Police deny rubber bullets usage on Rustenburg strikers


Rustenburg- Johannesburg – South African police clashed with residents near a mine run by the platinum firm Anglo American on Thursday, as miners at nearby Lonmin went back to work.

 

The protesters blocked roads, and police fired teargas and stun grenades to disperse them, as the Anglo American Platinum (Amplats) workers faced a Thursday-night deadline to call off an illegal strike and return to work.

 

“There was an illegal gathering that took place this morning,” police spokesperson Dennis Adriao told reporters. “Police used teargas as well as water cannon to disperse individuals. Stun grenades were used as well.”

 

Police denied having used rubber bullets after residents claimed they had been fired in the Sondela informal settlement where black smoke billowed as miners and residents barricaded roads with rocks and burning tyres.

 

The unrest at Amplats in the platinum belt of Rustenburg, 120km north-west of Johannesburg, appeared to be escalating just as a deadly six-week strike at a nearby Lonmin’s Marikana plant wound down.

 

Lonmin workers returned to work on Thursday after a deal was brokered to end the crippling strike in which 46 people died over a six-week standoff that spurred knock-on protests at other gold and platinum mines.

For more details go to http://www.iol.co.za

ANC cannot be hijacked by tenderpreneurs


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Johannesburg – Cosatu has a framework for the ANC leadership it wants elected at Mangaung in December, general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi said on Thursday.

“We must not allow the ANC to be hijacked by a class of ‘tenderpreneurs’,” Vavi told reporters at the conclusion of Cosatu’s national congress in Midrand.

 

This was the framework that the congress had provided to guide the central executive committee (CEC) of the Congress of SA Trade Unions in deciding who they would support at Mangaung.

 

The congress resolved that the decision on who to nominate for the leadership of the African National Congress would be taken by a special meeting of the CEC.

 

The federation’s political report, discussed at the congress, was also referred to the CEC to decide upon.

 

Vavi said the meeting would be held in the first week of October. ANC branches were expected to nominate their leadership candidates in October.

 

Vavi said it was decided not to let the 11th national congress decide on its candidate leaders as they would not have time to achieve consensus.

 

“Congress with its time pressures was not going to be united,” he said.

 

Earlier in the day some Cosatu affiliates – including the National Union of Metalworkers of SA and the SA Transport and Allied Workers’ Union – called for the ANC leadership discussion to be opened.

 

The request was opposed.

 

In his concluding remarks, Cosatu president Sidumo Dlamini called for “stability of leadership” at Mangaung.

 

“This is the message sent by the workers… today, in particular our own African National Congress as it proceeds to Mangaung, stability is what we need,” he said.

 

“This country does not need factionalism, it doesn’t need divisions of leadership, it needs stability of leadership,” he said to loud applause.

 

He said the ANC could take a lesson from Cosatu, which re-elected its top six leaders unopposed.

 

The congress erupted into loud celebration when an Independent Electoral Commission official announced the results of the elections for the top Cosatu leadership.

 

Dlamini was carried to the stage when it was announced he was re-elected.

 

Delegates then picked up Vavi, re-elected as general secretary, and carried him onto the stage.

 

Scores of delegates took to the stage where they sang, whistled and danced for around 10 minutes, before the congress was called to order.

 

Although the leaders were all nominated unopposed on Monday, the official results were only announced on the final day of the congress, Thursday.

 

Bheki Ntshalintshali would remain Vavi’s deputy.

 

Tyotyo James was re-elected first deputy president and Zingiswa Losi, second deputy president.

 

Freda Oosthuizen was re-elected treasurer.

 

Come home

 

Earlier, delegates sang pro-President Jacob Zuma songs.

 

They sang in isiZulu “Kuyoze kube nine sizabalaza [how long will this struggle be], sihamba noZuma asinamahloni [we are going with Zuma, we are not ashamed]”.

 

Vavi outlined the declarations agreed upon in the congress, chief among them refocusing attention on workers’ issues.

 

Vavi said the congress was embarking on a “programme of action” to drive economic shifts in the country. This included discussion on a national minimum wage.

 

“We will convene urgent meetings with the government and the ANC, at the highest level, to discuss the development of a new wage policy.”

 

In his closing address, Dlamini called for workers who had left Cosatu affiliates to start splinter groups to come “home”.

 

“Come back and raise your issues inside the organisation. We will address them.”

 

The call came after 46 people were killed in incidents relating to an illegal strike at Lonmin’s platinum mine in Marikana, in North West, since August.

 

The strike was partly blamed on rivalry between incumbent union, the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM), a Cosatu affiliate, and a breakaway union, the Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union (Amcu).

 

SAPA

Eskom soaring electricity charges questioned


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But besides the tariff increases to pay for Eskom’s current construction programme – the building of the Medupi, Kusile and Ingula power stations – the big question is how it is going to fund new generation capacity after that.

 

The country’s 20-year electricity road map, the Integrated Resource Plan of 2010 (IRP2010), proposes that an additional 9600MW of electricity will be generated by nuclear power, which is roughly a quarter of the total new capacity needed by 2030.

 

The nuclear procurement programme alone could cost anything between R400-billion and R1-trillion, but another 32 000MW will be needed by 2030. How is South Africa going to pay for projects that will run into trillions of rands?

 

Eskom’s current programme is testing its ability to raise the money for the rest of the programme. The utility’s debt will peak at R350-billion in the next three years to pay for Medupi, Kusile and Ingula. That will cost R27-billion a year in interest for at least a decade to pay it off.

For more details go to http://www.mg.co.za

Mme Thandi Modise postpone her visit to Marikana councillor’s family


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By Obakeng Maje

Mahikeng- North West Premier Thandi Modise who was on route to Marikana had to postpone her visit the family of ANC PR Councillor Pauline Mosuhle Magwana to convey the condolences of the provincial government after being advised of the unavailability of the family on Thursday afternoon.

 

The Councillor who served in Madibeng Local Municipality reportedly sustained rubber bullets wounds during a raid conducted by police at Nkaneng informal settlements on Saturday.

 

Premier Modise had earlier expressed a wish to convey our condolences to the family on the loss of their loved ones and to the community on the loss of their loyal servant who was very helpful throughout the conflict and stood by the ANC branch and did not desert the miners.

 

The tragic news of the councillor’s untimely death was conveyed to Premier Modise by the Executive Mayor of Bojanala Platinum District, Councillor Louis Diremelo who accompanied members of her family to the government mortuary to identify her body.

 

While relevant authorities investigate the councillors’ alleged shooting and subsequent death, Modise has appealed that while aouthorities investigate the councillor’s alleged shooting and subsequent death, members of the public should remain calm and speculate on the cause of her death as a post-mortem will confirm the actual cause of her death.

 

The Premier said that government has activated support for the family support as it has done with all other victims of the Marikana tragedy.

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North West supports local tourism for job creation


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By Obakeng Maje

North West Premier, Mme Thandi Modise says her provincial government will continue to support local tourism as it is very important for creating jobs and fighting unemployment.

 

“Tourism plays a very important part in our economy, if we can fully support small businesses as government in this sector; we can create many jobs for our people,

 

“Local tourism has the power to assist the province and the municipality in developing local products and creating local jobs,” emphasised Premier Modise at the tourism stakeholder engagement held at Rustenburg Civic Centre on Thursday.

 

The engagement which was held under the theme “service excellent- the negotiable element of hospitality” as part of the programme for tourism month is targeted at tourism and related service owners, management and employees who play pivotal role as the interface and image of destination.

 

Premier Modise at the interaction which was also broadcasted live on E –TV’s Sunrise Breakfast Show emphasized that there is a need for Small businesses at local level to be supported by government and also find a way of ensuring that they are sustainable.

 

“We all agree as government that tourism sector have got the potential to contribute to economic growth of our province.

 

We have noted that in the past money was pumped into small businesses which later collapsed due to lack of support. It is important that as we finance small businesses, proper monitoring and support to this small businesses,” she said.

 

Deputy Tourism Minister Thokozile Xasa, concurred with Premier Modise that South Africa need to continue to build a sustainable tourism industry locally.

 

She cited that tourism is one of the critical sectors, if it can be sustained the economy of the country can be at the highest level in the international standard.

 

North West MEC for Economic Development Environment Conservation and Tourism, Motlalepula Rhoso also said that her department is hard at work to promote unique selling point in terms of tourism product in the province.

 

“The tourists do not get attracted to a place for its physical beauty alone, they can be attracted by specific tourism products which are there in our product.We have Taung as a cultural district, for instance our own traditional dance, food, and agricultural products,” she cited.

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North West premier visit Markana councillor’s family


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By Obakeng Maje

North West Premier Thandi Modise is to visit the family of Marikana ANC PR Councillor Pauline Mosuhle Magwana to convey the condolences of the provincial government at around 4:00pm this afternoon.

 

The Councillor who served in Madibeng Local Municipality reportedly sustained rubber bullets wounds during a raid conducted by police at Nkaneng informal settlements on Saturday.

 

Premier Modise had earlier expressed a wish to convey our condolences to the family on the loss of their loved ones and to the community on the loss of their loyal servant who was very helpful throughout the conflict and stood by the ANC branch and did not desert the miners.

 

The tragic news of the councillor’s untimely death was conveyed to Premier Modise by the Executive Mayor of Bojanala Platinum District, Councillor Louis Diremelo who accompanied members of her family to the government mortuary to identify her body.

 

While relevant authorities investigate the councillors’ alleged shooting and subsequent death, Modise has appealed that while aouthorities investigate the councillor’s alleged shooting and subsequent death, members of the public should remain calm and speculate on the cause of her death as a post-mortem will confirm the actual cause of her death.

 

The Premier said that government has activated support for the family support as it has done with all other victims of the Marikana tragedy.

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Amajita ready for Nigeria


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BY Obakeng Maje

Johannesburg- The South African National Under 20 Team head coach Solly Luvhengo says he is confident ahead of the first leg match of the African Youth championship against Nigeria that is scheduled to take place at the Mbombela Stadium in Nelspruit, Mpumalanga on Friday, 21 September 2012.

 

Kick-off is at 19h00.

 

Luvhengo says his charges are physically and psychologically ready to take on the current AYC Champions.

 

Both teams are expected to complete their preparations on Thursday evening (20 September) when they hold their final training sessions at the match venue. Luvhengo adds that his team is in high spirits and all the players are aware of the mammoth task ahead. They also know what needs to be done when they walk onto the field.

 

“The mood is positive, the players want this win very much and I have no doubt they will give their all to get it. Ours is to put them in the right frame of mind, and the rest is in their hands. It will be important for us to score and not concede. We will be very attack-minded when we play this match, and have no intentions of defending because we are looking for a win,” said the head coach.

 

Luvhengo has also pleaded for support from the nation.

 

“These are our future Bafana Bafana stars and they need all the support they can get to overcome their opponents. I am making a plea to the fans to come in big numbers to support the youngsters because it would be very embarrassing to play at home in a stadium full of Nigerians,” added Luvhengo.

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Facebook’s ugly secret


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Washington – Facebook has an ugly little secret – a number disclosed nowhere in its voluminous filings to become a public company and now only vaguely addressed by corporate officials.

 

An estimated 5.6 million Facebook clients – about 3.5 percent of its United States users – are children who the company says are banned from the site.

 

Facebook and many other websites bar people under age 13 because the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) requires websites to give special treatment to children 12 or younger. The law aims to stop marketers prying personal information from children or using their data to advertise to them. Sites must get parental permission before allowing children to enter, and must take steps to protect privacy.

 

Facebook declines to acknowledge that many of its efforts to block children are not working.

 

The issue has taken on new relevance as the Federal Trade Commission finalises rules to further restrict companies and websites that target youths or are geared to young audiences.

 

Facebook, the world’s leading social media company with 955 million users, has said that the law does not apply to it because it explicitly restricts use of its site to people aged 13 and older.

 

Facebook has made some progress in identifying preteens and excluding them from the site. A June Consumer Reports study showed that Facebook eliminates as many as 800 000 users under age 13 in a year through its tiered screening process, which the company declines to describe.

 

The study still estimates 5.6 million children are on Facebook, a figure that experts say includes many who create accounts with help from their parents.

 

The Consumer Reports data comes from a January 2012 survey of 2 002 adults with home Internet. Participants were chosen by TNS, a research firm. The margin of error is plus or minus two percentage points.

 

“It’s not surprising to us to see 12-year-olds sneaking onto Facebook,” said FTC chairperson Jon Leibowitz, saying the situation was “particularly complicated” if parents helped them. “Is it troubling? In some ways it is. Is it a story in black and white? Not really.”

 

A Reuters test of Facebook’s signup process shows that a child could bypass the site’s screening features with relative ease. The site effectively blocked a fictitious sign-up from an underage prospective user. But after an hour’s wait, the site accepted a sign-up using the same name, email, password and birthday but citing a different birth year.

 

Facebook declined to discuss the data or describe its efforts to outlaw children. Spokesperson Frederic Wolens said in an email that Facebook is “committed to improving protections for all young people online”.

 

Larry Magid, who serves on Facebook’s advisory board and co-directs the Internet group Connect Safely, said he and others studied the issue for a year and found no way to tell if children were lying online.

 

“The only solution that I am aware of is to access some sort of national ID or school records,” he said. “There are good reasons that we don’t do this. I’m sure this is really easy to do in totalitarian regimes.”

 

Senator Richard Blumenthal, an outspoken privacy advocate whose youngest child is 18, said children’s vulnerability to potential sexual predators and susceptibility to advertising were reasons to keep the 12-and under set off most websites. “Our children were not on Facebook at that age, and they would not be now,” he said.

 

When gullible preteens or “tweens” go online they often reveal sensitive data, said Kathryn Montgomery, who teaches at American University and was an early advocate of the 1998 COPPA law.

 

“What we hoped to do with these kinds of rules is to get companies to act responsibly toward kids. It’s not easy to do,” said Montgomery.

 

Facebook now boasts 158 million US users, according to May figures from the data firm comScore. If the site more effectively banned children, it could stand to lose about 3.5 percent of its US market.

 

Ironically, one reason it’s easy to game Facebook’s screening process is the law passed to protect children. COPPA bars companies from saving most data on children. The FTC has said it would look sceptically on companies saving children’s names or email addresses even if the data simply helped them prevent children logging onto their sites.

 

Children who aren’t savvy enough to game Facebook’s system often get parental help, according to a 2011 study headed by Danah Boyd, a senior researcher at Microsoft Research. She found that 55 percent of parents of 12-year-olds said that their child was on Facebook and that 76 percent of those had helped the child gain access.

 

“Many recent reports have highlighted just how difficult it is to enforce age restrictions on the Internet, especially when parents want their children to access online content and services,” said Facebook’s Wolens.

 

On Facebook, children are exposed to advertising for sugary, high-fat foods, the kind increasingly pulled from children’s television shows.

 

“We found lots of food products on Facebook being advertised, including many which are targeted to children,” said Jennifer Harris, director of marketing initiatives at Yale University’s Rudd Centre for Food Policy and Obesity.

 

One is Kellogg’s new Krave cereal, a product which is roughly one-third sugar. With advertisements featuring an animated, pudgy Krave Krusader, it now counts 456 000 “likes” on Facebook.

 

Kellogg’s said it did not intend to market Krave to tweens and complied with an industry initiative to not market high-fat, high-sugar products to children. “Krave follows Facebook’s policy that all fans must be 13 or older,” the company said in a statement.

 

Dr Victor Strasburger, chief of the division of Adolescent Medicine, University of New Mexico Department of Paediatrics, said the Krave Krusader ads are part of what he called “unethical” appeals by sugary cereal makers. Nearly 20 percent of US children aged 6-17 are obese, according to a 2011 government report.

 

Child advocates say that even if Facebook is not appealing directly to children, the company needs to realise that ads aimed at teenaged users will also attract tweens, who imitate older peers.

 

“I don’t think Facebook deliberately goes out and gets kids at the moment,” said Jeff Chester of the Centre for Digital Democracy. “I think when they target teens the way they do, they know that they’ll pull in a lot of younger kids.” – Reuters

 

 

Marikana councillor dies after shootings


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By Obakeng Maje

Rustenburg- North West Premier Thandi Modise is saddened and has expressed shock after receiving report that a Marikana ANC PR Councillor died in hospital on Wednesday.

 

The Councillor who served in Madibeng Local Municipality reportedly sustained rubber bullets wounds during a raid conducted by police at Nkaneng informal settlements on Saturday.

 

“We wish to convey our condolences to the family on the loss of their loved ones and to the community on the loss of their loyal servant who was very helpful throughout the conflict and stood by the ANC branch and did not desert the miners,” said Premier Modise.

 

The tragic news of the councillor’s untimely death was conveyed to Premier Modise by the Executive Mayor of Bojanala Platinum District, Councillor Louis Diremelo who accompanied members of her family to the government mortuary to identify her body.

While relevant authorities investigate the councillors’ alleged shooting and subsequent death, Premier Modise appeals for calm and for members of the public not to speculate on the cause of her death as a post-mortem will confirm the actual cause of her death.

The Premier said that government has activated support for the family support as it has done with all other victims of the Marikana tragedy.

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Chiefs retain their top spot


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BY Obakeng Maje

FNB stadium- Kaizer Chiefs handed newcomers, Black Leopards their first defeat of the season in an elite league when they bit them 2-1 on a replay match.

The game between Chiefs and Leopards initially was stop on saturday after a heavy rains experienced only 35 minutes after the game started.

 Chiefs started searching for the first goal early and they were resulted on the 11th minutes when George Lebese was brought down in the 18 yards. The referee, Daniel Bennett did not hesitate and pointed on the penalty spot.

Bafana and Kaizer Chiefs striker, Benard Parker stepped up at took the penalty.

Chiefs took the lead and continue to put pressure on the visitors.

Black Leopards came more better in the second half and also applied pressure which prelude to a salvage goal.

Former Chiefs striker Amoddu scored a consolation goal for Leopards only 10 minutes before the final whistle.

“”Tactically we have done well. We do have to improve on certain errors like lack of concentration. Will correct these ahead of Maritzburg” Leopards coach said.

Simphiwe Tshabala increased Chiefs lead when he scored after a beautiful run from Kingston Nkhata.

Chiefs George Lebese was on the rampage as he showed no respect to Black Leopards defence. He was unluck when his shot was blocked by Mtshali.

Lebese won man of the match award because of his scintilating form.

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