Bafana to host Norway


Bafana Bafana team @ Backpagepix

South Africa will play a friendly international against Norway in Cape Town on January 8, officials have said.

 

It will be one of four warm-up game for Bafana Bafana ahead of their hosting of the next African Nations Cup finals.

The team start their preparations after Wednesday’s draw with a home match against Zambia for the Nelson Mandela Challenge. That international against the reigning African champions will be played at Soccer City on November 14.

It will be followed by a game in Durban on December 23 against a top African opponent who are also headed to the Nations Cup – but not one of the sides who will share South Africa’s group.

The team then have a brief holiday break and re-assemble to play against Norway in a match confirmed after the visit to the country by Kjetil Siem, the former chief executive officer of the Premier Soccer League, now the general secretary of the Norway Football Federation.

The last preparatory game will again be against another Nations Cup finalist, set for Gauteng on January 13. The venue will be either the Orlando Stadium, Ellis Park or Loftus Versfeld in Pretoria.

The two opponents for Durban and Gauteng will be set tonight after the draw as SAFA officially identify who they want to play and then enter into discussions.

 

No bail for suspects in NUM killing


IOL pic aug 14 justice scales gavel

Rustenburg – Two men accused of the murder of a NUM official were denied bail by the Rustenburg Magistrate’s Court on Wednesday.

Magistrate Carnel Badenhorst said it would not be in the interests of justice to grant Zenzile Nxenge and Siyakhale Kwazile bail.

They are accused of killing Daluvuyo Bongo, branch secretary of the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) in Marikana.

“The two are members of a rival union to the deceased’s union. Keeping you in custody is not a punishment, it is for your safety,” said Badenhorst.

The State opposed bail, stating that the addresses of the two accused in the Eastern Cape had not been confirmed and the firearm used to kill Bongo had not been recovered.

The matter was postponed to December 5 for investigation. – Sapa

Marikana ‘unholy deals’ exposed: PAC


IOL pic oct22 marikana farlam

Rustenburg – The Farlam commission has exposed “unholy” deals in the mining industry, the Pan Africanist Congress said on Wednesday.

“The labour relations in the mining sector has collapsed and is replaced by deals between mining moguls, politicians and the union leaders,” secretary general Bennet Joko said in a statement.

“These deals have suppressed the interests of workers over a long period of time. It is tragic that the ruling elite and mining shareholders led to the slaughter of the mineworkers in Marikana.”

ANC national executive committee member and businessman Cyril Ramaphosa’s name was prominent on Tuesday at the inquiry investigating the deaths of 34 striking miners at Lonmin’s Marikana mine.

Advocate Dali Mpofu, representing the miners injured and arrested after the shooting on August 16, mentioned an e-mail in which Ramaphosa strongly condemned the protests, described them as criminal acts, and suggested “concomitant action”.

“This (e-mail) was on 15 August at 2.58pm, exactly 24 hours before the people were mowed down on that mountain.”

Mpofu said there were e-mails sent between Lonmin management, government ministers, and Ramaphosa.

The commission’s brief was to investigate the shooting that left 34 miners dead when police tried to disperse them on August 16. The workers, who wanted monthly salaries of R12 500, had been carrying knobkerries, pangas, sticks, and iron rods.

Joko said the inquiry confirmed that mineworkers were being exploited, which had resulted in their rejecting trade unions.

The unrest at the Lonmin platinum mine had been blamed on rivalry between the Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union and the National Union of Mineworkers.

Joko said the families of the miners injured and killed in Marikana needed to be fully compensated.

“The R75 million allocated to the commission (must) be matched rand for rand as compensation to the families.”

He called for further investigation into deals made in the mining industry involving mine bosses, trade unions, and the government. – Sapa

Woman found dead in her house


North West – A North West woman has been found dead in her house in Gopane Village, Motswedi near Rustenburg, police said on Wednesday.

The body of 65-year-old Emely Mmsethilo Ramogale was found by neighbours on Tuesday, The body had head injuries, Captain Aasje Botman said.

Botman said it seemed she was hit with a sharp object. – Sapa

Four mineworkers arrested for murder


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By Obakeng Maje

Rustenburg-The North West Police have arrested four Lonmin mineworkers who are believed to be behind of some of the murder cases that happened around the  Marikana Mine Hostels recently. In the past three weeks four mineworkers were brutally murdered and police have been working tirelessly in their endeavour to arrest the perpetrators. Following the investigations, yesterday 23 October 2012 police arrested four mineworkers in connection with the alleged  killing of their co-workers. The alleged killings happened  during the last violent unrest by some Mineworkers at Marikana. The four suspects were arrested  at about 15:00 in a vehicle while they were coming from the Marikana Enquiry.  

 

 

“Police would like to reiterate the fact that the arrest of the four has nothing to do with the intimidation of mineworkers who are testifying in the Marikana Inquiry” Brigadier Thulani Ngubane said.

“As the South African Police Service we dispute the allegations that we  are targeting mineworkers because we  are trying to prevent them from testifying in the Marikana Commission of Enquiry” He said.

In this Democratic dispensation, Police are governed and guided by the constitution of the country which protects Human Rights including those of the suspects, arrested and detained persons.

“Therefore it could not be right to suggest or insinuate that police effect unlawful arrests in order to derail the objective and purpose  of the Marikana Commission of Enquiry. Those who were arrested, were merely arrested after police conducted thorough investigations and were confidently convinced that the arrested four had bridged the law” Ngubane outlines.  

We are confident that there is evidence linking the arrested suspects to the killing of the victims.

South African Police Service would like to put it on record that we have no other agenda than to arrest those who are breaking the laws of the Republic.  We would like to encourage anyone who feels that they have been treated unfairly to contact any of the Chapter nine institutions, who are charged with the responsibility to investigate the Police.  

 

 

 

 

 

If there is a need for any of the suspects to appear before the Marikana  Commission of Enquiry, by virtue of the powers vested upon the Commission,  the commissioner will make such pronouncement and if still under police custody, they will be availed whenever that need arise. All they need to know is that all those who have taken part or contributed in criminal activities, the arm of the law is never too short to reach them. They will be snatched every where even underground in the mine shafts.

 

 

 

 

Banyana get a pep-talk from SA High Commissioner in Cameroon


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By Obakeng Maje

Banyana Banyana wrapped up their 5—day training camp in Yaounde, Cameroon and will jet off to Malabo, Equatorial Guinea on Thursday, 25 October 2012, to put the finishing touches to their preparations for the eight-nation CAF African Women Championship 2012.

 

The African women’s football showpiece event starts on October 28, with the Sasol-sponsored Banyana Banyana in Group A action against hosts Equatorial Guinea.

 

Banyana Banyana received further words of motivation from the South African High Commissioner to Cameroon, Ms Ntshadi M Tsheole, who paid a surprise visit to the national team’s training session.

 

“As a commission, we are so excited to have Banyana Banyana training here in Cameroon and wish them the best of luck for the tournament in Equatorial Guinea,” said Tsheole.

 

“We are politicians, but Banyana Banyana are ambassadors for South Africa in their own right. Everywhere they go, so do the media and these young football players are a real credit to our country.”

 

Meanwhile, national head coach Joseph Mkhonza looked also a bit more relaxed as the team’s technical staff joined the players in a small size field practice match.

 

“The spirit in the camp is high, particularly after the effort put in during the 1-all draw against Cameroon in an international friendly match played in Yaoundé on Monday,” said Banyana Banyana head coach Joseph Mkhonza.

 

“Having a national training camp in the humid conditions here in Cameroon was crucial to our build up to the CAF African Women Championship 2012 as we are likely to find similar conditions in Equatorial Guinea. Safa and Sasol, our team sponsor, need to be commended for allowing our team the opportunity to prepare here in Cameroon.”

 

The national coaching staff has been impressed with the way in which Durban Ladies (KwaZulu Natal) striker Silindile Ngubane and club-mate and defender Charlotte Mshengu have fitted into the Banyana Banyana set up.

 

“I called Ngubane to the camp after having seen her score 11 goals for Durban Ladies at the Sasol League National Championships held in Durban in July and she has already netted for Banyana Banyana in the 1-all draw with Zimbabwe in Daveyton last week,” said Mkhonza.

 

“Mshengu is a valuable player as she can play in any of the defensive positions and this could be of major value in a long tournament such as the CAF African Women Championship. The national coaches also spotted her potential when she played for Durban Ladies during the Sasol League National Championships held in Durban.”

 

Mshengu made her Banyana Banyana debut in coming on as a second half substitute for her Durban Ladies club-mate Zamandosi Cele, in the international friendly encounter against Cameroon on Monday, 22 October 2012.

 

Bad news coming from the camp is that University of Johannesburg (Sasol League Gauteng) midfielder Yola Jafta is on her way home due to a hamstring strain. She is expected to arrive in South Africa in the evening. This comes after the team doctor took her to hospital yesterday (Tuesday, 23 October) and discovered that she wouldn’t be able to recover in time for the tournament.

 

All the other players are fit and ready for action, with Cape Town Roses (Sasol League Western Cape) midfielder Nocawe Skiti having returned to training after a trip to the dentist in Yaoundé also yesterday, to have a tooth extracted.

 

Following the Group A match against Equatorial Guinea, Banyana Banyana will face Senegal in Malabo on October 31, and will travel to Bata for their encounter with DR Congo on November 3.

 

The semi-finals will take place in either Malabo or Bata on November 7, with the 3rd/4th place playoff and the title decider both scheduled for Malabo on November 11

 

 

Serial killer takes on government


moses sithole

Johannesburg – South Africa’s worst serial killer, Moses Sithole, has taken the government to task, accusing it of illegally transferring him to a Bloemfontein prison against his will.

The man, serving a jail term of 2 410 years for raping 40 women and killing 37 of them, has filed an urgent application in the Johannesburg High Court, challenging his transfer to Mangaung prison from Sun City (Johannesburg Prison).

The 38th murder victim was the two-year-old son of one of the women he killed.

These crimes were committed in Atteridgeville, Boksburg and Cleveland between 1994 and 1995. Some of the bodies could not be identified.

In his court papers, Sithole, 48, argued that Correctional Services officials came to his cell at Sun City in August last year and, against his will, forcefully transferred him to Mangaung C-Max prison.

Sithole was initially incarcerated at the Pretoria C-Max prison, having stayed there from December 5, 1997.

He was transferred to the Zonderwater Maximum Medium A correctional centre in Cullinan on March 17 last year because of the closure of the Pretoria C-Max prison.

A month later, on April 21 last year, Sithole was transferred to the Johannesburg Maximum Medium C correctional centre in Joburg on his request.

But Sithole claims he was forcefully transferred to the Bloemfontein facility on August 17 last year without prior notice or reasons being given.

This, he claims, was affecting the “emotional and psychological bond” he had forged with a daughter who was just a few months old when he was arrested in 1995.

Sithole made a joint application with Erick Jhon Jungbluth Guerra, a maximum prison inmate serving a 15-year jail term.

It was not clear what Guerra was incarcerated for, but he indicated in court papers that he was transferred to the Bloemfontein facility from Joburg in September last year.

Like Sithole, he was also not given reasons, and efforts to source answers from prison authorities had fallen on deaf ears, he said.

“Upon their admission in the Mangaung Correctional Centre, Sithole and Guerra made enquiries to establish the motive behind the decision of Correctional Services to transfer them.

“The reason the applicants got from the supervisor in charge was that no prior reason was furnished.

“Thereafter, the applicants wrote letters [to] Correctional Services, where they highlighted the ramifications of the decision the transfer had on them as well as their family. However, no response came back,” the two men said.

Since their transfers, the two men have not had visits from any relatives as the 540km trip would cost a family member close to R3 000.

“The baleful nature of the decision of the respondents and its effects does not limit itself to cost factors alone.

“The decision has also impacted negatively on the social and psychological well-being of the family of the applicants,” the pair said.

The two argued that their families and friends were allowed contact with them while they were jailed in Pretoria and Joburg, but this ceased soon after they were transferred to Bloemfontein.

“The decision by Correctional Services to transfer Sithole and Guerra to the Mangaung Correctional Centre had literally marooned them from their kinfolks,” the court papers said.

Sithole and Guerra have supplied the high court with a section of the constitution and various Correctional Services manuals, saying all these documents supported the view that their incarceration in Bloemfontein was illegal.

Sithole received an HIV-positive diagnosis during his trial, but claimed that his health had since improved.

On Tuesday, he and Guerra arrived at the high court in leg irons before the matter was postponed to next month.

baldwin.ndaba@inl.co.za and omphitlhetse.mooki@inl.co.za

  1. The Star

Ramaphosa must say sorry – ANCYL


iol news pic cyril ramaphosa sep 20

Johannesburg – ANC national executive committee member and businessman Cyril Ramaphosa must apologise to the families of those killed at Marikana on August 16, the ANC Youth League said on Wednesday.

“Comrade Cyril Ramaphosa must apologise to the families of the injured and the dead for agitating and inciting the South African Police against them,” the African National Congress Youth League said in a statement.

On Tuesday, advocate Dali Mpofu, representing the miners injured and arrested after the shooting on August 16, said there was an e-mail in which Ramaphosa strongly condemned the protests, described them as criminal acts and suggested “concomitant action”.

Mpofu told the Farlam Commission into the shootings, which is holding hearings at the Rustenburg Civic Centre, that the e-mail was sent 24-hours before 34 miners were killed.

“He advanced that what was taking place were criminal acts and must be characterised as such. In line with this characterisation (Ramaphosa said) there needs to be concomitant action to address the situation,” said Mpofu.

He said e-mails were exchanged between Ramaphosa, Police Minister Nathi Mthethwa, Lonmin management and Mineral Resources Minister Susan Shabangu.

Ramaphosa sits on the Lonmin board. The striking miners killed in the shooting were from Lonmin’s platinum mine in Marikana.

He is also executive chairman of Shanduka Resources, which owns half of Incwala Resources, Lonmin’s black economic empowerment partner.

Ramaphosa chaired the ANC’s national disciplinary committee of appeals which upheld the expulsion from the party of former ANCYL president Julius Malema, and at which Malema was represented by Mpofu.

The Hawks are investigating charges, brought by the trade union Solidarity, that Malema incited violence during the strike at Lonmin’s Marikana mine.

The ANCYL said Ramaphosa had “lost any credibility as a genuine leader of the people, and as a revolutionary committed to the cause of the working class”.

“With his e-mail to Police Minister, Comrade Nathi Mthethwa, Comrade Ramaphosa delivered the more than 40 people to their death(s) at Marikana,” the ANCYL said.

It said that Ramaphosa’s preoccupation with the preservation of his monetary interests in Lonmin led him to call for concomitant action to deal with the criminal acts.

“As a seasoned unionist, the ANC Youth League expected more from Comrade Ramaphosa.

“The criminal acts he spoke of were the legitimate calls of workers demanding a decent wage.”

The league said Mthethwa had yet to explain from where the police got their orders.

The ANCYL called for a moratorium on all dismissals of workers and a return to order in the mining industry.

“The call for nationalisation of mines has never been more urgent and we call on ANC leaders with vested interests in the mining industry to subordinate their interests in favour of the collective good of all in South Africa, as demanded by the Freedom Charter.” – Sapa

Cosatu rally will not unite workers: DSM


IOL pic oct22 miners walkout

A Rustenburg rally by Cosatu will not unite workers, the Democratic Socialist Movement (DSM) said on Tuesday.

“The rally will not bring the workers together, it will not bring unity, but conflict,” secretary general Weizmann Hamilton said.

His movement was concerned that Cosatu called the rally to claim back Rustenburg from what it called the forces of the counter-revolution.

The Congress of SA Trade Unions had planned a march and a rally on Saturday, at the Olympia Park stadium, to mobilise workers to engage in solidarity protests in support of mineworkers’ wage demands.

The strike started at Lonmin’s Marikana mine in August when workers demanded a monthly salary of R12,500, and elected a committee to represent them, instead of a union.

Hamilton said the DSM did not lead workers into a strike, but offered them support when their union, the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM), said the R12,500 was unreasonable.

“When workers went on strike for a reasonable demand, we offered them support. It is possible for mineworkers to be paid R88,000 a month and still leave a huge profit for the bosses.”

He said NUM was using the DSM as a scapegoat for its failure to serve the workers.

“NUM has turned into a business union with interests in the mines.”

He said the DSM wanted to form a national socialist party representing the interests of workers.

He said the DSM was a Trotskyist (far left) political party affiliated to the Committee for a Workers’ International, which was represented in 40 countries. The DSM was formed in the 1970s, mostly by expelled African National Congress members.

Hamilton said they had been inundated with requests from people wanting to join the movement. He could not immediately provide membership numbers. – Sapa

 

Lonmin defends emails to government


IOL pic oct22 marikana farlam

Rustenburg – Lonmin on Tuesday denied claims that it colluded with the police and the government in the days before the Marikana mine shooting.

“Lonmin’s action to engage with appropriate authorities of the state was simply part of a process aimed at achieving normality,” the company said in a statement.

“Lonmin is a mining company and is not responsible for law enforcement.”

The platinum miner was responding to arguments heard on Tuesday at the Farlam inquiry, which is investigating the August 16 shooting at Lonmin’s Marikana mine.

The company said it wanted to communicate with the government to ensure it understood the company’s view of the situation, to ensure a peaceful resolution of the matter.

Advocate Dali Mpofu, representing the miners injured and arrested after the shooting, told the inquiry of an e-mail in which ANC heavyweight and Lonmin board member Cyril Ramaphosa strongly condemned the protests, described them as criminal acts and suggested “concomitant action”.

“This (e-mail) was (sent) on 15 August at 2.58pm, exactly 24 hours before the people were mowed down on that mountain,” said Mpofu.

“We have e-mails that were being exchanged between Lonmin management, government ministers 1/8of mineral resources and the police 3/8, and at the centre is a gentleman called Cyril Ramaphosa,” he said.

“He advanced that what was taking place were criminal acts and must be characterised as such.”

Mpofu said the e-mail was addressed to a certain “dear Albert of Lonmin”.

He said evidence would be led to discredit claims that the shootings were spontaneous acts committed in self-defence by police officers.

One of the causes of the Marikana tragedy was a “toxic collusion between the state and capital”, he said.

“The main causes of the massacre are the SA Police Service (SAPS), other agencies of government, and Lonmin. The people I represent here seek the truth for themselves and their colleagues who passed away.”

Mpofu described the actions of the police as “murder and extra-judicial killings”.

The police opened fire while trying to disperse a group of strikers encamped on a hill in Nkaneng, killing 34 and wounding 78 on August 16.

The workers had been carrying knobkerries, pangas, sticks and iron rods. They went on strike on August 10, demanding a monthly salary of R12,500. Within four days, 10 people had been killed, two of them policemen and two of them security guards. – Sapa