SA porn business is booming – star


IOL camera nov 30

Durban – The boom in the local pornography industry has led an increasing number of young men and women who want to be part of the business, offering to do it for free.

However, the taboo that comes with pornography has forced many people in the industry to operate with aliases.

One such person is “Leila Lopes” who lives in Westville, outside Durban. A middle-aged woman with a slim body and slick hair, Lopes has been in the business for almost five years and has found the local porn industry becoming more stable. “It’s not a high-earning job because you earn anything from R1 000 to R8 000 a session. But there is certainly more work now.”

Lopes says that performing in a porn film is just like any other job. “There are a lot of taboos about porn and people think that there is something abnormal about it, but the fact is that thousands of people buy porn and it’s an honest day’s work for most of us,” she said.

“We still have lives and friends away from the business and it’s important to keep those elements separate.”

Lopes adds that local porn can be used as a more direct tool to teach people about HIV/Aids and sexual health.

“There is too much sugar coating that often goes on around sex in South Africa. What we do is give a visual display of what many South Africans think and fantasise about. But we are also responsible and we use condoms so as to show people that aspect of sexual health as well,” she said.

Each year thousands of magazines and videos make their way on to the market. But it is local productions that are catching the eye of local porn distributors and fans.

According to Tau Morena, who produced South Africa’s very first all-black porn film (Mapona Volume one), the success of local productions is proof that South African consumers want to see local porn.

Go to http://www.iol.co.za for more details

10 things Bafana must get right to beat Mali


IOL Mahlangu_Sangweni

Jonty Mark pinpoints the 10 things Bafana Bafana must get right to beat Mali in the Afcon quarter-finals.

1 KEEP THEIR SHAPE

This phrase might sound a little bit clichéd but it has been noticeable that when Bafana have done well in this tournament, the side have clearly held their shape, particularly in a defensive sense, when the opposition have the ball. For 90 minutes against Angola, and in the second half against Morocco, there was a clear difference in the way the team were set up, and interestingly, those are the three halves in which Bafana have scored goals. Once you have your shape defensively, it becomes much easier to spring forward into attack.

2 USE THE HOME SUPPORT AS AN INSPIRATION, NOT A SOURCE OF PERSPIRATION

There is a magic about Durban, a feverish atmosphere again likely at the Moses Mabhida Stadium this evening, hoping to sing Bafana to glory. It cannot be understated how much home advantage can play a role in a side overcoming the odds – in this instance, the 22nd best side in Africa playing the third best. Bafana looked a nervous wreck in the opening match against Cape Verde, but have thrived in Durban, the heart of the side visibly pumped by the supreme support here. Hopefully, the fans and the players will be dancing again tonight.

3 DEFEND SET-PIECES WELL

The height and physical strength of Mali’s players has been much-discussed in the lead-up to this game, and nowhere are they likely to be more of a threat than from set-pieces. Bafana will have to match them physically from corners and free-kicks, while Itumeleng Khune (left) will have to be very careful about when he chooses to come off his line. His one slip so far in that regard came against Morocco and resulted in one of only two goals the side have conceded.

4 DEFEND MUCH BETTER FROM OPEN PLAY

Three times in the last game, a Morocco player found himself clear of the Bafana defence and one-on-one with Itumeleng Khune. The Bafana keeper was quite exceptional, but the fact remains that with better finishing, Bafana could be out of the Africa Cup of Nations. Bafana’s back-four need to be far more solid than they were on that day, though to be fair, they did play fairly well against Angola and Cape Verde.

5 STOP MALI’S POWERHOUSE MIDFIELD

In Seydou Keita, Momo Sissoko, Samba Diakite and Modibo Maiga, Mali have a midfield to make any side in Africa shiver with fear. Diakite’s storming runs in the last match were a permanent threat to DR Congo, while Keita netted the winner against Niger and remains, even at 33, a world class player. Sissoko might be a little past his best but is still a physical force, and Maiga has yet to truly shine but is a particular threat with his late runs into the penalty area. Gordon Igesund might yet decide to play Kagiso Dikgacoi (left) tonight for some extra physical presence to counter the Malian threat.

6 KEEP THE BALL ON THE GROUND

Igesund is well aware that Bafana’s best way through the Malian midfield and defence is to keep the ball on the ground. If they lump it through the air like they did against Cape Verde, they are likely to be on a hiding to nothing. But if they can go at pace along the grass, like they did at times against Morocco, using the quick feet of Thulani Serero, May Mahlangu, Bernard Parker and Thuso Phala, they might just trouble Mali’s giants.

7 GET AT MALI’S FULLBACKS

In a congested midfield area, width is also likely to be key for Bafana this evening. Phala has provided plenty of that down the right and Siboniso Gaxa, a more attacking fullback than the suspended Anele Ngcongca, can also help him out in getting at Mali left-back Adama Tamboura. Without a true winger on the left, with Siphiwe Tshabalala likely to be benched again, Bafana could also move Phala to the left to have a go at Mali’s slightly slower right-back Fousseni Diawara.

8 TEST MALI’S GOALKEEPER

With their No1 goalkeeper Mamadou Samassa suspended, Soumbeila Diakite will be making his tournament debut for Mali tonight. Diakite is actually the most experienced goalkeeper in the Mali squad, but is bound to have some nerves at the Moses Mabhida Stadium, whatever coach Patrice Charteron says about his penalty-saving abilities. Bafana would do well to test him with some early efforts just to see if the jitters get the better of the new man.

9 KEEP ENCOURAGING SIYABONGA SANGWENI TO GET FORWARD

Bafana’s most prolific finisher at this Nations Cup so far is Siyabonga Sangweni, their central defender. While Sangweni’s main role is clearly to keep out the Mali attack, the fact is that his confidence must be sky-high in and around the opposition penalty area. As sensibly as possible, Sangweni has to be encouraged to keep getting himself into the opposition’s final third to provide assistance to the likes of Lehlohonolo Majoro and Katlego Mphela.

10 FIND THE BEST WAY TO USE THULANI SERERO

Serero is Bafana’s ace in the pack at this Africa Cup of Nations. He isn’t quite up to full match fitness just yet, but showed flashes of brilliance when he came on against Morocco, his movement with and off the ball noticeably more astute than many of his Bafana teammates. There is no doubt that a fully fit Serero should start against Mali, but Igesund must decide if he would rather use his player, as he has been doing, when opposition defenders are starting to tire. The stage is set for a man like Serero to really make his mark on this tournament. Could this be his day?

Saturday Star

SA man wins Facebook slander case


iol new spic facebook sep 21

Johannesburg – A Joburg man has successfully interdicted his ex-friend from slandering him on Facebook and has ordered her to remove the posts from her Facebook page’s wall.

Judge Nigel Willis’s judgement in the South Gauteng High Court this week means that Facebook users may be sued for damages as a result of defamatory remarks on Facebook.

On February 27 last year the woman wrote on her wall referring to her ex-friend: “I wonder too what happened to the person who I counted as a best friend for 15 years and how the behaviour is justified. Remember I see the brokenhearted faces of your girls every day. Should we blame the alcohol, the drugs the church or are they more reasons to not have to take responsibility for the consequences of your own behaviour. But mostly I wonder whether, when you look in the mirror in your drunken testosterone haze, do u still see a man?”

The man asked the court to interdict the woman and rule that if she posted any more defamatory remarks, tshe be arrested. He also asked that she pay his costs.

The man, an insurance broker, is separated from his wife, and engaged in divorce proceedings. The respondent had been a close friend of the man, in fact they had been friends before he married his wife. We are not naming them because there are divorce proceedings under way.

So close were they that when the man was still married, he and his wife had appointed the respondent as guardian of their three children, aged between 11 and 16.

His estranged wife is now living with his “ex-friend”. She left him to go live with the respondent in January last year.

But the children have been residing with the man for the past few months. The two minor daughters are both “friends” on Facebook with the respondent.

The applicant and the respondent were friends on Facebook but when his wife left him to go and live with the respondent, he “defriended” her.

The man complained that the Facebook posting portrayed him as a father who did not provide financially for his family, who would rather go out drinking than caring for his family and who had a problem with drugs and alcohol.

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

Shabba: We Are A Team


Bafana Bafana midfielder Siphiwe ‘Shabba’ Tshabalala did not feature in South Africa’s last two Africa Cup of Nations fixtures, in defeating Angola 2-0 and playing to a two-all draw with Morocco.

South Africa has since qualified for the knockout stages, where they will face Mali in the quarterfinals, and Tshabalala has emphasised the importance of the team. The Kaizer Chiefs man said that it is not important who plays, but rather about the side winning.

 

He said that the players have been supportive to each other, regardless of who plays on match day. He told the Siya crew that each and every player wearing the national jersey wants the best for the country.

 

“We are looking for wins and whoever plays knows that we are behind them. It doesn’t really matter whether you play or not, as long as who plays, plays to win. We are a team and as a team we support each other. 

 

“We know Mali are a good side with great players but we are also a good team and we want to keep on going until the final,” Shabba concluded.

For more details go to http://www.soccerladuma.com

Igesund: Is a different game plan



Afcon 2013: South Africa v Mali
Venue: Moses Mabhida Stadium
Time: 20h30

After almost 11 years Mali and Bafana Bafana meet again in the quarter-finals of the Afcon Cup.

In 2002 the two teams met and it was in Mali where the host won 2-0 and tonight all eyes will be on Gordon Igesund and his boys to win and qualify for the semi-finals.

Igesund said that he has watched Mali and he knows his opponents so he has to change the game plan.

He said he has seen that Malians are tall players and they have to play a passing game.

“I can’t say much about our game plan but one thing we know is we will have a different game plan. We have to avoid set pieces whether corner kicks or free kicks because they could be dangerous as well. As for penalties we have worked on them but we don’t want to go that far. There is 90 minutes and extra time I think that will be enough to win the game without penalties,” Igesund said.

His counterpart Patrice Carteron said that the game will be won or lost in the midfield.

He said both teams have good midfielders who can decide the outcome of the game.

“This game will be a midfield battle. The team that reads the midfield well will win this game. It will be tough and it needs well planning in the centre of the part of both teams if we have to win the game. Past history doesn’t matter in such tournaments as each team wants to make their own history,” Carteron concluded.

Afcon players to watch:
South Africa: Siyabonga Sangweni
Mali: Seydou Keita
For more details go to http://www.soccerladuma.com

Sangoma sentenced for rape,killing a toddler


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Durban – Five-year-old Nosihle Zondo went next door to play, but ended up being raped and murdered by her neighbour, a sangoma who then dumped her blood-soaked body in a pit toilet.

 

For his “brutal and heinous” crimes, 23-year-old Philani Phoswa, who pleaded guilty, was yesterday sentenced to two life terms by the High Court in Scottburgh.

 

The sangoma, of Highflats near Ixopo, had raped and stabbed the child on December 8 last year, while his own 10-month-old daughter slept in another room. He claimed he had become sexually aroused while watching TV.

 

Phoswa cried and hid his face yesterday as his attorney, Ishi Khan, read out his confession

 

to a packed courtroom.

 

In the statement, he said Nosihle, who had come to his house to play with his niece, was watching TV after his niece had left to visit an aunt.

 

He said his daughter had fallen asleep so he carried her to his bedroom.

 

“When I returned to the kitchen I became sexually aroused while watching TV,” he said.

 

“I was easily aroused because I had not had sexual intercourse for at least three months.”

 

Phoswa then asked Nosihle to remove her clothes and lie down on a blanket, “because I wanted to teach her a game”.

 

“When (she) complied with my instructions, I lowered my trousers and underwear to my knees and raped her,” he said.

 

“The deceased began to cry and I ordered her to keep quiet,” he said, adding, however, that the TV volume was loud enough to drown out her cries.

 

After raping the girl, Phoswa said she lay on the floor crying. “I realised that if I let the deceased return to her home, she would tell her family that I had raped her.”

 

That is when he decided to kill her. “I took a table knife and I used it to stab her once on her abdomen,” he said in the statement.

 

“I concluded she was dead when she eventually stopped breathing.”

 

Phoswa then wrapped Nosihle’s lifeless body in the blood-soaked blanket and concealed it in an unused pit toilet behind his house.

 

The court heard how Phoswa, who has a previous conviction for stock theft, had acted ignorant when Nosihle’s family raised the alarm about her disappearance later that day.

 

Remorse

 

However, he said he was overcome with remorse the next morning and reported to another sangoma what he had done.

 

The body was recovered and Phoswa was arrested.

 

Dressed in a grey shirt and trousers, Phoswa clutched his hands and listened attentively while Khan read out his confession.

 

There were murmurs of disbelief from the public gallery, where Nosihle’s parents and her grandmother, with whom she had lived, sat with others. They reacted with shock at the gruesome details, including that “the devil” had made Phoswa rape the girl.

 

Before Judge Anton van Zyl handed down sentence, a remorseful-looking Phoswa said a quick prayer, looked back at the public gallery, but quickly covered his face when some people hurled insults at him.

 

Van Zyl described the crime as brutal and callous.

 

“She died an agonising death while you watched her,” he said. “It’s difficult to imagine a more brutal and heinous crime.”

 

He said the decision to stab Nosihle was a calculated one.

 

“You raped her to satisfy your own desires and you disposed of her body in the most undignified way,” said Van Zyl, before sentencing Phoswa to two life terms.

 

He also refused Phoswa’s application for leave to appeal.

 

A highly emotional Velile Zondo, Nosihle’s mother, said although it would not bring back her youngest child, she was happy with the sentence.

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