Minister apologetic about Afrikaaners remarks


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Johannesburg – Minister of Women, Children and People with Disabilities Lulu Xingwana on Wednesday apologised for her comments about Afrikaner men.

 

“It has become clear to me that my comments may have offended some members of our community. I would, accordingly, like to retract these remarks and apologise unconditionally to them,” she said.

 

Xingwana told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation that young Afrikaner men were raised to believe they owned women and children.

 

“Young Afrikaner men are brought up in the Calvinist religion believing that they own a woman, they own a child, they own everything and therefore they can take that life because they own it,” she said during the interview aired on Monday.

 

“We also have cultural differences as well in our own communities where we have women who are forced into marriage and we are dealing with all those issues.”

 

Xingwana was being interviewed following the arrest of paralympian Oscar Pistorius after the fatal shooting of his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp on February 14.

 

“Through my comments, I sought to convey the message that, as a country we have emerged from a very violent past and that some tend to use cultural and religious beliefs to justify gender inequality and abuse,” she said.

 

Earlier, the Afrikanerbond said Xingwana had proven beyond doubt she was not fit to hold office in a constitutional democracy.

 

The Christian Democratic Party called for President Jacob Zuma to fire her.

 

“Many non-Afrikaners, black and white, are members of Calvinist churches and her latest statement could be considered as religious intolerance,” party spokesman Rev Theunis Botha said. – Sapa

A substance found at Oscar house named


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Pretoria – Oscar Pistorius’ representatives have named the substance found in his bedroom after the shooting death of his girlfriend as Testis compositum, and say it is an herbal remedy used “in aid of muscle recovery.”

 

A product called Testis compositum is also marketed as a sexual enhancer, good for lack of stamina. Some online retailers advertise oral and injectable forms as testosterone boosters.

 

South African police say they found needles in Pistorius’ bedroom along with the substance, which they initially named as testosterone. Prosecutors later withdrew that statement identifying the substance and said it had been sent for laboratory tests.

 

Pistorius family spokesperson Lunice Johnston said in an email to The Associated Press on Wednesday that the athlete’s lawyers confirmed that the substance is Testis compositum. – Sapa-AP

Bail bid in ANC murder case postponed


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Klerksdorp – The bail application of eight men implicated in the murder of ANC North West official Obuti Chika was postponed on Wednesday, said the Hawks.

The group appeared in the Klerksdorp Magistrate’s Court and their bail application was postponed to March 4 and 5, said Captain  Paul Ramaloko.

“Next week will be the conclusion of the bail application,” he said.

Chika, 33, was shot at point-blank range in the driveway of his home in Alabama, Klerksdorp, on December 14. He died later in the Klerksdorp Hospital.

Local government MEC China Dodovu was among those arrested for Chika’s murder.

The suspected trigger-man, Sihlangu Sekhakhane, was also arrested. He led police to Msinga in KwaZulu-Natal, where the suspected murder weapon was found.

The other accused are community member Jeffrey Letuka, North West provincial ANC Youth League chairman Papiki Baboile, ward secretary Paul Molomonyane, councillor Itumeleng Molebatsi, municipal worker William Malefo and taxi driver Kgotso Kali. – Sapa

Sinners and motorists to pay up


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Cape Town – Smokers and drinkers will have to cough and splutter up more for their vices, according to the latest budget proposals.

Beer drinkers will pay seven cents more for a 340ml can.

A bottle of wine will cost 15 cents more, while the price of ciders and alcoholic fruit beverages is set to rise seven cents a litre.

A 750ml bottle of spirits will cost R3.60 more from April 1.

Those who prefer traditional African beer will, however, not be digging deeper into their pockets.

Tax on cigarettes increases by 60c, to R10.92 per packet of 20.

Motorists will feel the pinch again this year, paying a total of 23 cents a litre more for petrol from April 3.

The general fuel levy will go up by 15 cents a litre, with an additional eight cents a litre going to the Road Accident Fund.

For the first time in four years, shoppers are going to have to pay more for plastic bags.

The levy on plastic shopping bags goes up from four cents to six cents this year.

The environmental levy on incandescent light bulbs will also go up a rand, to four rand a bulb.

Those purchasing e-books or downloading music will also be affected.

The SA Revenue Service will require all foreign businesses supplying these services in South Africa to register as VAT vendors.

“In the case of imported services or digital supplies, such as e-books or music, no border post or post office can perform the function as collecting agent, as is the case with physical goods,” according to the 2013 Budget Review.

The document says this means consumers are buying services on websites without paying VAT.

Treasury says the new proposals will bring South Africa in line with international trends. It cites regulations adopted by the European Union, which state that those supplying digital goods must register for VAT in the country where consumers reside.

Sapa

Wrap of the Budget Speech 2013


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Wrap of the Budget Speech 2013

How Pravin Gordhan plans to allocate funds to the nation

  • R7 billion in personal income tax relief
  • Sin taxes, fuel levies go up
  • Tax incentives for youth jobs
  • R67.9 billion for more visible policing, crime fighting
  • Health gets R133bn budget
  • Housing development had a budget of R31.9 billion
  • New tax proposals on retirement funds
  • Education gets R200bn
  • R5.7 billion to ensure 645,000 households have electricity
  • R6bn to support 435,000 subsistence farmers and 54,500 smallholder producers
  • Prasa, Sanral get R5 billion to fund plans to renew its fleet.
  • 3.7m jobs aims to be created
  • R100m to partly offset the decreases of contribution that came from US President’s Emergency Plan for Aids Relief programme
  • Unlikely that tax will be increased to fund National Health Insurance
  • Business confidence growing. Plans for construction and refurbishment
  • KZN gets biggest share of budget allocated to provinces
  • R6.5billion extra for water affairs

BUDGET SPEECH: Tax incentives for youth jobs


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Tax incentives to employ young people and for people employed in the special
economic zones (SEZs) are on the cards.

Tabling his 2013 Budget in the National Assembly on Wednesday, Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan said a revised youth employment incentive would be tabled in the National Assembly, together with a proposed employment incentive for SEZs.

Addressing a media briefing before he tabled the budget, Gordhan explained that it would include a tax break for employers, who would “get some money back through the PAYE system”.

According to the 2013 Budget Review, the number of youths without jobs remains exceptionally high, with more than 40 percent of those under the age of 30 unemployed.

Low levels of demand, lack of experience and a lack of appropriate skills and networks were among the reasons young people struggled to find work.

To date, interventions to encourage the private sector to hire younger workers had proven inadequate.

The national development plan (NDP) suggested a range of policies to help young people find work.

According to the budget document, government’s existing approach to increasing employment focused on training, skills development, labour market activation, and short-term public employment.

Programmes in support of these objectives included sector education and training authorities, further education and training colleges, small enterprise support, the Industrial Policy Action Plan, the expanded public works programme, and the community work programme.

To complement existing programmes, a youth employment tax incentive, aimed at encouraging firms to employ young work seekers, would be tabled for consideration by Parliament.

The administratively simple incentive would create a graduated tax incentive at the entry-level wage, falling to zero when earnings reached the personal income tax threshold.

The introduction of this tax incentive, which took into account the concerns of organised labour, would help young people enter the labour market, gain valuable experience, and access career opportunities.

Protection provided by existing labour legislation, combined with oversight by the SA Revenue Service and the labour department, would avoid displacement.

This issue had been at the heart of labour movement opposition to the plan, which was first mooted by Gordhan three years ago as a “youth wage subsidy”.

On Wednesday, the minister refused to comment on the protracted political battle over the measures, saying only that labour had valid concerns which were “clearly expressed” and clearly received.

Gordhan side-stepped a question on whether the incentive had come to replace the subsidy as initially proposed by him.

“The incentive is a further development of the idea that there needs to be cost-sharing — that is the key word. How by sharing costs do we encourage employers in South Africa to employ more young people, and by doing so how do we give young people their first exposure to work?

“That is the main objective, not the politics around this issue.”

A similar tax incentive would be made available to eligible workers of all ages within SEZs, the review stated.

According to the review, these included that in certain SEZs, a 15 percent corporate income tax rate would be authorised for businesses in such areas, as well as an employment incentive allowing a tax deduction for employing workers earning less than R60,000 a year.

Also, an accelerated depreciation allowance for buildings in these areas, based on the existing regime for urban development zones, to encourage developers to invest more in industrial premises.

Gordhan said the SEZs programme, announced last year, had received funding to build world-class industrial parks.

“I am in discussion with [Trade and Industry] Minister [Rob] Davies on specific tax incentives to enhance this initiative,” he said.

We were shot while fleeing, says Marikana survivor


ImageProtesting mineworkers were shot while trying to escape to a nearby informal settlement, a survivor of the August 16 shootings at Marikana told the Farlam Commission on Wednesday.

Mzoxolo Magidiwana, 24, said he joined a group of protesters who “dashed in the direction of Nkaneng” informal settlement when they had observed that police officers were surrounding them.

He denied several statements submitted to the commission, fingering him as the man who was seen wielding a stolen Z88 pistol belonging to the SA Police Service (SAPS).

“When we got closer to one of the Nyalas [an armoured police vehicle], it started moving, dragging barbed wire. The Nyala outpaced us and we were not able to access the road to Nkaneng,” he said.

Magidiwana said at that stage, police started shooting in the direction of the fleeing group.

He said his group made a U-turn and headed towards another gap, in another attempt to flee to Nkaneng.

“As soon as we emerged on the other side of the kraal, we were met with rapid gunfire. I was hit on my left leg. I stumbled and fell behind the others who had been shot, including Noki [a leader of the protesters who was fatally shot],” said Magidiwana, who is on crutches.

He said he was later shot and repeatedly beaten. He said police officers approached him asking him where he had put the firearm.

The police have alleged that Magidiwana was shot in an attempt to disarm him on August 16. He was allegedly found with a Z88 pistol bearing the SAPS emblem.

The police said he was charged with illegal possession of a firearm and ammunition. He was arrested, but could not be detained because of the severity of his wounds.

Magidiwana was hospitalised at various institutions, under police guard.

He was charged as accused number 273 of the protesting mineworkers.

Evidence of another policeman, presented to the commission, was that on August 16, Magidiwana conceded being in possession of the police firearm.

Another police officer submitted that he had seen Magidiwana shooting at a Nyala.

The 24-year-old dismissed the allegations as “nonsense”.

Advocate Dali Mpofu, who represents the mineworkers arrested on August 16, played a sequence of videos captured on August 16. The videos show Magidiwana wielding a stick and wrapping a red blanket.

He was often in front of the protesters.

Another video shows several police officers surrounding a group of fallen mineworkers. The police have their firearms drawn and dead protesters are lying with their faces down. Some police officers are dragging the corpses.

Magidiwana said even as he testified at the commission on Wednesday, he was in pain and that he often visited hospitals.

“I am in severe pain from the wounds on my legs, abdomen, elbow and testicles. I have been advised that there is a strong possibility that I may never be able to father children,” Magidiwana said in an affidavit presented to the commission.

The commission is holding hearings in Rustenburg, North West, as part of its inquiry into the deaths of 44 people during an unprotected strike in Marikana last year.

On August 16, 34 striking mineworkers were shot dead and 78 were injured when the police opened fire while trying to disperse a group which had gathered on a hill near the mine.

Ten people, including two police officers and two security guards, were killed near the mine in the preceding week.

SAPA

Chika murder accused have other pending cases


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BY Obakeng Maje

Klerkdorp- The bail application of David Chika murder accused is underway in Klerksdorp Magistrate Court.

Eight suspects are applying for bail including North West MEC for Local Government and Traditional Affairs and ANC provincial deputy chairman China Dodovu after his arrest on Monday for alleged conspiracy to commit murder.

Dodovu was arrested by the Hawks on Monday and became the eighth suspect in the murder case of the late regional secretary of the ANC’s Dr Kenneth Kaunda region, Aubuti Chika, last year.

He appeared in the Klerksdorp Magistrate’s Court on Tuesday, but his case was postponed to Wednesday where their bail applications are underway.

ANC North West chairman Supra Mahumapelo said Dodovu’s arrest and the charges against him would be discussed at the PEC meeting due on Thursday.

North West Premier Thandi Modise has already announced that Finance MEC Paul Sebego will head Dodovu’s department while he is facing charges, and the ANC is also expected to suspend him when it meets on Thursday.

According to reports, five suspects implicated in Chika’s murder are also investigated for other cases.

Dodovu is likely to be suspended by the largely divided PEC. The fact that he’s not had a warm relationship with Mahumapelo won’t do him any good.

He has been one of the most outspoken opponents of Mahumapelo and his closest allies, ahead of the ANC’s Mangaung conference last year, and has been a staunch ally of suspended provincial secretary Kabelo Mataboge.

But the ANC’s resolution at Mangaung about members facing criminal charges – which is that they must vacate their positions while they face the music – is expected to be the legitimate reason used to cast him aside.

Mahumapelo on Tuesday steered clear of questions about what was likely to happen at the meeting.

“The law will take its course. The officials decided yesterday to report this matter to the PEC when we meet, and they will then discuss it and decide on the way forward. This of course will be done in line with the ANC resolutions taken at Mangaung regarding formally charged members,” Mahumapelo said.

National executive committee (NEC) member Bathabile Dlamini, a deployee to the province, was quick to point out that the ANC presumed all members and individuals innocent until proven guilty, but added the provincial and national leadership would have to deal with the Dodovu matter.

Dodovu arrived in court and smiled and greeted the familiar faces in the courtroom, and chatted casually to his legal representative.

The courtroom was packed to the rafters, with many failing to make it inside to see the most high-profile suspect to be arrested in connection with Chika’s murder.

The attorney for Chika’s family said they were shocked by Dodovu’s arrest but it showed there were many people involved in Chika’s killing.

“Mrs Chika is encouraged that there is serious progress in the investigation of her husband’s murder, though she is still distraught because of his death.

“This has been a very hard time for her and the family, but she is confident the law will take its course,” family attorney Gcina Dlanjwa said outside court.

SA National Civic Organisation chairman in the Kenneth Kaunda region, William Mmolawa, said they were not shocked by Dodovu’s arrest. “We have always believed that he was involved in Chika’s death and we feel vindicated now that the Hawks also came to the same conclusion. It was all because Chika was supporting Zuma and his branch was supporting Zuma.

“We are confident that the courts will arrive at a conviction,” Mmolawa said.

Police beefed up security and were preparing for what is expected to be a huge turnout by Chika’s supporters when all eight suspects, now including Dodovu, will line up together in the dock for the first time.

Meanwhile two factions of supporters are chanting and singing outside the court.

Fire Xingwana over remarks, Zuma urged


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President Jacob Zuma has no option but to fire Women, Children and People with Disabilities Minister Lulu Xingwana after remarks stereotyping Calvinists, the Christian Democratic Party said on Wednesday.

“Many non-Afrikaners, black and white, are members of Calvinist churches and her latest statement could be considered as religious intolerance,” said CDP spokesperson Rev Theunis Botha.

Xingwana made the remarks in an interview for an Australian Broadcasting Corporation segment on the arrest and murder charge against paralympian Oscar Pistorius following the 14 February fatal shooting of his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp.

In the segment, which also looked at violence and gun ownership in South Africa, she said: “Young Afrikaner men are brought up in the Calvinist religion believing that they own a woman, they own a child, they own everything and therefore they can take that life because they own it.”

Stereotype

This prompted the CDP to say that: “This is also not the first time Xingwana stereotyped a community based on untruths.

“In her infamous Church Square speech, she accused farmers across the board of atrocities against farmworkers, based on a single Western Cape incident – by then already proven to be false by the police and reported as such to government months earlier.

“The country does not need demolishers in Cabinet or any other place in government, but bridge-builders.”

Earlier, the Afrikanerbond said Xingwana had “abused her office” and did not reflect honour or dignity in her position.

“This minister has proven beyond any doubt that she is not fit to hold office in a constitutional democracy,” Afrikanerbond secretary Jan Bosman said.

He noted that she had also said: “We also have cultural differences as well in our own communities where we have women who are forced into marriage and we are dealing with all those issues.”

In the ABC report, which aired on Monday, the focus was on how the Pistorius case highlighted gun violence in South Africa.

“I would ask him to tell the truth. I would ask him to respect women,” Xingwana said.

“I would ask him to get rid of all his guns. Because I believe if he did not have guns in his home, Reeva Steenkamp would be alive today.”

Apology

Bosman said Xingwana’s statements were an “extreme verbal attack on the integrity of Afrikaners”.

“It is unwarranted, uncalled for and without any substance. At the very least the minister owes Afrikaners, men, women and children, an apology without any reservations,” Bosman said.

“We can only deduce that she chose to attack Afrikaners to create a smokescreen for her total lack of any programme of action whilst [minister] and to deflect from the serious allegations of corruption and mismanagement in her department and her failure to provide a report with details about these allegations to Parliament.”

The Afrikanerbond would take up the matter with Zuma’s office for the president to “act against one of the most incompetent ministers in his Cabinet”, Bosman said.

Meanwhile, Afrikaner lobby group AfriForum said on Tuesday it was considering bringing a complaint before the Equality Court against Xingwana.

“Xingwana’s remarks boil down to a blatant contravention of various sections of the Promotion of Equality and the Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act,” spokesperson Ernst Roets said.

“She has discriminated on the basis of race, faith and gender. On top of that, she clearly lacks the necessary expertise to talk knowledgeably on the topic.”

Roets said AfriForum had submitted the matter to its legal team.

 SAPA

 

 

North West acting MEC Sebegoe to visit Letlhabile


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Letlhabile- North West acting MEC for Local government mr Paul Sebegoe will visit Letlhabile area to try and calm the situation.

Yesterday more than 25 people were arrested for public violence during an illegal protest in Letlhabile, near Brits, on Tuesday, North West police said.

Colonel Sabata Mokgwabone said the police fired rubber bullets to disperse a group of people marching towards the business area.

He said the group was demanding water, after taps ran dry at the weekend.

“They were promised that they will have water by Monday evening. This morning when there was no water they embarked on an illegal protest march.”

They barricaded the road passing through the township to Hebron.

“Residents then marched from Centreville towards the business areas. Police fired rubber bullets to disperse them,” Mokgwabone said.

Protesters including two women, both aged 35, were arrested for public violence.

Paul Sebegoe is set to visit the area and heed the protesters call of demand.

Police reported that two people were rushed to local clinic with slightly injuries.

The situation is calm and the police are monitoring it.”
      
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