North West province on poverty alleviation through sport


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BY Obakeng Maje

The North West Department of Sport, Arts and Culture will from March 12- 15 embark on a door-to-door visit to the most deprived wards around the province in support of its mandate to combat the scourge of HIV and poverty.

“MEC Tebogo Modise will be donating books from libraries to rural schools, with preference to War on Poverty and Comprehensive Rural Development Programme areas and identified wards on Friday March 15 at the Boskuil Combined School in the Maquassie Hills Local Municipality, at 10H00” Department spokesperson Vusi Kama said.

Food parcels will be donated to the Oersenskraal Community later on the same day. 

The Department has partnered with the Department of Health and Social Development, as well as Provincial Council on AIDS (PCA) and the South African Social Security Agency (SASSA) to address the needs of the communities.

“The initiative is for the benefit of the broader community and it is part of the war against poverty. It is our duty as the department to give support to the less fortunate and contribute to the fight against HIV and poverty,” said MEC Modise.

This year the events will take place as follows:

DATE

VILLAGE

DISTRICT

TIME

12 MARCH 2013

MANTHE

DR. RUTH MOMPATI

09H00

14 MARCH 2013

DISAKE

BOJANALA

09H00

15 MARCH 2013

OERSONSKRAAL

DR. KENNETH KAUNDA

09H00

 

 

Eskom, Klerksdorp in talks about bill


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Klerksdorp-Parastatal Eskom and the Matlosana (Klerksdorp) municipality, North West, were in talks on Wednesday about an unpaid electricity account.

“Right now, the political head and management (of the municipality) are meeting with Eskom, so they are still in negotiations,” municipal spokeswoman Ntswaki Makgetha said.

Once there was an outcome, the media would be informed, she said.

Beeld reported that Eskom planned to cut the municipality’s power on Thursday unless it paid R91 million.

Cutting the power was a last resort, Eskom spokeswoman Hilary Joffe was quoted as saying.

She said the municipality had been R91m in arrears for more than three months and that no agreement had yet been reached to avoid the cut. – Sapa

Dogs gnawed at a criminal’s charred body


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Cape Town – A young purse snatcher was hunted down and burnt to death by residents fed up of crime.

 

The unidentified man is the 18th victim of mob justice in the Cape since the start of last year.

 

Dogs gnawed at the man’s charred remains in the street where it was left by residents as a warning sign to other criminals.

 

Witnesses said the man, believed to be in his 20s, was cornered after he allegedly snatched a handbag from a woman who was on her way to the train station early on Tuesday morning.

 

The woman was on her way to work when she was approached by the thief.

 

She screamed for help, alerting residents as the man dashed off with her handbag.

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

Mbuyane to undergo scan


ImageThulasizwe Mbuyane will learn later today to which extent is the seriousness of the injury he sustained in the Soweto Derby over the weekend.

The Mamelodi born forward was substituted in the 18th minute of the match after picking up what looked like a thigh strain.

Club Physiotherapist John Williams told Orlandopiratesfc.com earlier today that Mbuyane will undergo a scan later today, and only then he will be able to divulge the full extent of the injury.

“Mbuyane suffered what looks like tear in his thigh but that is all we know for now,” Williams said. “He will see a Doctor later today and only then will we be able to start with treatment. I can’t tell how long he will be out for until the results from the scan.”

Meanwhile, speaking to Orlandopiratesfc.com while on his way to see the Doctor, Mbuyane said he was disappointed to for not finishing the match.

“It was quite sad to learn that I would not be able to carry on,” said Juju. “It is hard to make it into the team especially before the derby. I was happy to have been given the nod to start the match but my joy was short lived due to this injury.

“Initially I thought it wasn’t a bad injury and hence I tried to continue but the pain was unbearable and hence I went to ground,” he explained. “I had to get on the ground and call for help – my whole family gathered in my home, to watch me playing and I was ready baba – now this injury comes, eish. I felt that I let my family down, but unfortunately I had very little control over it.

“I will see the doctor and I hope he will have good news for me,” concluded Mbuyane.

Meyiwa aims for consistency


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Senzo Meyiwa has declared he is on a mission for greater consistency.

Meyiwa who dished out a Man of the Match performance in the Soweto Derby against Kaizer Chiefs over the weekend, revealed at training this morning that he will strive to be more consistent in the remaining league matches.

Prior to the clash against Chiefs, the KwaZulu Natal born goal-minder came under a lot of criticism, after conceding eight goals in the three matches against Maluti FET College (four), Moroka Swallows (three) and Bloemfontein Celtic (one). However, in the recent clash against the perennial rivals Amakhosi, Meyiwa dished out a superlative display to ensure that the Mighty Buccaneers remain five points behind the leaders.

“It is not going to be easy,” said Meyiwa, referring to the race for the league title. “We have a number of tricky encounters left and all the teams are desperate for the three points.

“As a keeper it is very important to be consistent because often, that is the difference between winning and losing titles. Hence I have doubled my efforts in training to ensure that I am ready when called upon.

“I’m currently starting our matches but that doesn’t mean I can relax. There is a lot of competition from Brighton (Mhlongo) who is working very hard at training to get his chance. Furthermore, the fact that Moeneeb (Josephs) is back training, is another motivation for me to remain focused.”

Regarding his clean sheet in the match against Chiefs, Meyiwa complemented his back four and said it was a team effort.

“Awards are great,” he said. “The Man of the Match award I received will go a long way to motivate me to continue doing well but this award could not have been achieved had it not been for the four guys playing in front of me. This is much there award as it is mine. Hopefully this can be the start of something great…..after all, a team that keeps clean sheets doesn’t lose matches.”

 

This is our chance to win silverware – Ngcobo


ImageStriker, Sthembiso Ngcobo has told kaizerchiefs.com that the Nedbank Cup presents the Club with an opportunity to win some silverware and continue with the proud culture of the Club to win trophies.

‘Valdez’ as Ngcobo is affectionately known at the Village was the hero the last time the Glamour Boys won a trophy back in December 2010 as his brace and one goal from Siphiwe Tshabalala sent rivals, Orlando Pirates packing with a 3-0 thumping in the Telkom Cup final played at FNB Stadium.

The KwaZulu/Natal born striker has found it tough to break in to Stuart Baxter’s team with Bernard Parker, Lehlohonolo Majoro and Kingston Nkhatha doing well this season.

He has showed in the past three games in particular against Orlando Pirates when he came on as a substitute that he can still stand up and be counted as Chiefs prepare for a tricky Nedbank encounter against Polokwane City at Moses Mabhida Stadium in Durban on Saturday morning.

“We are all looking forward to the game against Polokwane City. With the Coach (Stuart Baxter) preparations for the game are the same as when we prepared for the Soweto Derby. The competition for places remains fierce and everyone wants to play which is good for the team,” said Ngcobo following a grueling training session at the Kaizer Chiefs Village on Tuesday.

“We know that it is going to be a tough game. I have been here for a while now and we suffered against lower division sides in the past couple of years. We are not taking this game lightly.

Ngcobo also sees the Nedbank as an opportunity for the Club to bring silverware to the Village; “We want to win this Cup and we know we have to beat Polokwane City to take a step closer to our dream. I am also happy the game is being played in Durban, my home province.

“We have a good record in Durban and hopefully we will continue doing well at Moses Mabhida Stadium,” added Ngcobo.

Kickoff is at 20h30.

SAFA Congratulates CAF on a successful congress and election of executive committee members


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On Sunday, 10 March 2013, SAFA participated in the 35th CAF Congress wherein the future of the sport on the continent was discussed by all 54 Members of CAF.

We are encouraged by the report that CAF made a surplus of USD18 million in the last financial year and look forward to helping it to build on that success.

We are also excited by the launch of the CAF Hall of Fame and look forward to the induction of the continent’s football heroes into this Hall of Fame. We congratulate FIFA President, Mr Joseph ‘Sepp’ Blatter and the President of CAF, Mr Issa Hayatou, as the first two inductees into the CAF Hall of Fame.

“We also congratulate the new Members of the CAF Executive Committee (Exco) on their election and wish them well in their important work. We have no doubt that they will take our confederation to new heights and we look forward to working with the CAF Executive Committee to improve the sport on the continent,” says SAFA President, Mr Kirsten Nematandani.

Whilst we may not have been able to get our candidate elected to the CAF Exco, “we are truly grateful for the strong support shown by our sister federations who voted in support of South Africa’s candidate. This is indeed encouraging for South Africa’s future role in African football,” says Mr Nematandani.

SAFA notes with concern the deviation from the 2012 COSAFA decision that the two positions reserved for the Southern Zone on the CAF Exco would be allocated to a candidate from the Indian Ocean islands and the other to a candidate from the mainland.

SAFA regrets that this decision was not implemented when a second candidate from the islands continued to participate in the 2nd round of voting after the first candidate from the islands was elected. SAFA will therefore engage COSAFA vigorously on the matter.

We thank President Issa Hayatou for his unstinting support of South Africa’s candidacy and his continued confidence in the South African Football Association as a valued member of the CAF family.

Ground-breaking SKA tech sought


ImageJOHANNESBURG – The search is on for new technology that will allow scientists to process the massive amount of information that will be gathered by the Square Kilometer Array (SKA).
The SKA will be the world’s most powerful radio telescope and will be managed by a consortium of countries. The telescope will mostly be built in South Africa.

A four-year partnership has been struck with IBM and the Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy (Astron), to develop the computer systems that are required.
These will include complex algorithms to process the data and allow scientists to study it.
The SKA’s Jasper Horrell said the computers and systems will also have to be able to survive desert conditions.

“If we tried to build the SKA within a day, it wouldn’t be possible because the computing technology and algorithms that are needed haven’t been developed yet.”

According to the Astron website, the aperture arrays and dishes of the SKA will produce massive amounts of data, but the power to process all of it does not exist yet.

When the SKA is completed, it will collect “megadata” from deep space containing information dating back to the Big Bang more than 13 billion years ago.

For more details go to www.ewn.co.za

Macia murder accused kept behind bars ‘for own safety’


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BENONI – Nine Daveyton policemen accused of killing Mozambican taxi driver Mido Macia will remain in custody as they prepare to defend themselves in their murder trial.

The men were all denied bail in the Benoni Magistrate’s Court on Tuesday. They were arrested late last month.

The 27-year-old taxi driver was found dead in holding cells at the Daveyton Police Station on 26 February, hours after he was handcuffed to a police van and dragged hundreds of metres.

Macia’s ordeal was filmed by angry community members who say they pleaded with police to stop.

It has been claimed the taxi driver resisted arrest for parking his vehicle in an illegal spot on a road and threatening one of the policemen with a firearm.

The murder accused are Thamsanqa Ncema, Linda Sololo, Meshack Malele, Motome Walter Ramatlou, Percy Mnisi, Bongumusa Mdluli, Sipho Ngobeni, Lungisa Ewababa and Bongani Kolisi.

The bail application concluded yesterday after lengthy arguments from the state and defence.

Macia’s family hugged each other tightly as Magistrate Sam Makamu read out that all the accused had been denied bail.

“I don’t think it is in the interest of justice for the applicants to be released on bail at this stage. And as such, the application is dismissed.”

In the dock, the policemen’s heads dropped as court interpreters relayed the news.

In a judgment that lasted nearly two hours, Makamu ruled it was not guaranteed the men would not interfere with witnesses.

He also said allowing the accused to return to their homes, situated in Daveyton, was risky.

The matter will return to court on 12 April, when a trial date will be set.

‘WATER-TIGHT’ CASE

The state prosecutor in the case against the policemen yesterday said they had a watertight case thanks to the Independent Police Investigative Directorate (IPID), which is leading the probe into Macia’s death.

December Mthimunye said he is proud of the IPID team and confident about going to trial.

“They were met with so many challenges. You must understand, the people they are investigating are their colleagues… It is not your simple, straight-forward case whereby [there] is one accused. We’re talking about nine different accused being police officers.”

For more details go to www.ewn.co.za

No one arrested yet for Mosiane’s death


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North West – Below the ground, a female miner lay in a pool of blood, dead and possibly raped. A bloodstained rock and a lunch box were found next to her battered body.

 

Now, more than a year later, no one has been arrested for Pinky Mosiane’s murder.

 

North West police said they were still awaiting forensic results to determine whether the 35-year-old was raped.

 

She was killed at Amplats’s Khomanani mine in Rustenburg, where she worked as a sorter on a conveyor belt, on February 6 last year.

 

Asked whether they had dealt with other attacks or rapes on women underground, the police said no others had been reported.

 

This story seeks not to suggest that Mosiane was raped, but focuses on underground sexual activities. The Star visited mines around Rustenburg and asked the question: Is there sex taking place underground? Almost all the men said yes, while female workers preferred not to comment.

 

Former miner Tuswell Kgosi said sex was taking place daily in many forms underground.

 

“I don’t think it will be easy for a woman to be raped underground, but women are forced by circumstances rather to have sex with men they wouldn’t normally sleep with out of choice.

 

“Underground sex is more of a transaction which involves sex but doesn’t always involve money,” Kgosi said.

 

“Fact is, people are having sex underground on a daily basis – from discreet sex to sexual favours for men who perform tasks for those women.

 

“It will never end because women are underground, but they’re still not able to perform most of the tasks and have to rely on their male colleagues who prefer sexual favours.”

 

Kgosi said used condoms often found in disused hallways and dark corners were evidence that sex was rife in the mines.

 

An industrial sociology masters degree thesis by Wits University student Asanda Benya shed some light on this. Benya spent some time at Impala Platinum mines in Rustenburg, working underground, as part of her research in 2009.

 

Part of her paper, titled “Women in mining: A challenge to occupational culture in mines”, focused on sex underground.

 

Kgosi said some underground jobs were still too heavy and not easy for women. “Some jobs like winch operator are a challenge for women, especially when the thick cable of a scraper snaps, as an operator has to fix it. This is where they need a male colleague to assist, and it takes a favour for this to be done,” he said.

 

“Some women are, however, plain lazy and prefer hanging around men to get them to do their job, then thank them later in kind because they can’t say to their supervisors that any job is too heavy for them. They need those jobs for survival.

 

“Some have sex with male colleagues for money because they need to supplement their salary, which is more like prostitution where two colleagues negotiate a transaction.”

 

In her paper, Benya said women were using their “femininity to cope with their work and obtain favours from men”, and that occasionally “women do sexual favours for men in exchange for help”.

 

Those interviewed told Benya that generally “shift bosses and miners sleep with women and in return lessen their workload”.

 

Benya also emphasised that “sexual favours are very common underground”.

 

“Mine management argues that having strict sex rules does not help because workers are adults and are free to do what they want, especially outside of work. Women therefore use sex and sexuality as another coping mechanism in the workplace,” Benya wrote.

 

A female senior geologist at Lonmin platinum mine, Caroline Mulaudzi, believes that much has changed in mining as the industry is becoming more accommodating to women.

 

She remembers having to use the toilet on the surface before descending into the mine when she started working about nine years ago as she would not use the filthy ablution facilities underground.

 

“Now there are cleaner, gender-dedicated ablution facilities. Things are changing and the underground is not as uncomfortable and maybe unwelcoming to women as it used to be,” Mulaudzi said.

 

Although she is now at managerial level, she could not dispute that sex was taking place underground, but raised her concerns.

 

“These people are adults and I just hope they are being responsible because HIV/Aids is a serious concern. If indeed women are rewarding men with sex for doing their jobs, then this will hamper their growth in mining,” she said.

 

“I believe as women we need to stand up and prove that no job is gender specific. Mining companies are big on woman empowerment, and they should take advantage of this and enhance their mining careers.”

Courtesy of http://www.iol.co.zaNorth West – Below the ground, a female miner lay in a pool of blood, dead and possibly raped. A bloodstained rock and a lunch box were found next to her battered body.

 

Now, more than a year later, no one has been arrested for Pinky Mosiane’s murder.

 

North West police said they were still awaiting forensic results to determine whether the 35-year-old was raped.

 

She was killed at Amplats’s Khomanani mine in Rustenburg, where she worked as a sorter on a conveyor belt, on February 6 last year.

 

Asked whether they had dealt with other attacks or rapes on women underground, the police said no others had been reported.

 

This story seeks not to suggest that Mosiane was raped, but focuses on underground sexual activities. The Star visited mines around Rustenburg and asked the question: Is there sex taking place underground? Almost all the men said yes, while female workers preferred not to comment.

 

Former miner Tuswell Kgosi said sex was taking place daily in many forms underground.

 

“I don’t think it will be easy for a woman to be raped underground, but women are forced by circumstances rather to have sex with men they wouldn’t normally sleep with out of choice.

 

“Underground sex is more of a transaction which involves sex but doesn’t always involve money,” Kgosi said.

 

“Fact is, people are having sex underground on a daily basis – from discreet sex to sexual favours for men who perform tasks for those women.

 

“It will never end because women are underground, but they’re still not able to perform most of the tasks and have to rely on their male colleagues who prefer sexual favours.”

 

Kgosi said used condoms often found in disused hallways and dark corners were evidence that sex was rife in the mines.

 

An industrial sociology masters degree thesis by Wits University student Asanda Benya shed some light on this. Benya spent some time at Impala Platinum mines in Rustenburg, working underground, as part of her research in 2009.

 

Part of her paper, titled “Women in mining: A challenge to occupational culture in mines”, focused on sex underground.

 

Kgosi said some underground jobs were still too heavy and not easy for women. “Some jobs like winch operator are a challenge for women, especially when the thick cable of a scraper snaps, as an operator has to fix it. This is where they need a male colleague to assist, and it takes a favour for this to be done,” he said.

 

“Some women are, however, plain lazy and prefer hanging around men to get them to do their job, then thank them later in kind because they can’t say to their supervisors that any job is too heavy for them. They need those jobs for survival.

 

“Some have sex with male colleagues for money because they need to supplement their salary, which is more like prostitution where two colleagues negotiate a transaction.”

 

In her paper, Benya said women were using their “femininity to cope with their work and obtain favours from men”, and that occasionally “women do sexual favours for men in exchange for help”.

 

Those interviewed told Benya that generally “shift bosses and miners sleep with women and in return lessen their workload”.

 

Benya also emphasised that “sexual favours are very common underground”.

 

“Mine management argues that having strict sex rules does not help because workers are adults and are free to do what they want, especially outside of work. Women therefore use sex and sexuality as another coping mechanism in the workplace,” Benya wrote.

 

A female senior geologist at Lonmin platinum mine, Caroline Mulaudzi, believes that much has changed in mining as the industry is becoming more accommodating to women.

 

She remembers having to use the toilet on the surface before descending into the mine when she started working about nine years ago as she would not use the filthy ablution facilities underground.

 

“Now there are cleaner, gender-dedicated ablution facilities. Things are changing and the underground is not as uncomfortable and maybe unwelcoming to women as it used to be,” Mulaudzi said.

 

Although she is now at managerial level, she could not dispute that sex was taking place underground, but raised her concerns.

 

“These people are adults and I just hope they are being responsible because HIV/Aids is a serious concern. If indeed women are rewarding men with sex for doing their jobs, then this will hamper their growth in mining,” she said.

 

“I believe as women we need to stand up and prove that no job is gender specific. Mining companies are big on woman empowerment, and they should take advantage of this and enhance their mining careers.”

Courtesy of http://www.iol.co.za