“Professor” in the dock over police uniform


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Durban – A kwaito musician will have to face the music for wearing an eThekwini metro police uniform to an awards ceremony, the NPA said on Wednesday.

 

The National Prosecuting Authority had issued a summons for Mkhonzeni “Professor” Langa to appear in the Durban Magistrate’s Court on May 17, spokeswoman Natasha Ramkisson said.

 

He would face charges of impersonating a police officer, possession of a police uniform, and wearing a police uniform, in violation of the SAPS Act of 1995.

 

He wore the uniform at the Metro FM Music Awards held in Durban on February 23. He had been expected to appear in court the following week, but the chief prosecutor referred the case back to police for further investigation.

 

Ramkisson said on Wednesday the investigation had been completed and the senior public prosecutor had decided to take the matter to court.

 

Under the SA Police Service Act it is an offence for anyone not a police officer to wear a police uniform without permission. The act also regulates unauthorised use of metro police uniforms.

 

If convicted, Langa could be fined or sentenced to six months in jail. Impersonating a police officer carries a jail term of up to two years.

 

Ethekwini mayor James Nxumalo was among those who saw Langa receiving his two awards in the uniform. – Sapa

Pirates and Ajax in a 2-2 thriller


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Ajax Cape Town coach Jan Versleijen feels his side should have beaten Orlando Pirates comfortably in their league match on Wednesday night, but cited his side’s lack of composure in front of goal as the reason for more dropped points.

 

The Absa Premiership game at Cape Town Stadium ended 2-2 in an enthralling match where chances were created almost at will, and while Versleijen says he would have taken the draw before kick-off he feels his side ‘should have scored five or six’.

For more http://www.iol.co.za

Confusion over Mandela daughter


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Johannesburg – A legal attempt to push advocate George Bizos SC, Cabinet Minister Tokyo Sexwale and attorney Bally Chuene out of companies connected to former president Nelson Mandela will be opposed.

 

“We are instructed to record our clients’ complete rejection of the scurrilous allegations made by the applicants in their papers,” Michael Hart, director at the law firm Norton Rose, said in a statement.

For more http://www.iol.co.za

SA owes Hani debt of gratitude- Zuma


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Johannesburg – South Africa owes assassinated SA Communist Party leader Chris Hani a debt of gratitude for what he did during the struggle, President Jacob Zuma said on Wednesday.

 

This debt could be repaid by showing commitment to society, Zuma said at a wreath-laying ceremony at the Thomas Titus Nkobi Memorial Park in Elspark, east of Johannesburg, to commemorate the 20th anniversary of Hani’s assassination.

 

“We must hasten to usher in the type of society comrade Chris lived and died for,” Zuma said.

 

“We must honour the memory of comrade Chris by developing a better life for all, that he believed in.”

 

Zuma said it was impossible to see complete change in just 20 years. The damage done by apartheid would be with the country for some time, he said.

 

“To suggest we cannot blame apartheid for what is happening in our country now, I think is a mistake to say the least.

 

“We don’t need to indicate what it is apartheid did. The fact that the country is two in one, you go to any city there is a beautiful part and squatters on the other side, this is not the making of democracy and we can’t stop blaming those who caused it,” said Zuma.

 

Hani was shot dead outside his house in Boksburg on April 10, 1993. – Sapa

Pirates and Ajax desperate for points


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Ajax Cape Town and Orlando Pirates will both be desperate for the points on offer when they clash at Cape Town Stadium on Wednesday. 

 

Kick-off at 18h30.

 

Ajax claimed their first League win of 2013 this past weekend when they defeated Free State Stars 4-2 at home.

The Cape Town team has recorded four wins, five draws and two defeats from their 11 home matches so far this season. The Urban Warriors are placed 14th on the log with 22 points from 23 matches.

For more http://www.kickoff.com

Newborn kicked to death-Police


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Eastern Cape – A newborn baby has been kicked to death in Mqanduli, near Mthatha, Eastern Cape police said on Wednesday.

 

Major Zamukulungisa Jozana said a woman went to a neighbour’s house for help when she went into labour on Sunday.

 

“On her arrival at the neighbour’s house, she gave birth to an infant.

 

“Immediately thereafter, the owner of the house entered and became furious, kicking the infant wrapped in a jacket. The infant died immediately,” said Jozana.

 

The man apparently ran away when he realised the baby had died, police said.

 

The motive was not known and no arrests had been made. – Sapa

ASA suspends officials and staff


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Six Athletics SA (ASA) board members were suspended on Wednesday, ASA president James Evans said.

 

He said vice-president Hendrick Ramaala and financial manager Terrence Magogodela were among them.

 

“Six board members have been suspended pending the outcome of disciplinary cases against them which have been referred to the disciplinary committee,” Evans said in a statement.

 

“The cases will be finalised as soon as reasonably and fairly possible if the suspended members co-operate with the disciplinary committee.”

 

Ramaala, a former elite marathon runner, Shireen Noble, Esther Malema, Pieter Lourens, James Moloi and Qwadiso Ntathu would all face disciplinary hearings.

 

Evans said Morgan Matholeni had been appointed as acting ASA general manager.

 

Last week, Evans obtained an urgent interdict in the High Court in Pretoria, preventing ASA board members from taking any further action in their attempt to remove him from his post, pending the result of an arbitration hearing.

 

Evans believed the board failed to follow constitutional processes last month when a meeting was called to have him impeached.

 

“Certain board members continued with their course of conduct, which ultimately brought them into breach of the court order,” Evans said.

 

Since the motion of impeachment was passed, Evans said ASA had descended into a state of chaos.

 

The ASA bank account had been frozen, despite the embattled federation receiving a financial boost last month when it signed a new broadcast rights deal with the SABC.

 

Overdue payments had not been made, which included outstanding prize money to athletes, and ASA had received “several threats of legal action”, including from the SA Revenue Service (Sars).

 

Evans confirmed that staff members had not been paid, and he criticised the board for not pursuing allegations of improper behaviour in the finance department.

 

“In short, those board members involved have left the sport in disarray,” Evans said.

 

“While making… allegations against me of running the sport as a one-man show, the board members concerned have been taking decisions without referring to other board members or following any policy and procedures.

 

“This has to end if the organisation is to not be liquidated. Money which should be spent on the sport is wasted on further personal political battles, and the sport [is] damaged irretrievably.”

 

The special general meeting scheduled to be held in Stellenbosch on Saturday would go ahead as planned.

 

The agenda would include a reconsideration of the decision made at the SGM in Johannesburg in March to impeach Evans. An independent commission of inquiry would also be set up to investigate the affairs of ASA and its financial situation.

 

“The focus of ASA shall be on restoring the organisation’s administrative and financial integrity and then rebuilding confidence in the sport, which has taken such a battering during the past month,” Evans said.

 

Evans’s impeachment followed accusations that he made payments to himself from ASA’s coffers, entered into various agreements and settlements with ASA staff without the board’s knowledge, and instructed the chief financial officer to make payments without the board’s authority.

 

Evans and Ramaala squared off in a public spat through the media following the SGM. While Evans maintained that he was still ASA president, Ramaala, who called the previous meeting, reportedly claimed Evans had been suspended.

       

-Sapa

PSL considers fencing off fans from action again


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THE reintroduction of crowd-control netting at football stadiums was mooted at a Premier Soccer League management meeting on Monday following the weekend’s vuvuzela attack debacle.

Fresh security concerns were raised on Saturday when a pitch invader attempted to strike referee Lwandile Mfiki with a vuvuzela draped with a Kaizer Chiefs flag during an Absa Premiership clash between Lamontville Golden Arrows and Amakhosi at the Moses Mabhida Stadium in Durban. Chiefs and the PSL quickly condemned the act and two supporters have been charged and each was released on R500 bail.

For more http://www.sowetanlive.co.za

Tatane cops were working during trial: Reports


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Johannesburg – Seven policemen acquitted of killing protester Andries Tatane returned to work in 2012 while their trial was still pending, according to a media report on Wednesday.

 

The Sowetan quoted Free State police spokesperson Brigadier Billy Jones as saying that after a disciplinary process it was decided the policemen could resume work, and they were assigned administrative tasks.

 

Jones said the internal disciplinary process was distinct from the criminal case.

 

Police had not yet been officially informed by the National Prosecuting Authority of its investigation into two other police members who testified in the trial and were suspected of perjury.

 

Jones could not say whether the men would be suspended pending the NPA probe.

 

At the end of March, Ficksburg regional magistrate Hein van Niekerk found the State could not prove its case of murder and assault against the seven policemen beyond reasonable doubt.

 

During the trial, two officers testifying for the State recanted their original statements. They claimed they were threatened into making statements to the Independent Police Investigative Directorate.

 

Tatane died on April 13, 2011, after police used rubber bullets and batons to subdue him during a service delivery protest in Ficksburg. The case received huge media attention when footage of Tatane’s assault was broadcast nationally. – Sapa

De Sa: We still have a chance


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While many have written Orlando Pirates off in the title race, Roger de Sa believes his side are still contenders ahead of their clash against Ajax.

De Sa’s troops – on 44 points, eight behind table-topping Kaizer Chiefs – have two games in hand over their Soweto rivals.

 

“We are one point better than where Pirates were last year at this stage of the season,” De Sa pointed out.

For more http://www.mg.co.za