KZN op nets 6 murder, rape suspects


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Johannesburg – Six people were arrested for murder and rape in Inanda, KwaZulu-Natal police said on Saturday.

“Police launched an operation on Thursday night to find suspects for murder cases committed in the area.

“A team of detectives arrested these suspects who had terrorised the community for a long time,” said spokesman Colonel Vincent Mdunge.

Two of the men were charged with murder after they allegedly kidnapped a man from a building outside his home Emanyaseni.

His body was discovered two weeks later by a man herding cattle in the bushes.

“Three men were also arrested for a double murder which took place on Monday when a group of guys allegedly attacked and killed two young men.”

The sixth man was charged with house robbery and rape which took place in the Bhambhayi area., said Mdunge.

The men, who are aged between 18 and 36, would appear in the Ntuzuma Magistrate’s Court on Monday.

– SAPA

Cops probe cause shopping centre blaze


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Johannesburg – Police are probing the cause of a blaze that ripped through the Broadacres Shopping Centre in northern Johannesburg, a report said on Saturday.

According to Eyewitness News, all employees were swiftly evacuated and the fire, which had started around 19:00, was quickly contained.

Sapa reported that two people were treated for smoke inhalation and taken to a nearby hospital, but no other injuries were reported.

EWN said that three restaurants bore the brunt of the fire, the cause of which is still unclear.
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Man fined for self-defence killing


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Mbombela – A Mpumalanga man was sentenced to a fine of R20 000 (or six years’ imprisonment) in the Nelspruit Regional Court on Friday for killing a man in self-defence.

Ernest Friday Motau, 29, from Schoemanskloof, was arrested in June 2010 for stabbing and killing Johannes Kanego Theledi, 34, during a fight outside a tavern.

Magistrate Shirley Msibi told the court Motau had not wasted the court’s time as he pleaded guilty.

“All witnesses stated clearly that you stabbed the deceased in self-defence after you were attacked by a group of men while trying to stop a fight. On evidence provided before the court, you were assaulted and hit with a beer bottle before stabbing him.

“Although you were convicted for assault in 2004, that will not be considered, as you have not been in conflict with the law ever since,” Msibi told Motau.

Motau was initially charged with murder, which was later changed to culpable homicide. Msibi said all those involved were drunk at the time.

She told Msibi he was unfit to possess a firearm, and ruled that half the sentence be suspended for five years, on condition he was not arrested and charged for a similar offence.

“You are also offered an option to pay the fine in instalments until it is completed,” said Msibi. – Sapa

Marikana sangoma case postponed


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Durban – The case against a man allegedly linked to the murder of the sangoma responsible for the rituals performed on Marikana mineworkers has been postponed, the NPA said on Friday.

The 28-year-old man was expected to bring a formal bail application in the Bizana Magistrate’s Court on May 23, National Prosecuting Authority spokesman Luxolo Tyali said. Tyali could not provide the man’s name.

The Hawks arrested the man, from KwaMaphumulo, outside Pietermaritzburg, at Durban’s KwaMashu hostel on Tuesday night.

The sangoma, Alton Zikhuthele Joja, 69, also known as Ndzabe, was at his home in the Ludeke Holt village, in Mbizana, Eastern Cape, when five men armed with pistols and rifles entered his homestead on March 24. They shot him when he approached their car, then fled.

The vehicle was later found abandoned and burnt out, with a rifle inside. Joja died on arrival at a local hospital. He had been expected to testify at the Marikana Commission of Inquiry regarding his role in the rituals that apparently caused protesters to believe they would be invisible and invincible in the face of gunfire.

The commission is investigating the circumstances surrounding the police’s killing of 34 striking mineworkers near Lonmin’s platinum mine in Marikana on August 16, and the deaths the previous week of 10 people, including two policemen, in strike-related unrest. – Sapa

Lean budget will leave SA defenceless


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Cape Town – The annual defence budget debate is an interesting phenomenon. Every year since 1994 there has been almost total cross-party support in Parliament for increases in defence funding; and yet every year the gap between what the government expects of the SANDF and the funding it provides, has widened.
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SA woman bust with drugs in India


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Johannesburg – A South African woman was reportedly caught by customs officials at Mumbai Airport carrying 26 kilogrammes of drugs, the SABC reported on Friday.

According to Indian media reports this was one of the biggest drug busts in recent times.

 

The woman, identified as Sity Lentin, was searched by Indian custom officials as she prepared to board a Ethiopian Airways flight to South Africa, the broadcaster reported.

 

Acting on a tip-off officials searched her luggage and found a false pocket in which drugs like cocaine, methamphetamine and ketamine were concealed.

 

The SABC reported Lentin was believed to work for an event management company which has operations in India, Canada and Singapore.

 

SAPA

Uproar over a planned segregated matric dance


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Johannesburg – The DA and the Mpumalanga education department condemned on Friday an alleged incident of racial segregation at Hendrina Combined School, near Middelburg.

 

The Democratic Alliance’s provincial spokesperson Anthony Benadie said he was told on Thursday of a plan that would have black and white pupils hold separate matric dance events.

 

“[We received] information from angry parents who were… notified at a meeting for the English matric class that the school’s white parents and scholars had decided to host their own matric farewell, and that the black learners must hold their own,” said Benadie in a statement.

 

The department said they were not aware of the incident but were looking into it.

 

“The department condemns any form of discrimination based on race, sex or colour that may take place in any of its schools and will institute a probe into this matter,” said spokesperson Jasper Zwane.

 

The principal of the school Arthur Williams said he could not comment on the matter.

 

“I have been instructed not to speak to the media,” he said.

 

According to the DA, white parents cited “cultural differences” as the reason for the separate events.

 

Benadie said he telephonically engaged with Williams on two separate occasions.

 

“During the first he stated that because the school was unable to pay for a matric dance, the required funds were raised by a parents’ committee.”

 

However, in the second discussion, Benadie said Williams changed his stance, saying that the school was hosting a combined farewell which all learners were invited to attend.

 

SAPA