Cops in court for theft of drug money


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Bellville – Three policemen accused of theft and extortion appeared in the Bellville Specialised Commercial Crime Court on Thursday.

They allegedly kicked down Anton Pillay’s door last February and confiscated a plastic bank bag containing 15 sachets of tik and R1 650, he told the court.

He said the policemen remarked that he had a lot of money, and said they would let him go if he gave them R100 each. He did so and was allowed to leave.

Pillay was testifying in the trial of Constable Nkosinathi Mdiya, Warrant Officer Mogamat Meniers and Sergeant Heinrich Gordon, all of whom have plead not guilty.

Mdiya is charged with two counts of theft, two of robbery and one of extortion; Meniers is charged with one count of theft and one of corruption; and Gordon faces three theft counts, two of corruption, two of extortion, and two of robbery.

Pillay told the court he lived in an informal settlement in Diep River, and that his girlfriend went to the police after an argument.

He said he was asleep, and groggy from drugs, when the police knocked on his shack door, then smashed it down.

Asked by prosecutor Xolile Jonas what happened to the drugs, he said: “I don’t know, and did not care. I just wanted to be out of the police station.”

He said no investigation docket was opened against him.

Asked why he laid charges against Meniers and Gordon, he said: “They had arrested me before on other charges, and I thought it wrong of them to take my money like that”.

Defence attorney Shantell Morgan said Meniers would tell the court that Pillay’s girlfriend went to the police because he was holding her child hostage, and that their visit to his home had nothing to do with drugs or money.

“My client will say that when they arrived at your shack they heard a child screaming behind the locked shack door and that they kicked down the door because Pillay refused to open it.”

Pillay denied taking the child hostage.

The case was postponed until September 16. – Sapa

Mpofu grills police boss on Marikana


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Pretoria – Lawyer Dali Mpofu finished weeks of cross-examination of national police commissioner Riah Phiyega at the Farlam Commission of Inquiry on Thursday.

While Phiyega had hoped it would be her last day at the commission, sitting in Centurion, its chairman, retired judge Ian Farlam, told her she would have to appear again next week to be cross-examined by another lawyer.

This would be followed by her re-examination by Ishmael Semenya, who is appearing for the police.

The commission is investigating the circumstances surrounding the deaths of 44 people – including 34 at the hands of the police – during strike-related violence at Lonmin’s platinum mine in Marikana last year.

Mpofu, who represents the miners who were wounded and arrested in the violence, accused Phiyega of being deceitful in accepting her commanders’ reasons why the police plan resulted in deaths.

He said she had also failed to properly investigate claims that the police planted weapons on some of the miners after shooting them.

“The South African public deserves a national commissioner who’ll satisfy them in proving that the weapons were planted by her subordinates,” he said.

Phiyega dismissed the criticism as invalid. “I did an investigation, of which I acquired expert advice,” she said.

She told the commission one of the experts she appointed to investigate was a top detective, and that she had accepted his report.

Mpofu said the wounded miners were lucky to have survived. He said the police had tried to murder them when they shot at them.

“You insensitively described the incident as the best of responsible policing,” he said.

He told the commission two of Phiyega’s predecessors had been removed from office for issues far less serious than the deaths of 34 people.

Mpofu accused Phiyega of giving her blessing to the implementation of stage three of the police’s plan, at a time when the police had a false perception of the matter at hand.

Earlier, Mpofu told the commission the police had been unable to roll out a suitable plan as they did not have the right diagnosis for the problem.

“If I can prove at the end that there was a series of misdiagnosis of the situation, then the police’s plan was doomed to fail,” he said.

He submitted that the police had not appropriately addressed the situation as they had believed the unrest was largely associated with union rivalry. Workers were also demanding higher wages.

He and Phiyega spent a large amount of time debating at what point the police were informed of the underlying wage issues associated with the strike.

Phiyega said she knew there was a matter regarding R12 500. “Whether it was a wage dispute or anything, I don’t know,” she said.

Mpofu asked her whether she believed the unrest was a wage-related matter in which criminal activity had surfaced.

He referred her to a statement by ANC deputy president Cyril Ramaphosa, whose company Shanduka owns shares in Lonmin, in which he acknowledged having sent an email to Lonmin the day before the fatal police shooting.

“The terrible events that have unfolded cannot be described as a labour dispute. They are plainly dastardly criminal and must be characterised as such,” Ramaphosa wrote.

“In line with this characterisation, there needs to be concomitant action to address the situation.”

Mpofu said this was sent the day Mineral Resources Minister Susan Shabangu labelled the matter a labour dispute.

President Jacob Zuma later described the situation in a manner that suggested it was a hybrid of labour and crime.

Phiyega said the police had viewed the matter as a law and order issue when they went to Marikana.

Mpofu said he was pursuing the angle that there was a campaign to characterise it as solely criminal, because Police Minister Nathi Mthethwa had said maximum force could be used only if this was the case.

During his cross-examination, Mpofu also accused Phiyega of failing to apologise for the incidents in Marikana.

“You haven’t said sorry. All you have said is that you never said that you are not sorry,” he said.

The commission resume on Friday, with the testimony of Major-General William Mpembe. – Sapa

Time for Cassel Mathale to go


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One of the important decisions taken by the ANC after the Mangaung conference was the disbandment of the national executive committee of the ANC Youth League and the ANC provincial executive committee (PEC) in Limpopo.

It was a commendable and necessary decision given the serious internal problems of the youth league and its inherently oppositional relationship with the ANC national leadership.
For more http://www.thestar.co.za

Inheritance is a gift, not a right


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Johannesburg – Is inheritance an entitlement or a gift? To put it differently, are children justified in suing parents for inheritance? In many parts of the world, people are faced with these vexing questions.

An Australian billionaire, Gina Rinehart, who inherited a mining empire from her father has locked horns with her three children. Although the children were blessed with a stake in the family trust, they are now fighting back in court after being denied ownership shares.
For more http://www.thestar.co.za