ANC on downward spiral- Malema


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Johannesburg – The ANC is on a downward spiral ideologically, politically and morally, expelled ANC Youth League president Julius Malema said on Monday.

 

It was no longer committed to the freedom charter, he wrote in an open letter to Thami ka Plaatjie.

 

Malema was responding to Ka Plaatjie’s open letter to him, which was published in the Sunday Independent.

 

He accused the African National Congress under President Jacob Zuma of demoting South Africa to a government of thieves which used selective prosecutions and secrecy to hide its looting of the resources which should better the people’s lives.

 

He claimed it was an association of careerists and neo-liberal bureaucrats whose sole mission and role was protecting the interests of white monopoly capital.

 

Malema announced last week his intention to establish a new political platform called the Economic Freedom Fighters.

 

In his letter, Ka Plaatjie wrote that Malema would be sealing his doom if he established a party out of anger and frustration.

 

The former Pan Africanist Congress (PAC) secretary general left the party in 2009 to found the Pan Africanist Movement, and resigned from it to join the ANC in May 2011. 

 

He is now an adviser to Public Service and Administration Minister Lindiwe Sisulu.

 

He said that in blaming Zuma’s hatred of him for his expulsion, he was personalising organisational discipline to rivalry between himself and the ANC’s leaders.

 

“You are aggrieved because you have lost property and have suffered public humiliation for what you regard as your beliefs. Are these the ranks that you wish to abandon and curse?” Ka Plaatjie asked.

 

“My counsel to you, son of Africa, is to stay within the ranks of the glorious movement, lick your wounds, regain your resolve, up your chin and submit to organisational discipline and fate will be the best arbiter.”

 

He said Malema had little chance of taking on the ANC and winning.

 

Foolishness

 

In his response, Malema wrote that this advice did not make sense, as he was not a member of the ANC.

 

He also believed that in the ANC, under Zuma, tribalism, regionalism, and factionalism would be entrenched to marginalise all radical economic perspectives.

 

He also said his Economic Freedom Fighters platform was not an ANC breakaway.

 

Instead, it consisted of revolutionaries who, “having realised suppression of radical economic thoughts and policy direction in the ANC, have chosen to establish an independent platform to gain mass power, political power, the state and then transform the economy for the benefit of all South Africans”.

 

Malema said that, to him and his followers, politics was not a profession for obsession with upward mobility at the expense of principle.

 

He said he had urged that the struggle for economic freedom in his lifetime be intensified long before charges were brought against him, and had known he and his followers could face banishment, criminalisation and threats to their lives because this would directly challenge white monopoly capital.

 

However, he had refused to back down, even in the face of the disciplinary action which resulted in his expulsion, because he believed the struggle was genuine.

 

He believed the struggle should be extended to Botswana, Namibia, Malawi, Angola, Mozambique, Angola, Lesotho, Swaziland, the rest of the African continent, and intensified in Zimbabwe.

 

Malema said the ANC was not the alpha and omega of revolutionary politics in South Africa and that many major political events had transpired without its involvement.

 

To think it was only the ANC under Zuma which would carry the struggle forward was “foolishness”, he said.

 

SAPA

 

Thousands march over education


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Johannesburg – Thousands of school children and Equal Education (EE) members marched in Pretoria and Cape Town on Monday to demand that Basic Education Minister Angie Motshekga publish norms and standards on school infrastructure.

 

They also called for safer and better resourced schools.

 

In Cape Town, around 2 500 learners marched to Parliament, where they delivered a memorandum to a representative of the basic education department.

 

Other marches were held in Johannesburg and Durban on Sunday.

 

According to EE, 3 544 schools have no electricity, 401 have no water and 2 611 have an unreliable water supply; 913 have no toilet facilities and 11 450 are using pit toilets.

 

It said many schools also had inadequate library, laboratory and computer centres resources.

 

Last week, EE announced it was taking Motshekga to court for allegedly breached an agreement to publish the binding minimum norms and standards document for school infrastructure by 15 May.

 

The matter will be heard by the Eastern Cape High Court on 11 July.

 

SAPA

Two sisters raped in Boitekong


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By Obakeng Maje

Boitekong-Police are investigating a case of rape after two children aged 10 and 12 who are reported to be sisters were allegedly raped on Friday at about 14:30.

“It is alleged that the victims were playing at a nearby open space when they were approached a by an unknown man who asked them for the directions to a nearby school” captain pelonomi Makau said. 

Police said the victims directed the suspect as he requested and he then asked them to accompany him.

“It is alleged that the suspect changed directions and took them to a nearby bushes where he allegedly raped them” Makau said. 

The victims reported the incident to their sister who took them to the police. 

Police took the victims to the hospital where rape was confirmed.

Follow us on Twitter@Taung_DailyNews

Rustenburg woman raped by unknown man


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By Obakeng Maje

Rustenburg-A teenager was allegedly raped by unknown suspect in Rustenburg on Sunday.

Police said a 26 year-old woman was allegedly from a local shop went confronted by a suspect.

“A girl was allegedly raped in an open field on her way home. She was allegedly confronted by unknown man who forced himself on her” captain Pelonomi Makau said.

Police opened a case of rape and are looking for an unknown man who pounced on her.

Police investigations continue.

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A man found murdered in Klerksdorp


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By Obakeng Maje

Klerksdorp-North West police open a case of murder after a man found murdered in the street on sunday.

The incident took place at Alabama township near Klerksdorp.

“An unknown man was allegedly found with multiple stabbing wounds in an open field in Alabama” said Pelonomi Makau.

Police opened a murder case and no one has been arrested yet.

Police investigations continue.

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A man stabbed to death on Youth Day


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By Obakeng Maje

Jourberton-North West police arrested a 23 year-old suspect for allegedly stabbing a 27 year-old man with a knife on Youth Day at a local tavern in Extension 10, near Jouberton. “The two were allegedly engaged in an argument that led to a fight” captain Pelonomi Makau said.  

Police said the deceased sustained multiple stabbed wounds on his head, ear and arms. 

A 27 year-old man was rushed to hospital and died on arrival. 

The suspect was allegedly stabbed by deceased in a chest and will appear before Klerksdorp Magistrate’s Court on Tuesday on charges of Murder.

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Ethopia may lose points, Bafana waiting


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Fifa has confirmed opening an investigation into the Ethiopian Football Association after they allegedly fielded an ineligible player in their World Cup qualifying campaign.

 

KickOff.com has established through match reports on Fifa’s website that the player is Minyahile Beyene, who should not have played against Botswana on June 8, 2013 as he was on two yellow cards.

 

He was booked against South Africa in June 2012 in a match played in Rustenburg and against Botswana in March 2013 in Addis Ababa and therefore, he was suspended for the match against Botswana on June 8 in Lobatse.

 

In a similar case recently, Sudan were docked three points and three goals which were handed to Zambia for using an ineligible player in their 2-0 win over Chipolopolo in a 2014 World Cup qualifier in June 2012.

 

As it stands, Ethiopia have reached the World Cup play-offs following their 2-1 victory over Bafana on Sunday in Addis Ababa, but their fate is now in FIFA’s hands.

 

If they are docked three points, those would be awarded to Botswana. Ethiopia would then have 10 points, Bafana 8, Botswana 7 and Central African Republic 3 with the last round of matches to be played in September.

For more http://www.kickoff.com

Qunu: Clergy locked out over pics


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Johannesburg – A delegation of Christians was turned away from former president Nelson Mandela’s Qunu, Eastern Cape, home on Sunday because they were taking photographs after being warned not to, police said.

“They were taking some photos [outside the house] after they were informed not to take any,” Lieutenant Colonel Mzukisi Fatyela said.

 

Two policemen turned away the missionaries, from the Reformed Church of Christ and the Apostolic Faith Mission, when they arrived at the Mandela house, to offer their prayers and support.

 

A Sapa correspondent reported that two members of the group, while attempting to take pictures of themselves outside the house, were temporarily arrested and held inside a security room at the gate. This resulted in a heated exchange between the group and the police.

 

“It was not a big issue, there were no arrests,” Fatyela said.

 

Apostolic Faith Mission women’s leader Nomzingisi Jonga, 44, said they went to the gate wanting to know why the two were arrested.

 

“We came here because we had a prophecy at our night vigil yesterday [Saturday], to… pray for Madiba in his grounds. Now we are being denied access and also we were told not to pray in front of his gate.

 

“I wish I could share with you the prophecy, but now it is only God who knows. Let His will be done,” said Jonga.

 

The group then crossed the N2 Transkei road, to pray in public. Thambisa Nomatshitshi, 21, said she was disappointed at how the police treated them.

 

“You cannot just arrest us because we are praying for Mandela, it’s wrong… we did nothing wrong,” she said.

 

One police officer accused the group of betraying the freedom Mandela fought for.

 

SAPA

Youth face new struggle- Zuma


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Johannesburg – The current generation of youth face a different struggle compared to that of 1976, President Jacob Zuma said on Sunday.

 

“The youth is now empowered by the Constitution and the laws of the land to participate fully in building a better life,” he said at a Youth Day celebration in Newcastle, KwaZulu-Natal, according to a copy of his speech.

 

“The youth of 1976 were made not to be full citizens of this country. They were made to be pariahs in their motherland and could not influence or participate in decision-making in their own country.”

 

What was common between the two generations was that both were building a better life for all. 

 

Now the fight was against drugs, substance abuse, crime, gangsterism, child and women abuse, teenage pregnancy, truancy, mob justice and xenophobia, Zuma said.

 

SAPA

Mthethwa- Youth targeted by Drug Dealers


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Johannesburg – Young people are the most targeted by drug dealers, with more of them being sucked in by the illicit industry, Police Minister Nathi Mthethwa said on Sunday.

 

“South African youth are drug dealers’ biggest target audience, with more getting involved with drugs… whether it is experimenting, dealing, addiction or being mules or decoys. They are getting sucked into the drug industry,” Mthethwa said in a speech delivered at the Future Leaders Annual Youth Conference in Durban on Sunday.

 

He said a study conducted in 2009 indicated that the use of drugs among teenagers had increased over the years by more than 600%.

 

The average starting age of drug abuse in South Africa was 12 and younger, and drug dealers were targeting schools, said Mthethwa.

 

“A 2007 report indicated that Gauteng’s youngest drug dealer was an 8-year old boy from Douglasdale.” Mthethwa said South Africa was both a transit and an end-user country and that over the last year alone, 41 drug laboratories were closed down by the law enforcement agencies.

 

Authorities were also concerned about the links between growing gangsterism and the illicit trade in drugs.

 

“Our response needs to focus on production, consumption and cross border trafficking.”

 

The drug trade was a $300bn global industry, Mthethwa said. “In South Africa, drug abuse was costing the country R20bn a year, it could pose a bigger threat to the country’s future than the HIV/AIDS pandemic.”

 

SAPA