The Department to Revive Olive Tree Project


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By Obakeng Maje

Hartswater-The Department of Enviromental Affairs and Nature Conservation is planning to revive the Olive Tree project that was left crude in Hartswater.

 

A 120 Hector Olive Tree Project was one of 22 projects launched by the department back in 2007.

 

The Agricultural department spokesperson Norman Shushu said the aim of the project was to alliviate poverty and reduce unemployment in the area.

 

“The aim of the project was to help youth in the area to eradicate poverty and let them plant Olive Trees that in turn would’ve been sold overseas” Shushu told SABC Radio.

 

He said after the project dessicated, they are now trying to revive it and hand it over to another youth group.

 

“After we gingerly thought of this project, we agreed to revive it and hand it over to another group of youth because those who were in the project did not work hard to make it survive despite the support they received from the department” he said.

 

The farm turned into a white elephant. Shrubs and long grass made use of the opportunity.

 

However those who were involved in the project refutes Shushu’s claims.

 

They said the department never showed enough support on the project and never bother to help them with challenges they encountered.

 

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Premier condemns cop killing


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Johannesburg – The death of Major General Tirhani Maswanganyi is a senseless blow to Gauteng’s war against crime, Premier Nomvula Mokonyane said on Tuesday.

“In the memory of Major General Maswanganyi all of us law-abiding citizens should take up the cudgels and say: ‘We will not be cowed into submission by criminals. We will honour Maswanganyi by making sure that the perpetrators of this heinous crime are swiftly brought to book’,” she said.

The 52-year-old policeman’s body was found in a field near Hammanskraal, north of Pretoria, on Tuesday morning, police said.

His family told investigators he left home to go to work shortly after 14:00 on Monday.

“Approximately 03:00 this morning, the body of the officer was found in a bushy area next to the road,” Gauteng commissioner Lieutenant General Mzwandile Petros said.

“His hands and feet were tied up.”

A police patrol found Maswanganyi’s abandoned Isuzu bakkie next to the R101 on Monday evening. A police uniform and a police identification card were in the bakkie, which prompted a search.

Police were waiting for a post mortem report on the cause of death. Petros said there were no gunshot wounds to the body.

Police Minister Nathi Mthethwa said Maswanganyi’s death was a loss to South Africa.

He had been in the police for 31 years.

“The SA Police Service [SAPS] is poorer. The Gauteng provincial team is poorer. The people of Johannesburg are poorer. The people of Gauteng and of the entire South Africa are poorer,” he said.

He condemned the killing of police officers.

“We have emphasised the point before that policing remains a very difficult and challenging duty…. On a daily basis our members face dangerous and vicious criminals, who will not hesitate to kill them.”

One policeman’s life lost was one too many, and enough was enough, he said.

‘Senseless murder’

The SA Police Union (Sapu) also condemned Maswanganyi’s death.

“We want to condemn with the strongest terms possible the senseless murder of this top cop,” said Sapu General Secretary Oscar Skommere.

“His cold-blooded murder has robbed the SAPS, as he was one of a few career officers who have dedicated their lives [to] the fight against crime in our society.”

The DA extended its condolences to Maswanganyi’s family, friends, and colleagues.

“By all accounts he was a dedicated policeman who keenly felt the need to make a difference in the fight against crime,” DA MPL Kate Lorimer said in a statement.

Petros said a team of detectives under the leadership of the deputy provincial commissioner for detective services, Major General Tebello Mosikili, and investigators from the provincial investigation unit and organised crime would investigate the murder.

– SAPA

Ramphele worried over IEC


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Cape Town – The soon-to-be-launched political party, Agang SA, has concerns about the independence of elections, its leader Mamphela Ramphele said on Tuesday.

“The Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) has eroded as an independent electoral commission,” she told the Cape Town Press Club.

She said Agang SA was in talks with other political parties, the Democratic Alliance in particular, to double-check certain IEC processes.

“[We need] to be reassured that first of all, we are not going to have party hands, people going around purportedly doing voter education,” she said.

“We don’t need voter education, we need civic education and that has to be done independently, by professionals.”

She said she was concerned by the IEC’s service providers.

“That electronic platform used for elections – we need to be sure that it is the best that is available and that it’s tamperproof.”

Ramphele said that during a four month tour of the country, she became aware of “sinister” intimidation of voters.

She had heard of some people being required to take pictures of their ballot papers with their cellphones to be “rewarded for doing the right thing”.

Take away your house

“Voters don’t actually know that they have a choice. Many are being told that if you go into that ballot box, we can see who you vote for and therefore we will punish you and take away your grants or your RDP houses.”

Ramphele believed the country was in a state partly because it had disempowered citizens.

“… And that has been the focus of Agang: to build that self-confidence. South Africans have very low expectations of themselves, of their government and of their country.”

She said many of the people she spoke to were furious with the government.

“They’re furious with this corrupt behaviour, and yet they feel powerless,” she said.

“It is clear to me this is made possible by lack of accountability and good governance. Accountability relies on the relationship between the representatives and constituents.”

She believed that there would be greater accountability if MPs had to conduct regular meetings with their constituents.

“Without appropriate governance and accountability systems, the direction of our country is being allowed to drift to catastrophic depths.”

Agang SA will be formally launched as a political party on Saturday.

– SAPA

Enough is enough – Mthethwa


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Johannesburg – Police Minister Nathi Mthethwa was saddened by the death of Major General Tirhani Maswanganyi, whose body was found early on Tuesday morning, his office said.

“We are saddened by this tragic loss of a senior cop who dedicated his life to serve the vulnerable and the weak in society,” Mthethwa said in a statement.

“The SA Police Service [SAPS] is poorer, the Gauteng provincial team is poorer, the people of Johannesburg are poorer, the people of Gauteng and of the entire South Africa are poorer.”

The minister said the country had been robbed of a true patriot, a dedicated officer who contributed to the reconstruction and development of South Africa.

Maswanganyi’s body was found in a field near Hammanskraal, north of Pretoria, on Tuesday, police said.

“Approximately 03:00 this morning the body of the officer was found in a bushy area next to the road,” Gauteng commissioner Lieutenant General Mzwandile Petros said.

“His hands and feet were tied up.”

A police patrol found Maswanganyi’s abandoned Isuzu bakkie next to the R101 on Monday evening. A police uniform and police identification card were in the bakkie, which prompted a search.

Mthethwa said South Africans could pay tribute to Maswanganyi, who had been in service for 31 years, by taking a tough stance against crime.

Maswanganyi and many other police officers had lost their lives in the line of duty, the minister said.

“We have emphasised the point before that policing remains a very difficult and challenging duty… on a daily basis our members face dangerous and vicious criminals, who will not hesitate to kill them.”

Probing the killing

One policeman’s life lost was one too many, and enough was enough, the minister said.

He welcomed Gauteng police commissioner Petros’s appointment of senior detectives to investigate the murder.

Police were waiting for an autopsy report on the cause of death.

Petros said there were no gunshot wounds.

A team of detectives under the leadership of the deputy provincial commissioner for detective services, Major General Tebello Mosikili, and investigators from the provincial investigation unit and organised crime would investigate the murder.

– SAPA

Motshekga: Re-draft will take 6 months


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Johannesburg – A re-draft of the norms and standards for school infrastructure will take at least six months to complete, Basic Education Minister Angie Motshekga said on Tuesday.

Last week, the Equal Education (EE) group said it was taking her to court for allegedly breaching an agreement to publish the document by 15 May. The matter was to be heard in the Bhisho High Court on 11 July.

On Tuesday, Motshekga said she has been communicating with EE to update it on progress with the norms and standards.

She wrote it a letter on 9 May in which she indicated that the compulsory consultation process with the National Economic Development and Labour Council had not been concluded. When she received its report, she would consider all recommendations.

“It is important to emphasise that norms and standards cannot be published at the whim of EE,” said Motshekga.

“The South African government is a democracy that requires all involved and interested in education to have ample time to make input to the final regulations,” she said.

Motshekga accused the EE of being disingenuous. She questioned the group’s sudden interest in the education of African children.

“…To suddenly see a group of white adults organising black African children with half-truths can only be opportunistic, patronising and simply dishonest to say the least,” she said.

The EE said it was shocked and disappointed by Motshekga’s comments.

EE chairperson Yoliswa Dwane said Motshekga should distance herself from these statements, which it viewed as racist.

“EE consists of people of every background and we are very proud of this. Any person who commits [themselves] to advancing the daily struggles of poor and working class youth is welcome in EE,” said Dwane.

“That these values exist is something that those responsible for education should celebrate, not attack.”

The EE has in the last few days mobilised school children in Cape Town, Durban, Johannesburg and Pretoria to participate in marches.

The children demanded that Motshekga publish the norms and standards, and called for safer and better resourced schools.

On Tuesday, a Grade 11 pupil from an Eastern Cape school took Motshekga, the Eastern Cape education MEC, her school principal, and school governing body to the Bhisho Magistrate’s Court about the condition of her school.

Palesa Manyokole, of the Moshesh Senior Secondary School in Queen’s Mercy, complained that the principal was often absent and unlawfully expelled pupils; teachers were absent and late; there was a shortage of qualified teachers; and there was no curriculum planning.

The matter was postponed to 22 October.

Basic education spokesperson Panyaza Lesufi said the department would appear in court if it received a notice.

“We believe this case is part of the gimmick of the EE to embarrass the department,” he said.

As from July, the basic education department claimed it would open one school per week in the Eastern Cape. These are an addition to several other schools opened in Mthatha in the last three months.

These former mud structures reportedly all have early childhood development facilities, administration blocks, soup kitchens, ablution blocks, water and electricity,

“Equal Education will not be brave enough to acknowledge this, or any progress we make on a daily basis regarding school infrastructure,” said Motshekga.

– SAPA

SAHRC welcomes Cape jogger ruling


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A court ruling dismissing an application by Police Minister Nathi Mthethwa for a review of findings in a matter involving a Cape Town jogger was welcomed on Tuesday.

“We are very pleased with [the judge’s] finding that the minister must respect the [SA Human Rights Commission (SAHRC)] and the work done by the commission,” its chairperson Lawrence Mushwana said in a statement.

“This should really send the message to other government officials who do not co-operate with the commission or its findings.”

The South Gauteng High Court in Johannesburg found in favour of the commission last week and dismissed the minister’s application with punitive costs.

Police ministry spokesperson Zweli Mnisi said Mthethwa had not undermined the commission, but had raised valid Constitutional issues.

The issue was whether litigants should have access to many forums in which to “ventilate their complaints against the state”, or if a particular forum within which to do so should be established, said Mnisi.

“The judgment does not clarify this important Constitutional issue, and may lead to extensive cherry-picking by litigants in the future.”

The SAHRC found in July 2011, that a number of political science student Chumani Maxwele’s rights had been violated.

Maxwele was detained in February 2010 and was quizzed about his political affiliations after he showing a rude hand sign to a convoy carrying President Jacob Zuma while jogging.

He alleged that his head was covered, his legs were tied, he was taken to two different police stations for interrogation, and that his home was searched.

Maxwele said he was held a day without being fed, and was released by the Wynberg Magistrate’s Court without appearing.

Review application

SAHRC spokesperson Isaac Mangena said the SAHRC found against Mthethwa and the president’s Special Protection Unit (SPU).

In January 2012, the minister brought an application to review, set aside and substitute the SAHRC’s decision on appeal, Mangena said.

In a hearing on Wednesday, the South Gauteng High Court in Johannesburg criticised Mthethewa’s behaviour and reminded him of his constitutional duties.

“[The judge] found that the minister had displayed a disconcerting attitude which, if not downright contemptuous of the commission, at the very least showed disrespect for the commission’s standing as a body instituted by the Constitution…,” Mangena said.

“The judge accordingly found that the minister’s conduct fell far short of its duty to assist the commission,” he said.

Mthethwa noted and respected the judgment, Mnisi said.

“The minister instituted the review proceedings on legitimate grounds that the findings of the SAHRC could impact on the legal proceedings instituted against the minister in this matter,” he said.

“The legal proceedings in this matter are at an advanced stage and are likely to be settled.”

– SAPA

Township’s safety at issue in hearings


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Pretoria – Police plans to protect the Nkaneng informal settlement against armed protesters in Marikana last year were at issue before the Farlam Commission of Inquiry on Tuesday.

While North West deputy police commissioner General William Mpembe said the police’s plan had included the protection of the whole area, the commission’s evidence leader Mbuyiseli Madlanga submitted that: “… No provision was made for such.”

The hill where protesters held their meetings during the unrest is in the Nkaneng informal settlement, near Lonmin’s platinum mine in Marikana.

“The plan was to not let those protesters in groups through into the informal settlement as history has shown that, when in groups, protesters would go out of hand and destroy property,” said Mpembe.

He said the police planned to search, disarm and arrest groups entering the area. Those walking alone would be let through.

The commission’s chairman, retired judge Ian Farlam, said it seemed there was no plan, away from the police line at the hill, to chase those who escaped the police and entered through other sides of Nkaneng.

Mpembe said the aim of the police was to search those who entered in groups of at least 10, so as to protect residents.

“We did not know where those who faced danger and reported for work stayed exactly in Nkaneng. We deemed it safe to not let the groups into the settlement,” he said.

The commission, sitting in Centurion, is probing the circumstances of the deaths of 44 people during an unprotected strike at Lonmin’s platinum mine in Marikana, in August.

Thirty-four striking miners were shot dead when the police tried to disperse them on August 16. Ten people, including two policemen, died in strike-related violence the week before.

The hearing continues on Thursday. – Sapa

Dikwena: Johnson can lodge dispute


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Platinum Stars have released a statement in which they make it clear that they want to keep Cavin Johnson but adds the coach is free to go the legal route if he feels he is entitled to leave.

Johnson, who has been strongly linked with SuperSport United, handed in a resignation recently but Stars insist they won’t accept it.

The statement reads:

“Platinum Stars Football Club has been inundated with calls from the media regarding its relationship with the club head coach Mr. Cavin Johnson.

“The facts are as follows-

1. Mr. Johnson has performed admirably while at the club, he has a contract with the club, and Platinum Stars have no intention of terminating the relationship.

2. Mr. Johnson has however indicated that he wishes to move on and Platinum Stars have been informed that there are various clubs interested in his services with whom he intends contracting.

3. Platinum Stars has every intention of commencing the coming football season with Mr. Johnson as the head coach of the first team and we hope that the club’s right to enforce its contracts will be respected by Mr. Johnson and all other stakeholders and participants in the game.

4. In view of the need for certainty – both for the club and Mr. Johnson – we have invited Mr. Johnson to commit to the club or, if he believes he is entitled to leave, to refer a dispute to arbitration in terms of the football rules as he is entitled to do.

“We have made these comments in view of the widespread reporting on the matter but do not intend discussing the issue any further in the media for reasons of privacy and also of course because any dispute or difference that there may be should be dealt with in the correct forums and not in the media.

“Our relationship with Mr. Johnson has always been professional and we intend maintaining that.”
For more http://www.kickoff.comn

PSL ‘welcome’ High Court decision on Thanda matter


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The PSL is undaunted after the South Gauteng High Court’s decision today that the application brought by Thanda Royal Zulu should go to arbitration again.

The matter already went to arbitration, which ruled in favour of the League. Thanda then took the matter to the courts, despite Fifa’s strong standing that football matters cannot be resolved in courts of law.

But the court has ruled that the matter must go to arbitration again, despite Thanda’s case already having been dismissed, and the PSL insist this is what they were calling for.

“The judge’s ruling is in line with the argument advanced by the PSL throughout the proceedings that the matter cannot be argued in court but through processes available to all 32 members of the Premier Soccer League as stated in the NSL Rules,” a PSL statement reads.

“The judge did not rule on the merits of the application. The court ordered that the issues be referred to arbitration or arbitrators appointed in terms of the constitution and rules of the National Soccer League, as read with those of the South African Football Association and any further instruments incorporated by reference in the constitution and rules of NSL and Safa.”

PSL head of legal, advocate Ntsietso Mofokeng, says: “We are delighted with the outcome because we are convinced that this matter should never have been referred to court in the first place. This is a football matter.

“An arbitrator will be appointed to deal with the issues raised by Thanda. Today, the judge did not make any findings on the merits of the award made at the arbitration process of 26 May 2013.”

The PSL also advised that the promotion/relegation play-offs will continue as scheduled this week. On Thursday, June 20, Santos will host Mpumalanga Black Aces at Cape Town Stadium, kick-off at 7.30pm.
For more http://www.kickoff.com

Pupil takes Motshekga to court


b0f706338ceb48d7bec9e6c5e0a76dc6Johannesburg – An Eastern Cape Grade 11 pupil took Basic Education Minister Angie Motshekga to the Bhisho High Court on Tuesday over conditions at her school, Equal Education (EE) said.

Moshesh Senior Secondary School pupil Palesa Manyokole wanted the court to act against those responsible for standards at her school, EE said.

The school is in Queen’s Mercy, a rural village near Matatiele.

“Learners from the school first wrote to Equal Education in 2012 to ask for the organisation’s assistance,” it said in a statement.

“Equal Education visited the school to assess the situation, and found several problems at the school which were seriously hampering learner progress.”

These included absenteeism of the principal, the principal’s unlawful expulsion of pupils, teacher absenteeism and lateness, a shortage of qualified teachers, and no curriculum planning.

The matter was postponed to 22 October.

Gimmick

Manyokole’s application was against Motshekga, the Eastern Cape education MEC, the school principal, and the school governing body.

EE said despite numerous communications with the provincial education department, most issues remained unresolved.

“In light of the fact that major issues still need to be resolved, Equal Education is pushing ahead with the case,” it said.

Basic education spokesperson Panyaza Lesufi said if the department received a notice it would appear in court.

“We believe this case is part of the gimmick of the EE to embarrass the department,” he said.

“The department already opened 22 schools in the Eastern Cape and plans to open more to eradicate the bad conditions in schools. EE are misleading and using children to fight their issues.”

– SAPA