Investors not worried, says Zuma


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Cape Town – President Jacob Zuma has rejected the notion of South Africa lacking policy certainty and investor confidence.

“I think there is leadership in this country, very clear leadership. There is certainty on policy, there is certainty on economic policy. I would not accept the fact that there is no certainty,” he told the National Assembly on Wednesday.

Zuma was responding to a question by Democratic Alliance parliamentary leader Lindiwe Mazibuko.

She said labour unrest had contributed to a “break-down in investor confidence”, triggering warnings that South Africa’s platinum could decline by 60% in coming years.

She asked where Zuma stood on the issue of strike balloting, and argued that ANC MPs had undermined government’s efforts to improve the economy by removing a provision requiring a pre-strike vote from the labour relations amendment bill.

The president said labour strife at mines was a complex issue because of the emergence of rival trade unions, and it was vital that all roleplayers co-operate to resolve it.

“The difficulty has come in the manner in which the recent problems have emerged,” he said.

Praise

He praised Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe for his mediation efforts between unions and mining companies.

“I think they are working very closely to agree on the matters that have to be addressed in terms of addressing the problems at the mining level,” he said.

Zuma said negative headlines were largely to blame on negative views expressed by the political opposition.

“Generally, people are saying we are doing very well. I have just come back from Japan. They are full of praises of South Africa… key investors. So it is not like a perception that is thrown around that investors are worried, not at all.”

He said the economy was well-balanced and aimed at dealing with the country’s specific challenges, including imbalances created by its apartheid past.

“Therefore, I confirm, the policies of the ruling party are absolutely correct, no-one could argue against them. Whoever argues against them does not understand the South African sentiment.”

 

Premier Modise wishes Itumeleng Khune a Happy Birthday


ImagePremier Thandi Modise wishes Bafana Bafana and Kaizer Chiefs Captain Itumeleng Khune a Happy Birthday. South Africa’s number one goalkeeper who hails from Tshing Township near Ventersdorp in the North West Province is turning 26 today.  

 

“Khune is a role model who overcame adversity to reach the height of his soccer career. His success should inspire young people with similar backgrounds to stay away from drugs and pursue their dreams,” said Premier Modise.

 

In recognising Khune for his achievements as a soccer player in her speech delivered at the 37th June 16 Provincial Commemoration held last Saturday, Modise had said that all artists, sports men and women who come from the province are ambassadors of the province and they must continue to shine.She committed that the Provincial Department of Sport, Arts and Culture would ensure that talented young people are supported and resources are allocated to improve and erect recreational facilities in all communities in the province.

 

“Mmabana continues to be a good model of nourishing, developing and promoting talent in our province and I would not rest until each municipality in the province has a multi-purpose recreational centre,” the Premier had underscored. 

 

 Other artists that Premier Modise recognised as ambassadors of the province were MTN 2013 South African Music Awards Triple Award winner Khuli Chana and E-TV SA’s Got Talent Show 2012 winner  Botlhale Boikanyo. 

 

 

Farmer threatens to turn off taps


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A Northern Cape farmer has threatened to stop supplying water to Victoria West because the local municipality has not paid him, according to Sunday’s Rapport newspaper.

 

Andrew Conroy, owner of the farm Biesjiesfontein, claimed the Ubuntu municipality owed him R350,000 for supplying water to the town from his farm. The municipality had also failed to renew its 20-year contract with him when it expired in 2006. He had been supplying water to the town for nearly 30 years.

 

In an advert placed in the local newspaper, the Victoria West Messenger, on Friday, Conroy threatened to shut off the water supply on August 1 if he was not paid and his contract renewed.

 

“In the meantime he [Conroy] is keeping the pumps working and is paying for the electricity,” Kennett Sinclair, who represents the Northern Cape in the National Council of Provinces, told Rapport.

 

Municipal manager Martin Fillis said the municipality would not let itself be put under pressure.

 

“Conroy is not the only water source. This is a water-scarce area so we retain all the sources… Leave this matter between us and Conroy; I don’t have time for stone-throwing,” he was quoted as saying.

 

-Sapa

Neymar sends Brazil to semis of Confed cup


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Brazil superstar Neymar scored one goal and set up the other to give hosts Brazil a 2-0 win over Mexico in their Group A game and a place in the semi-finals of the Confederations Cup in Fortaleza on Wednesday.

 

The 21-year-old took his tally to 13 goals in his last 15 games for his country with a superb left-footed volley early in the first-half, and then produced a brilliant shimmy between two Mexican defenders in second-half stoppage time to set up Jo for the second goal.

 

While Brazil progress to the semis, Mexico’s hopes hang by a thread after two defeats as Japan, who lost 3-0 to Brazil in their opener, must beat Euro 2012 finalists Italy later on Wednesday to give them any hope of reaching the last four.

 

Brazil play Italy in their final group match in Salvador on Saturday.

 

– Sapa-AFP

Dladla extends Chiefs contract


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Despite heavy speculation that Josta Dladla would be leaving Kaizer Chiefs at the end of the 2012/13 campaign, the club have announced late on Wednesday that the 33-year-old midfielder has signed a one-year extension on his contract.

 

The Soweto, Meadowlands-born player joined Chiefs in 2009 and has played 118 games for the Glamour Boys.

For more http://www.soccerladuma.com

Gadaffi Loot: Zuma sees, hears no evil


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Cape Town – President Jacob Zuma insisted on Wednesday that he knows nothing about billions of dollars reportedly cached in South Africa by former Libyan dictator Muammar Gadaffi.

Responding to questions on the matter in the National Assembly on Wednesday, he repeatedly told MPs: “I don’t know.”

Zuma said the presidency was approached by officials from the Libyan government “regarding purported sums of money allegedly deposited on behalf of the late Gadaffi, and held by banking institutions in South Africa”.

He said these officials had been referred to the finance ministry.

The Treasury admitted in a statement last week that Gadaffi assets, including diamonds, gold and cash to the value of about R10bn, would be returned to Libya in accordance with UN guidelines.

Zuma was asked in the House on Wednesday about the reported involvement of ANC security head Tito Maleka in the repatriation of the money.

“Can you shed light on the connection between the ANC party and the recovery of the money?” asked Congress of the People MP Leonard Ramatlakane.

“I don’t know”

The president responded: “”With regard to [this], I don’t know. This has not come to my ears, that some ANC head of security was involved. So I don’t know about it.”

City Press newspaper reported on Sunday that Gadaffi may have stockpiled about R100bn in South Africa and its neighbouring states.

It said two Libyan factions were at the centre of a fight over the slain dictator’s hidden assets. 

The newspaper also reported the alleged involvement of Maleka in Libyan attempts to recover the money.

Asked if he could say to whom the money actually belonged, Zuma said he also did not know.

“With regard to whether the money belongs to Gadaffi, or the [Libyan] state, I also don’t know. I don’t know how this money came here [or] who is the owner of it.

“The only thing I’ve answered is that Libyan officials have come asking for what they know was here.

“As to whether it belongs to an individual or the state, I don’t know.”

To a further question on why the money was in South Africa, Zuma also had no answer.

“I don’t know why Gadaffi or Libya’s money is here. I don’t know. I was never involved in what caused the money to be here,” he said.

For more http://www.news24.com

Proteas choked, says Kirsten


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London – South Africa’s coach Gary Kirsten admitted his team deserved the tag of chokers after it crashed to a seven-wicket defeat by England in the Champions Trophy semi-final on Wednesday.

“We need to be honest with ourselves. 

 

“I think we did choke again today,” Kirsten said after the disappointing one-sided game at the Oval that lifted England into their second Champions Trophy final.

 

“It’s a horrible word but we have to front up. 

 

“We let ourselves down today.”

 

It was the first time a South African coach had publicly accepted what was widely believed in the rest of the cricket world — that the Proteas faltered in crunch games.

 

South Africa, the top-ranked Test team and a formidable opponent in world cricket, have struggled to get past the semi-final stage in major one-day tournaments since winning the inaugural version of the Champions Trophy in Bangladesh in 1998.

 

Alastair’s Cook men outplayed the Proteas after electing to bowl on an overcast day at the Oval where England had lost to the West Indies in the final of the same event in 2004.

 

South Africa were reduced to 80-8 by the 23rd over before a record ninth-wicket partnership of 95 between David Miller and Rory Kleinveldt gave the total some respectability.

 

But Jonathan Trott hit 82 not out and Joe Root made 48 during a 105-run stand to help England surpass the modest target in the 38th over of a disappointing semi-final.

 

Kirsten, the former South African opener who ends his two-year term as coach with Wednesday’s match, said he had expected his team to perform better in the semi-final.

 

“I think we had better expectations of our performances,” he said. 

 

“To be blown away with the ball with the quality of batsmen we have got in our batting line-up is very disappointing.”

 

“There has definitely been an inconsistency to our cricket. 

 

“When we play in big tournaments like this, we do get exposed.”

 

Kirsten, who coached India to victory in the 2011 World Cup before moving back to South Africa, said he shared the blame for the team’s debacle.

 

“Do I leave the team in a better state? I don’t know,” he said. 

 

“We certainly have not improved, and that is where a question mark needs to come over me. 

 

“So maybe it’s a good decision that I’m leaving.”

 

England captain Alastair Cook disagreed with Kirsten and thought his side had won the right to meet India or Sri Lanka in Sunday’s final rather than South Africa throwing it away.

 

“I don’t think they choked, I think we played really well,” he said.

 

“You are always trying to keep your foot on the throat.”

 

Steven Finn impressed after coming in for Tim Bresnan, whose partner gave birth to a boy, and James Tredwell again stood in for injured spinner Graeme Swann and took three for 19.

 

“It’s going to be a very tough selection call if Swanny is fit.

 

“It’s a good headache to have,” Cook added about both bowling spots as 2010 World Twenty20 champions England face their first 50-over tournament final since 2004.

 

“As kids you always grow up wanting to play finals. Finals can bring out the best in people.”

 

Cook was confident his team can win Sunday’s final at Edgbaston, Birmingham, against the winners of Thursday’s all-Asian semi-final between India and Sri Lanka in Cardiff.

 

“We can win it, without a doubt,” the England captain said.

 

“You need people to stand up and deliver to win one-day internationals and it has happened for us in the last two games we have played.

 

“This England side in particular has delivered when the chips have been down and the pressure has been at its highest. So I have no doubt that our guys will turn up on Sunday and do it.

 

“Hopefully it’s now our turn.”

 

Cook, whose team begins the highly-anticipated Ashes series against Australia next month, said it would be a “great achievement” to win the Champions Trophy.

 

“It’s hard to compare it with the Ashes, but at the start of the summer we set out some clear goals and one of them was to win the Champions Trophy,” he said.

 

“We got to the final in 2004 and we could not quite get over the line. Hopefully this time we can go one better.”

 

 

Reuters

SuperSport confirm Johnson


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SuperSport United have confirmed that former Platinum Stars mentor Cavin Johnson is their new coach.

The former Platinum Stars coach has signed a three-year deal with Matsatsantsa.

“It’s been a lot of thinking that has gone into this decision,” Johnson says. “There’s hard work ahead for myself. There are a lot of trophies in the cabinet here. I’m here to add to that.”

SuperSport chairman Khulu Sibiya says the club expect Johnson to improve on the second-place finish he achieved with Platinum Stars.

“Choosing Cavin was not a difficult decision. Look what he has done. We want tho develop our own success. Look at what he achieved at Platinum Stars.

“The length of the contract is three years. There’s no pressure but like all teams there is a mandate: Do better than Platinum Stars. You know where Platinum Stars finished, right? Do better than that.”

To which Johnson added: “Maybe in the three years we can win the treble …”

Platinum Stars released a statement yesterday insisting they would not accept Johnson’s resignation, as he still has a contract with the club.

SuperSport director of football Stan Matthews says: “Cavin was available for his signature. So we won’t comment on Cavin’s dispute with Platinum Stars, that’s between Cavin and Platinum Stars.”
For more http://www.kickoff.com

City granted final interdict on toilets


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Cape Town – The City of Cape Town has been granted a final interdict against those who interfere with servicing of toilets, Mayor Patricia de Lille said on Wednesday.

The Western Cape High Court made the interim interdict final on Tuesday.

She said the order would ensure that affected communities, especially Kosovo, Kanana, and Barcelona, were given essential services without the obstruction of a few individuals.

The city approached the court last month after groups of people disrupted the servicing of container and portable flush toilets (PFTs).

At the time, former Sannicare janitors responsible for cleaning communal toilets blocked part of the N2 highway with burning tyres and dumped faeces on the road.

They were protesting against being dismissed after demanding that they be paid the equivalent of a 16-hour work day.

Sannicare rejected the demand and said it was against labour legislation.

Some residents of Barcelona and Kanana apparently removed some of the container toilets from the neighbouring informal settlement, Europe, to close down the highway.

An interim interdict was obtained against 89 former Sannicare employees and seven residents of Ward 40, associated with the ANC Youth League (ANCYL).

The interim order prohibited the named individuals from interfering with service delivery, city staff, and property.

It also prevented them from blocking any roads into and surrounding the N2, Borchards Quarry, NY108, the R300, Klipfontein Road, Stock Road, Symphony Way, Sheffield Road, and Vanguard Drive.

A second protest took place in the vicinity about a week after the interdict was granted.

Dumping of faeces

In protests against rolling out the PFTs human waste was thrown on the steps of the Western Cape legislature and at provincial Premier Helen Zille’s convoy.

De Lille called on those involved not to do anything illegal.

She appealed to the ANCYL to prevent its members from doing so.

Last week, ANCYL national task team co-ordinator Magasela Mzobe took a tour of the toilets in the Barcelona and Kanana informal settlements.

He explained the political stance on the issue.

“Throughout this saga, the name of the ANCYL has been mentioned and we felt as a task team we must come and summarise the problems of our people and give the necessary support that they need,” he said at the time.

He said the ANCYL distanced itself from faeces throwing, but not from raising poor service delivery.

“We are talking to them that there is a better way that we can employ in raising the plight of our people without having to throw faeces all over the province,” he said.

“If they do not listen to that, we are forced then to look at the internal processes of disciplinary action.”

– SAPA

Dad gets 12 years for killing son with axe


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Pretoria – A mechanic was sentenced to 12 years in prison on Wednesday for killing his 3-year-old son with a pick-axe handle.

“In my view a sentence of 12 years’ imprisonment would be an appropriate sentence for the crime committed,” Judge Nico Coetzee said in the North Gauteng High Court in Pretoria.

“Therefore the accused [Vincent Mugwagwa] is sentenced to 12 years imprisonment.”

The court found Mugwagwa, 54, guilty on 3 June.

The court heard he came to the country after losing his job in Zimbabwe in 2010. His wife and four of their nine children later joined him. The other five are still in Zimbabwe.

On June 11 last year his wife accused him of being unfaithful while she was in Zimbabwe. The couple started to argue. He chased her and the children out of the house, and followed them to a neighbour’s house, where he picked up a pick-axe handle and hit his youngest child, Wesley.

“The accused lost his temper and was emotionally unstable at the time he committed the murder,” Coetzee said while handing down sentence.

‘Boy ran to dad’

Describing what happened from the court papers, Coetzee said the 3-year-old boy ran to his father. Mugwagwa hit him on his head several times.

He called an ambulance and reported the incident to police himself. The boy died in hospital three days later.

“He described the incident, saying things got out of hand,” Coetzee said.

During court proceedings earlier this year Mugwagwa said: “I don’t know how it happened. I did not believe it when they told me I was going to be arrested… I don’t have an explanation for what I did that day.”

Coetzee said Mugwagwa’s wife of 29 years, Dorica Chipeta, had forgiven him. She pleaded with the court not to send him to jail because she and the children needed his financial support.

The children were currently not in school because she could not find work.

“His wife had forgiven him for what he had done. She said he was a loving and caring father and husband,” Coetzee said.

“He had a very close relationship with the children and they wanted to see their father. She had forgiven him. The children had forgiven him.”

Mitigating factors

Murder in South Africa would continue and not decrease unless perpetrators were harshly punished, he said.

Mugwagwa’s age, the fact that he was a first offender, and that he showed remorse were taken into account for sentencing, Coetzee said.

Earlier, social worker Yvette van Schalkwyk: “Mr Mugwagwa is not a person who has a pattern of being aggressive.

“If we look at the circumstances at the home, I’ve got great empathy for the mother and the children.”

‘Kids pray with dad’

Van Schalkwyk was presenting a probation officer’s report ahead of sentencing.

She said she conducted a house visit and it was difficult to talk to the children. Chipeta, however, helped her speak to two of their nine children.

“The children enjoy his company and often pray with him,” she said.

“I’ve spoken to the correctional officer. He is illegally in the country, therefore he can’t be placed under correctional supervision… His documents [have] expired.”

Mugwagwa, dressed in black pants, black T-shirt and a dark grey jersey, sat quietly in the dock watching Coetzee and occasionally looking down.

Chipeta sat in the second row of the public gallery and stared blankly ahead.

– SAPA