Two Marikana suspects arrested for murder


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By Obakeng Maje

MARIKANA-The wheels of justice turned last night, where the long arm of the law snatched two suspect aged 44 and 35, for the murder of Mr Thwala that occurred on the 14th August 2012 last year. 

The deceased was brutally murdered at the Kopie where he was shot with a firearm and hacked to death. 

Later his lifeless body was found by the Police on the side of the Kopie with the skull of a bull. “The two suspects were arrested last night by a team of detectives, at Nkaneng and Marikana West informal settlement” Brigadier Thulani Ngubane said.

Ngubane said the hard work of the detectives have so far arrested 25 suspects for the various murders that took place before the 16 August 2012.  “The two suspects arrested last night make the total number of arrests to be a total of 27 on murders alone. The suspects are currently attending court on these cases” he said. 

Another group of 532 suspects have been arrested to date on charges of public violence, the suspects are also court going. Seven people have been arrested for intimidation and another seven for pointing/ possession of a firearm and one suspect for assault GBH. 

All the arrests do not include crimes committed on the 16 August 2012. 

These are crimes committed before and after the mentioned date. 

This brings the total number of people arrested in the Marikana area to 574.

“The two suspects will appear today at Garankuwa Magistrate court and the Police will ask the court to refuse bail for the two suspects for further investigations as they are linked to other cases that the Police are investigating” Ngubane said.

The North West Provincial Commissioner Lieutenant General Zukiswa Mbombo, have commended the hard working team of detectives for detecting these suspects.

“It remains our obligation and not a choice for us to ensure that people who commit crime are brought to book” she said.

The Provincial Commissioner further called for the communities to claim back their safety by ensuring that they work with the Police in reporting perpetrators of crimes in their communities.

“No one must be allowed to undermine the community and be allowed to get away with murder or any crime committed in broad day light” Mbombo said.-TDN

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Inauguration might be ‘farewell for Mugabe’


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Harare – Zimbabwe’s president Robert Mugabe, who will extend his 33-years in power on Thursday, once quipped he would rule his country until he turned 100.

 

Taking the oath for a fresh five-year term at 89-and-a-half, he is getting closer to reaching that goal.

 

The inauguration ceremony at a 60 000-seater sports stadium is seen as a show of power to confer legitimacy following yet another disputed election victory.

 

It “can be read as a farewell event for Mugabe. It reminds one of Jesus’s Last Supper”, said political scientist Eldred Masunungure.

 

After three turbulent decades at the helm of the former British colony, the firebrand leader has gone from a darling of the West to international pariah.

 

Mugabe swept to power in 1980 as an independence hero in the fight against white minority rule, bringing democracy to millions of black Zimbabweans, and was widely credited with health and education reforms.

 

But his lustre quickly faded.

 

From crushing political dissent to ushering in disastrous land reforms that saw the economy crumble, many accuse Mugabe of turning the regional breadbasket into a food importer.

 

Using blistering rhetoric, he has often blamed his country’s downward spiral on international sanctions.

 

A new constitution could see Mugabe serve as president until he is 99.

 

But the health of the feisty leader has been a topic of much speculation in recent years.

 

Qualified school teacher

 

He makes frequent medical trips to Singapore – purportedly to treat cataracts. But a 2008 US diplomatic cable published by WikiLeaks mentioned that Mugabe had prostate cancer – which he has denied.

 

He retains an iron self-confidence, telling the New York Times in a rare interview ahead of last month’s election: “The 89 years don’t mean anything.”

 

“They haven’t changed me, have they? They haven’t withered me. They haven’t made me senile yet.”

 

He has told his critics to “go hang” and has vowed to forge ahead with his drive to empower blacks by forcing foreign-owned companies to cede their majority shares to locals.

 

His tenacity is a constant source of chagrin for long-time political rival Morgan Tsvangirai who claimed the 31 July vote was rigged as he failed for a third time to unseat Mugabe.

 

Born on 21 February, 1924, at Kutama Mission northwest of the capital Harare, Mugabe was raised in a Catholic family and was described as a loner and a studious child.

 

After his father walked out on Mugabe’s mother and siblings when he was 10, the young man concentrated ever harder on his studies, and qualified as a schoolteacher at the age of 17.

 

An intellectual who initially embraced Marxism, he enrolled at Fort Hare University in South Africa, meeting many of southern Africa’s future black nationalist leaders.

 

He then resumed teaching, moving to Ghana – whose founding president Kwame Nkrumah profoundly influenced him.

 

As a member of various nationalist parties that were banned by the white-minority government, Mugabe was detained in 1964 and spent the next 10 years in prison camps or jail.

 

Mugabe’s new challenger

 

He used his incarceration to gain three degrees through correspondence courses, but the years in prison left their mark.

 

His four-year-old son by his first wife Sarah Francesca Hayfron died while he was behind bars, but Rhodesian leader Ian Smith would not allow him leave to attend the funeral.

 

On release from jail in 1974 he became leader of the Zanu party, and left for Mozambique, from where his banned group staged a guerrilla war on white minority-ruled Rhodesia.

 

Economic sanctions and war forced Smith to negotiate, after which Zanu came to power in the 1980 election.

 

Mugabe put down a revolt among the minority Ndebele people with his North Korean-trained Fifth Brigade in a campaign that killed an estimated 20 000 suspected “dissidents” between 1982 and 1986.

 

In 2000 he launched controversial land reforms, driving out white farmers and seizing their land in often violent rampages by his supporters.

 

Productive commercial farms were parcelled out and redistributed to supporters, devastating the economy in the process.

 

By the turn of the millennium, a new challenger to Mugabe’s hold on power had emerged, Tsvangirai, a miner and leader of the country’s largest union.

 

His Movement for Democratic Change gained a strong following among urbanites and Zimbabweans in the rural west of the country, and he won a first round of voting in 2008 before pulling out of the run-off citing violence against his supporters.

 

But Mugabe retains the support of a significant proportion of Zimbabweans, who cherish his image as a freedom fighter.

 

AFP

Two Nwest MECs hospitalised after they collapsed during meeting


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By TDN

Mahikeng-The North West Provincial Executive Council (Exco) has wished the two Members of the Executive Council (MEC’s) who collapsed minutes after each during the Exco sitting held in the Dr. Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela Exco Boardroom in Mahikeng on Wednesday a speedy recovery.

In assuring the public that both MEC’s conditions were stable after they were rushed to hospital for further medical attention and treatment, Premier Thandi Modise appealed for calm.

“Programmes of MEC for Economic Development, Conservation, Environment and Tourism, Motlalepula Rosho and MEC for Sport,Arts and Culture, Tebogo Modise had been quite hectic in recent months that stress and fatigue are suspected to have led to their collapse,” said Premier Modise who was chairing the Exco meeting.

The Premier called on people in the province to join Exco in praying for their total restoration and well being.

The bi-weekly meeting was adjourned for about 45 minutes for the Doctors in the meeting, MEC for Health, Dr Magome Masike and the Acting Director General, Major General Dr. Mokgethi  Radebe to attend to both MEC’s  before they were rushed to Mahikeng Provincial Hospital.

The incident started when MEC Rosho complained of a back pain and collapsed as she was being led out of the meeting to see her private doctor. MEC Modise who was escorting her collapsed minutes later.-TDN

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