Cop dogs help to nab ‘car thieves’


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Johanensburg – Dogs were called in on Thursday afternoon when four suspects resisted arrest and ran away from the police in Nellmapius near Mamelodi.

On receiving a tip-off, the Bronkhorstspruit K9 unit let the dogs out when the suspects refused to surrender. One got away but three other male suspects, aged between 27 and 36, were nabbed by the dogs and arrested.
For more http://www.iol.co.za

Police minister must pay R10m to Taung Giant Diamond Miners


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The minister of police, in his official capacity, has been ordered to pay R10.1 million to a North West company which prospects for diamonds, after its equipment was vandalised by residents while police merely looked on.

Exploration Omega Company Ltd (the plaintiff) said in papers before the Pretoria High Court that it had asked at least 12 times for the police’s help. The company either received empty promises or in some instances SAPS members merely looked on while the thugs destroyed equipment and threatened the management.

The company gave the SAPS notice of the damages claim and served papers on the minister.

The SAPS did not bother to respond and on Thursday the company eventually obtained default judgment against the police – which the taxpayer will have to pay.

Taung Giant Diamond Miners, the holder of a prospecting right for diamonds, entered into an agreement with the applicant in 2009 to prospect for diamonds in Manthestad in North West.

After consulting community leaders, especially the chief of the Taung area, the mining company brought in its equipment.

First, its Volvo front loader was parked at the offices of the tribal council to indicate to the community that the chief had agreed to the prospecting activities.

The plaintiff started establishing the site in March 2011, by parking a caravan on the site. This was burnt down a few days later by some residents. The company laid a charge with the police.

A week later, a pick-up truck used by the head of security on-site was burnt to ashes by some residents.

Another criminal charge was laid at the Taung police station.

The plaintiff then obtained the services of a security company to patrol and guard the site.

The mine manager again consulted the community leaders and moved the rest of the equipment to the site. Soon after that the windows of the Volvo front loader were smashed. That incident was also reported to police.

On April 14, 2011, six officers from the Taung police station arrived at the site after they had been called by the plaintiff’s employees, asking for protection from the vandals.

It was stated that the policemen did nothing other than witnessing the vandalism.

That night, a crowd marched to the site office, where they damaged another front loader, while police looked on.

The front loader was found the next day, 15km from the site.

Criminal charges were once again laid with the police.

During April to June 2011, the on-site head of security phoned the police on various occasions, asking for protection against the criminal elements in the community.

The police refused to assist.

Eventually three suspects were caught and they appeared in the local magistrate’s court, where they were released on bail, with one of the conditions being that they could not enter the site.

They ignored this and, on their release, returned to the site, with other residents, where they intimidated the site manager.

They threatened to kill him and to burn the rest of the equipment.

The court was told that this was done in the presence of the SAPS, who did nothing.

Residents, including the three accused, planned a march to the site to vandalise it, and the mine management again called the police. The SAPS promised to protect the mine and it its staff and in fact said they had everything under control.

The protesters meanwhile arrived at the site and hurled rocks and petrol bombs at the equipment.

The mine workers fled for their lives, but an elderly woman could not get away and she was severely assaulted by the crowd.

When the police eventually arrived and saw the crowd, they immediately drove off to escape the community’s wrath.

The court papers say the mine suffered R56.8m in damages, as it could not proceed with its operations. This amount included loss of income and the equipment that had been destroyed.

The company is, however, only claiming for the loss of equipment, as the SAPS did not lift a finger to assist in protecting the mine.

Pretoria News

Muvhango actress in the dock


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Welkom – The case against a local soapie actress and an accomplice who allegedly defrauded a businessman in Welkom, in the Free State, was postponed in the Welkom Magistrate’s Court, police said on Friday.

Nomathemba Mokeretla, who plays the role of a doctor in Muvhango, was granted R5 000 bail on Thursday, Captain Stephen Thakeng said.

Mokeretla, 34, would appear, along with Liteboho Sithole, 33, on September 18 on fraud charges.

“(Mokeretla) handed herself over to the Welkom police and appeared in court on Thursday,” Thakeng said.

In September 2011, the two women allegedly used a Welkom doctor’s trucks for their transport business and failed to pay him R300 000 he claimed they owed him, Thakeng said.

Sithole was arrested on November 29, 2011.

In July this year, the doctor saw Mokeretla on television while watching the soapie on SABC and alerted police. – Sapa

HIV mom who poisoned son has jail term cut


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Pretoria – An HIV-positive mother who killed her four-year-old son by giving him Rattex mixed with yoghurt as she was down and out and without anyone to take care of her children has been given a lifeline with her 25-year jail sentence being drastically reduced.

Elizabeth Mazibuko was sentenced in the Nigel Regional Court in 2011, but she turned to the Pretoria High Court to appeal against the 25-year sentence.

Acting Judge Nicolene Janse van Nieuwenhuizen said the circumstances that gave rise to Mazibuko’s conviction were “extremely tragic”.
For more http://www.iol.co.za

Foetus found at Uitenhage dump


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Johannesburg – A foetus has been found at the Koedoeskloof rubbish dump in Uitenhage, Eastern Cape police said on Friday.

The foetus was found by a community member around 11.20am on Thursday, said Warrant Officer Gerda Swart.

“The community member made the discovery when she opened a plastic bag.”

A case of concealment of birth was being investigated.

Members of the public were urged to assist police with any information they might have.

Sapa

Interdict granted against ANC march


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Johannesburg – The Pretoria High Court has granted an urgent interdict preventing the ANC in Lesedi, Gauteng, from marching to Hoër Volkskool Heidelberg on Friday, lobby group AfriForum said.

“It is unacceptable that the ANC is willing to exploit children to promote its own political agenda,” AfriForum deputy CEO Alana Bailey said in a statement.

“It is high time that the ruling party serves the interests of the new generation of South Africans instead of their own political agendas.”

Bailey said the urgent application, lodged by the school governing body, was heard by the court on Thursday. AfriForum supported the application.

Bailey said the African National Congress planned to march to the school while matriculants were writing preliminary examinations.

ANC Lesedi zonal chairman Ernest Dlamini said the party respected the court order.

“The reason we wanted to march was because the school expelled one African child and suspended 16 others. It was alleged that there was a fight between the black and white pupils,” he said.

In terms of the court order no protest action could take place until after September 23. Dlamini said the ANC would march after that date.

Sapa

Girl found tied up in school toilets


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Cape Town – A Grade 11 pupil at a Maitland school was found by fellow pupils in the toilets, her hands tied and mouth gagged.

She had apparently been sexually assaulted.

Bronagh Casey, spokeswoman for Education MEC Donald Grant, said it was unclear if the perpetrator came from within the school or from outside the premises.

Police spokesman Frederick van Wyk said

: “The girl is still traumatised and shocked and cannot speak to the investigating officer.”
For more http://www.iol.co.za

Charges against alleged rightwinger withdrawn


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Bloemfontein – The State withdrew all charges against one of four alleged rightwing plotters in the Bloemfontein Magistrate’s Court on Friday.

Hein Boonzaaier, 50, of Centurion, was asked by the magistrate to excuse himself from further court proceedings.

He was one of four men arrested in December last year for allegedly planning to assassinate senior ANC leaders in Mangaung.

Boonzaaier was out on bail of R80 000.

The case against two other accused, Johan Prinsloo and Mark Trollip, was postponed for trail in the Bloemfontein High Court on November 4.

Sapa

Rival gangs apologise to Manenberg for trauma


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Cape Town – Leaders of Manenberg’s main gangs, the Hard Livings and the Americans, have apologised for the trauma their battles have caused residents and have vowed to stop settling their differences through the barrel of a gun.

Manenberg has been in the grip of gang violence for some months, with the loss of several lives and the Western Cape Department of Education closing schools for two days after teachers demanded that it take action. Schools reopened on August 19 after the City of Cape Town deployed 71 metro police officers to patrol the schools.
For more http://www.iol.co.za

Spy tapes: Zuma files leave to appeal


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Johannesburg – President Jacob Zuma has applied for leave to appeal against a high court decision forcing the NPA to hand over the so-called spy tapes.

In court papers seen by Sapa on Friday, and dated on Wednesday, Zuma’s lawyers listed several grounds for appeal against the ruling by the High Court in Pretoria.

One was that the court erred in not finding that the transcripts of the tapes were part of Zuma’s representation and therefore did not have to be produced.

“The court [also] erred… in holding that the third respondent [Zuma] was obliged to factually demonstrate that he had an interest in the confidentiality of the ‘transcripts’.”

The application says the appeal could be heard by either a full bench of the high court or the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA).

The tape transcripts and other documents relate to a National Prosecuting Authority decision to drop corruption charges against Zuma.

Last Friday, the court ordered acting national director of public prosecutions Nomgcobo Jiba to lodge a copy of the tapes with the registrar of the court within five days.

The ruling by Judge Rami Mathopo followed an application by the Democratic Alliance.

In April 2009, then acting NPA head Mokotedi Mpshe withdrew the fraud and corruption charges against Zuma.

In March last year the SCA ordered the NPA to lodge the record with the registrar of the high court. The NPA refused to do so on the basis that it contained confidential representations by Zuma.

Mathopo ordered Jiba to comply with the SCA order and ruled that the record to be lodged include a copy and transcripts of the electronic recordings Mpshe referred to in his announcement that charges were being withdrawn.

The appeal papers stated that the court erred in accepting that the transcripts were not confidential and that the production of any item which was part of the representations was compelled by the order of the SCA.

“The court erred in holding that… [Zuma] was obliged to make out a case that the representations made on his behalf were confidential — it was common cause before the SCA and this court that… the representations were not subject to compelled disclosure.”

It also erred by holding that minutes, which would reveal the content of the representation, were not excluded from the record, but required a legal claim of confidentiality to be established by Zuma.

The DA said on Friday the arguments by Zuma’s legal team were “unlikely to hold water”.

“The application for leave to appeal argues that the court ‘erred’ on basically every point in the judgment,” DA federal executive chairman James Selfe said in a statement.

“It is time to stop delaying and just comply with the courts. President Zuma’s legal team is delaying the inevitable and at each stage at the cost of the taxpayer.”

He said the DA had submitted parliamentary questions to determine the exact cost to the public “of President Zuma trying to hide the truth from South Africa”.

“The DA will oppose this application vigorously, because South Africa deserves to know, once and for all, whether the decision by the NPA to drop the charges against President Jacob Zuma was politically motivated,” he said.

“All we can say to President Zuma’s legal team is bring it on.” – Sapa