Matsatsantsa release Sithole


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Zimbabwean forward Simba Sithole has been deemed surplus to requirements by SuperSport United after eight months at the club.

Sithole, who previously also failed to make the grade at Mamelodi Sundowns, joined SuperSport United from Zimbabwean champions Dynamos on a three-year deal in January, but struggled for game time.
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PSL unaware of latest Chippa appeal


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The Premier Soccer League expressed surprise after KickOff.com told them of Chippa United approaching the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Switzerland to have the promotion play-offs declared null and void.

The League were last week informed that Thanda Royal Zulu were approaching the international court in Lusanne to have last season’s First Division table ruled unlawful because only 27 of the 30 matches were played.

This after they failed to get the final decision in the South African courts and upon a second visit to League arbitration overturned.

And now the Chilli Boys have joined the party, with club boss Chippa Mpengesi confirming to KickOff.com that their “appeal was already there, and will be heard in September”.
For more http://www.kickoff.com

Ajax enquire about Mudenda


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Ajax Cape Town have made preliminary enquiries for Kennedy Mudenda from Power Dynamos.

A highly-placed source at the Zambian club said Ajax Cape Town have approached them over the availability of the attacking midfielder.

“Yes, they have sent a letter officially enquiring about Mudenda,” said the official, who adds that Power were still studying the offer, although he could not state whether there has been any headway in their discussions.

The 25-year-old, who was a member of Chipolopolo’s 2009 CHAN tournament team in Cote d’Ivoire, is a key player for the six-time Zambian champions whom he helped inspire to the 2011 league title.

However, should the deal go through, it would be a massive blow for Power, who are currently fifth from bottom on the table and have already parted ways with their influential playmaker Mukuka Mulenga, who recently completed a three-year deal with Mamelodi Sundowns.
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Polokwane still waiting for trophy


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Polokwane City are yet to receive their trophy from the PSL for winning the National First Division title back in May.

The Limpopo-based side ‘snuck in’ to finish above Mpumalanga Black Aces and Thanda Royal Zulu on the final day of the 2012/13 season, but were never handed their trophy due an on-going legal process involving Thanda.

The PSL were given the green light on July 24 to go ahead with the 2013/14 campaign, effectively confirming City as champions. However, it seems the trophy is just collecting dust at the League offices.
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Public must contribute to safety – MEC


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Cape Town – The public has a role to play in ensuring public healthcare facilities are safe, Western Cape Health MEC Theuns Botha said on Wednesday.

“There’s a co-responsibility. It’s not only government that can solve it, it’s not only labour that can solve it,” Botha told reporters and workers at Groote Schuur Hospital in Cape Town.

“What are people doing in their own communities to ensure it’s safe for an ambulance to come pick someone up who has a desperate need to go to an institution?”

Botha said he found it strange and unacceptable that it was necessary to be concerned about the safety of doctors and nurses helping the poor and needy.

“These things are beyond my imagination. I do not understand a society where this is the case. Unfortunately, that is reality and we’ve got to deal with it.”

He was speaking at the launch of a campaign by provincial nurses and doctors to improve their working environment.

The Democratic Nursing Organisation of SA (Denosa) and SA Medical Association (Sama) detailed their plan for a positive practice environment, following similar launches in the Northern Cape, Eastern Cape, and Limpopo.

The campaign, set to run over the next two years, would address issues such as worker safety and payment, equipment, supplies, and education.

Denosa president Dorothy Matebeni called on nurses and doctors to “adopt” a medical facility with issues and bring these to the attention of the health department.

She said the first phase of the campaign would focus on the safety and payment of workers.

Botha assured workers that safety and security was a focus.

“We spend over R100m in the department of health in the Western Cape on security. I’m certainly not so sure whether we get the service we pay for and whether that service is up to standard,” he said.

Audit

The safety and security of government property had been moved to the Western Cape department of community safety.

The community safety department had appointed international consultancy firm Arup to conduct an audit of security at all provincial facilities.

The end goal was to build new facilities with more secure designs, revisit security contracts, and train officials to exercise oversight over procured services.

Botha gave his support to the positive environment campaign.

“I want to invite and commit that we as the department will be accessible and that we will take part in this process and you can approach us.”

Sama vice chairperson Dr Mark Sonderup said the campaign would see a more collaborative approach.

He said there had been a historically antagonistic relationship between government and healthcare workers.

“If you’re going to wait for government to deliver, you’re going to wait a long time… it’s time for healthcare workers to roll up their sleeves and see what we can do,” he said.

– SAPA

Perpetrators were once protectors – FPB


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Johannesburg – People who ought to be protectors are allegedly perpetrating crimes against children, the Film and Publications Board (FPB) said on Wednesday.

“Looking at the profile of those arrested, it affirms that these crimes attract even the most trusted within society,” said FPB acting CEO Jonas Phoshoko in a statement.

He was reacting to the arrest of six men allegedly linked to an international child-pornography ring.

Police spokesperson Solomon Makgale said they were arrested last Thursday in four provinces.

Among them were two teachers, a retired school principal, a lawyer, a dermatologist, and a businessman.

All six appeared in various South African courts on different days and the last case was heard on Monday, said Makgale.

“… These are people who ought to be protectors and not [alleged] perpetrators,” said Phoshoko.

He commended the police on the arrests.

“… We trust… those found in transgression of the Film and Publications Act by being in possession, creating or distributing child pornography will be severely punished if found guilty.”

Phoshoko urged parents to be vigilant and guard their children against potential abusers, both physically and on the internet.

– SAPA

Kidnapped boy found, woman arrested


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Johannesburg – A woman was arrested in Burgersfort, Limpopo, on Wednesday in connection with the kidnapping of a 10-year-old boy, police said.

The boy was taken around 16:00 on Tuesday afternoon near his home in Vergelegen village by a man who asked for directions, police spokesperson Ronel Otto said.

“A few hours after the boy was taken his parents received a text message demanding R10 000 for the child to be returned home safe,” said Otto.

The parents alerted police and an arrangement was made for the money to be paid into an account number provided by the kidnapper.

“Police arrested a woman at an ATM in Burgersfort trying to withdraw the money,” said Otto.

The boy was found unscathed near the ATM and police were searching for a second suspect believed to have been involved in the kidnapping.

– SAPA

Seriti commission mum on claims


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Johannesburg – The Seriti Commission of Inquiry into the multi-billion rand arms deal would not comment on Wednesday on reports that it was being deliberately stalled.

Commission spokesperson William Baloyi said he had spoken to the commissioners and they decided it was “not worth commenting on”.

Beeld newspaper on Monday reported it spoke to three sources, who claimed the commission could have finished its work by the end of last year.

It was, however, delayed to protect the ANC and secure President Jacob Zuma a second term as party president at the Mangaung conference, held in December 2012.

According to another source, commission chair Judge Willie Seriti and head of research Fanyana Mdumbe continuously hampered the commission.

When investigators asked to see the weaponry that was bought so they could make sure the investigation was conducted thoroughly, Seriti refused, the source told the newspaper.

It was claimed Seriti manipulated information, which came in and out of the commission.

According to the source, people had to ask for Seriti’s permission before they could speak to anyone or hand over any documents to investigators.

“He is obsessive about handling all the information,” the source told Beeld.

The commission had reportedly known for more than a year about a container of documents at the Hawks head office, but never went to get it. There were also plans to get documents from Cabinet meetings and Parliament, which never happened.

The newspaper reported that the commission decided to let whistle-blowers testify first during the public hearings so they could be discredited during cross examination, and the investigation would collapse before ANC officials had to testify.

The commission started its first phase of public hearings
in Pretoria this week.
Members from the department of defence and military veterans were testifying about the rationale behind the arms deal and the use of the equipment bought.

President Zuma appointed the commission in 2011 to investigate alleged corruption in the 1999 arms deal.

– SAPA

Don’t leave ANC: Mantashe


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The African National Congress (ANC) would drift to the right if the working class opted to abandon the party, Secretary General Gwede Mantashe said on Wednesday.

“You have made an assumption that if you decide to leave the ANC, the ANC will become static,” he told Police and Prisons Civil Rights Union (Popcru) members at their second national political school in Benoni, east of Johannesburg.

“[However] you will have an ANC that will grow more and more conservative and once it is more conservative it will be brutal on the working class.”

Mantashe said working class organisations, such as the unions and the SA Communist Party, influenced the standing of the ANC.

The liberation movement, led by the ANC, was a multi-class revolution and if the working class decided not to support the party other classes would take over the space and shift it.

“If you think it’s neo-liberal now… You will push it [ANC] to the right,” he said.

Mantashe urged union members to engage with Cabinet ministers, especially those who were former union members.

He used Basic Education Minister Angie Motshekga and the SA Democratic Teachers’ Union (Sadtu) as an example.

Motshekga was a former Sadtu member and now that she was a minister the union was fighting her.

Once you close your eyes to those fundamental principles you are going to see the battles that are running now

“I looked at Cabinet and I established that a big chunk of it can be traced back to the trade unions… but they [unions] cannot talk to their former members.”

Mantashe was speaking under the theme forms and content of the class struggle.

Mantashe also touched on the problems facing the Congress of SA Trade Unions.

He said the federation needed to focus on its principles.

“Once you close your eyes to those fundamental principles you are going to see the battles that are running now. Those battles are a function of many things.”

Mantashe said one of those things was the development of personalities in Cosatu.

“When you begin to worship individuals then you are going to kill the thing [Cosatu].”

Cosatu has been divided following allegations of rape against general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi, and his subsequent suspension.
On Thursday, Cosatu announced Vavi had been put on special leave pending the outcome of a disciplinary hearing into an affair he had with a junior employee.

On Friday, Vavi vowed to challenge his suspension.
Source : http://www.sabc.co.za

Abducted man found in hospital


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Durban – The Durban man who was allegedly hijacked and abducted was found alive but injured at the Mahatma Gandhi Hospital in Phoenix on Tuesday, family friends said.

Police were unable to confirm that he had been found.

Dumisani Mdlalose, was allegedly accosted by three armed men on his driveway in Mount Moriah, near Phoenix, on Monday night while opening the gate when, at gunpoint, he was ordered back into his black BMW 318i by the hijackers who then drove away with him.

His wife, Thembeka, who was seated in the passenger front seat, ran from the men and was unharmed.

She called for help in the community. A neighbour and friend of the Mdlaloses, Panuel Zondi, said on Wednesday morning that Mdlalose was found at the Phoenix hospital with minor injuries.

“He was a bit bruised when we found him… they left him in Avoca and drove away with the car, but he is still in hospital recovering,” he said.

Mdlalose’s wife could not be reached for comment because her cellphone was stolen during the hijacking. Thembeka and a group of close friends had begun a search looking for Mdlalose, who was feared dead.

Zondi would not give intimate details on what transpired during the hijacking or how the man ended up in hospital.

Police spokesman Captain Thulani Zwane said Mdlalose had not been found, according to records at the Phoenix SAPS.

“According to Phoenix SAPS, the victim has not yet been found hence they are still looking for him and would appreciate any information on the victim’s whereabouts,” he said.

Daily News