Two nabbed for stock theft in Hartswater


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By Obakeng Maje

Hartswater-Hartswater Stock Theft Unit are investigating a case of stock theft which allegedly took place on Tuesday at approximately 18:00. Lieutenant Sergio Kock said members from the unit immediately followed up on information received and found three men transporting seven stolen cows in a bakkie and trailer on the N12 near Warrenton. 

“Two of the three men were charged with stock theft while the third was released” he said. 

Police said the cows were stolen from a farm near Warrenton and is valued at R37 000,00. 

The two suspects known as Godfrey Kabelo Afrika(26) and Hans Wegern(30) appeared briefly before the Warrenton Magistrates’ Court on Thursday and the case was remanded for 03 September 2013 for a formal bail application.-TDN

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A Hartswater man arrested for house-breaking


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By Obakeng Maje

Hartswater-Vigilant Police in Hartswater recovered stolen goods before the owner realised that his property was stolen. Police reacted on information of a suspicious looking man in possession of two bags in the Utlwanang Township in Hartswater on Wednesday at approximately 15:00pm. 

“Minutes after following upon the information, police found the suspect hiding at a dumping site and in possession of two stolen laptops” lieutenant Sergio Kock said. 

The man was questioned and further recovery of a Nokia 2690 cellular phone and a GPS at his shack.  

“The owner was delighted when while reporting the case of housebreaking and theft at the police station, he was informed that the property was recovered and that a 36 year old suspect was also arrested” Kock said. 

All his property except a gold wedding band was recovered. 

Kock said the total value of the recovered goods is R13 300,00. The suspect will appear in the Hartswater Magistrates’ Court on Monday for house breaking and theft. 

“The actions of the police is commendable and their quick response towards the safekeeping of our society and the protection of property is an example of the kind of service delivery expected from our police officers.” commented the Hartswater Cluster Commander, Colonel Lekhu.-TDN

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Kimberley man lost two cars in scam


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By Obakeng Maje

Kimberley’s Vehicle Identification and Safeguarding Unit is urgently trying to locate a 48 year old man by the name of Andre Knoetze who can assist them in their investigation of two theft of motor vehicle cases.

“It is alleged that the man alias Andrea Roux befriended a Kimberley man and convinced him into releasing a VW Golf into his possession and promised the complainant that he would sell the vehicle for him. Once the money of over R20 000 is paid to him, he would give the owner of the vehicle his money back. However, Knoetze sold the vehicle to a person in Boshoff during August 2013” colonel Priscilla Naidu said. 

Naidu said the man did not pay the owner his money but instead further convinced him into releasing a second vehicle, a 1994 White Toyota Corolla to him. Knoetze has since disappeared.

Knoetze allegedly informed the complainant that he is a phychologist with a practice in Kimberley, but this is not the case. 

“Anyone who can assist police in tracing Knoetze is asked to contact D/Const Reginald Magou at Kimberley on 053 807 9550 or 072 4611 588” she said. 

All information supplied to police will be treated as confidential. Police believe that Knoetze is operating between Kimberley and Bloemfontein.-TDN

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South Africa has made great progress in advancing women’s equality and much of the progress is owed to the vision and ideals of the many women who drafted the Women’s Charter and those women activists who marched to the Union Buildings, North West MEC for Agriculture and Rural Development, Desbo Mohono said in Mahikeng on Thursday. “Today the women our country are beneficiaries of a strong economy, a progressive constitution, massive service delivery in terms of access to water, sanitation, housing, electricity, land, agrarian reform and to major improvements to the education system,” said MEC Mohono who received a recognition award on behalf of Premier Modise who was honoured by Mahikeng Local Municipality for her role in contribution towards the emancipation of women.

 

Mohono said that Premier Modise was a tried and tested leader who was among the first women to join Umkhonto We Sizwe (MK), saying that the province was blessed to have a leader of her calibre, who is serious about empowering women, especially the poor and unemployed.

 

In handing the recognition award, the Executive Mayor of Mahikeng Local Municipality, Councillor Lena Miga said that Premier Modise had distinguished herself as a visionary leader.

 

“She has also demonstrated bravery during the struggle for liberation starting from the time when she joined MK at 18 and surviving harsh conditions in prison. She has consistently fought and continues to fight for the empowerment of women, ” stressed Miga.

 

Other women who received awards for their remarkable roles were veteran struggle Saane Bertrent who was recognised for her role in the political struggle, Thabethe Matlhodi who received the award for Women in Community Development, Dr Khakhane Leballo for Women in Health and Dudu Maragelo for the category Women in Business.

 

The event was organised under the banner, “A centenary of Working Together Towards Sustainable Women Empowerment” also included the signing of the Women’s Charter.

 

Amongst the eight cardinal point of the charter were the right to vote and to be elected to all state bodies without restriction or discrimination, and the right to full opportunities of employment with equal pay and possibilities of promotion in all spheres of work.

 

One of the over four thousand women who attended the event, Alina Nkate, 50, of Nooitgedacht said she was delighted that she was able to attend.

 

“It’s my very first time in such a celebration where it’s only us women. What I am taking home from this gathering is that when you have a problem you must go to other women, women must help each other. They must not oppress each other,” she said.

 

In her vote of thanks Representative of the North West House of Traditional  Leadership, Kgosi  Anthea Seatlholo said the women that were being recognised had distinguished themselves as women of substance and appealed to women to stop competing against each other instead of helping one another.

 

“The pulling down syndrome must stop now. We tend to only think of ourselves. Successful women must bring others up,” said Kgosi Seatlholo who also appealed for the pledge to be translated in Setswana so that other women who do not understand English could comprehend its essence. 

 

 

Mbeki statements mischievous- Office


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Johannesburg – Statements attributed to former president Thabo Mbeki about Zimbabwe’s election and land reform policy were “mischievous”, his office said on Thursday.

 

They were intended to “communicate falsehoods to achieve particular political outcomes”, Mbeki’s spokesperson Mukoni Ratshitanga said in a statement.

 

Zimbabwe’s NewsDay website reported that Mbeki had expressed disappointment at the Movement for Democratic Change’s (MDC) withdrawal of its court challenge of the election results.

 

It also reported that, during a seminar at the Thabo Mbeki African Leadership Institute at the University of South Africa in Pretoria last week, he also indicated his disappointment at the way Zimbabwe’s land reform process was carried out. 

 

Ratshitanga said it was true that Mbeki had expressed the view that Zimbabwe and the Southern African Development Community (SADC) would have been well-served by the MDC’s allegations of electoral irregularities going through the courts.

 

This was so the matter could be laid to rest once and for all, he said.

 

“With regard to Zimbabwe’s land reform process, former president Mbeki said that though the SADC agreed with the Zimbabwean government about the imperative for land reform, it did not agree with the manner in which the process was carried out.

 

“He added that this agreement notwithstanding, the land reform process in Zimbabwe has proved successful.”

 

Ratshitanga said the fact that SADC, of which South Africa is a member, had expressed a contrary opinion to Zimbabwe’s government at the time must have come as a “shocking surprise” to NewsDay.

 

However, as shocking as this revelation might have been, it was no justification to twist and manipulate the truth, he said.

SAPA

Lecturer quit over racist remark


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Johannesburg – A Pretoria University philosophy lecturer has quit after writing in a blog that raping babies is a “black phenomenon”, The Times reported on Friday.

 

Pretoria University spokesperson Nicolize Mulder told the daily that lecturer Louise Mabille had resigned and that an investigation was underway, but added that she was writing in her personal capacity.

 

Mabille wrote on the Afrikaans website Praag: “Naturally, it is much easier to endlessly complain about ‘Calvinism’ than to ask the question on why the rape of babies is a cultural phenomenon among black ethnic groups.”

 

Mabille, who resigned with immediate effect on Thursday night, told the newspaper she “deeply regrets having written the piece and causing harm or pain to anyone”.

 

SAPA

‘We would not sell our souls to ANC again’- Councillors


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The majority of the fired ANC councillors in the troubled Tlokwe local municipality, spurned the party’s overtures to lure them back and registered as independent candidates for the by-elections set for September 18.

 

The ANC’s national disciplinary committee (NDC) recently ruled that the 14 councillors, who had been kicked out of the party by the provincial leadership, be reinstated as party members because their sacking was unprocedural.

 

The provincial executive met the fired councillors to convey the ruling of the NDC, but the message had no takers.

 

One of the affected members, Palesa Mohlope, said if they were unprocedurally fired as councillors, then they should be reinstated as councillors.

 

He said the ANC was trying to buy them back and indicated that they would never sell their souls again.

 

“To show our determination never to look back, we registered as independent candidates on Monday and the ANC should know what’s coming its way, hence these half-measures to try and defocus us. We say keep your ANC and we keep our integrity,” he said.

 

Mohlope added that what they fought against was corruption and they would not be seen to be reneging on that score.

 

“We live among the people, they suffer everyday yet some within the council are helping themselves to issues that should benefit the majority. 

 

“We fought against the sacked mayor’s conduct over a certain plot, where we were supposed to relocate people but he used it for his cattle and many other issues where the community had been fleeced. It appears in the ANC that people do not come first, a clear violation of the Batho Pele principles and we have had enough of that,” he said.

 

Mohlope will be standing as an independent in ward 20 and said operations were underway to galvanise support for all the independent candidates.

 

“The ANC saw what we did in ward 9 and they are running scared. We had little resources but it shook them to the core. We are going to see a changed Tlokwe because people are tired of corruption,” he said.

 

Provincial ANC spokesperson Ishmail Mnisi said the leadership in the province had met with the councillors but no one had indicated that they had issues.

 

“We had a meeting with them on Monday but they did not say anything. To us it appears everything was alright and as bearers of the message, there was also a limit on what we could do,” he said.

 

Mnisi added if any of the affected councillors had issues, they would have to raise them with the party individually because from the onset, each member was charged alone.

 

Meanwhile, the ANC has released a full list of its candidates set to contest in the September 18 by-elections at Tlokwe.

Source: http://www.thenewage.co.za

Farlam commission postponement talks continue


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Dali Mpofu’s application for the postponement of the Farlam Commission of Inquiry will be discussed on Thursday.

 

Mpofu, who is appearing for the miners who were wounded and arrested at Marikana last year, arrived at the commission with some of his clients on Wednesday.

 

He asked that the hearings be put on hold until the issue of funding for his team was resolved.

 

Mpofu has provisionally withdrawn from the commission because of a lack of funding.

 

“Continuing with the commission’s work in the absence of my clients is prejudicial,” he submitted.

 

Mpofu told the commission some of his clients were being harassed by the police.

 

However, Ishmael Semenya, for the police, said the arrest of anyone was not meant to harass them or disturb the functioning of the hearings.

 

The commission, which is sitting in Centurion, is investigating the deaths of 44 people in strike-related unrest near Lonmin’s platinum mining operations at Marikana, in North West, last August.

 

Police shot dead 34 people, almost all of them striking mineworkers, on August 16. Ten people, including two policemen and two security guards, were killed in the preceding week.

 

-Sapa 

New call centre for Mahikeng residents


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The Mahikeng local municipality finally established a call centre and residents in the provincial capital can now report on issues affecting them directly to the municipality.

 

The development is set to relieve pressure on the national hotline where Mahikeng residents used to endure long periods of waiting on the line to report on problems in their areas.

 

Deputy Minister in the Presidency, Obed Bapela, raised the need for a call centre in Mahikeng when he visited the city last year.

 

Bapela pointed out that the national hotline was clogged by calls on issues that municipalities were well placed to solve.

 

As an answer to this, member of the mayoral committee (MMC) for marketing and communications, Pontsho Tabane, told journalists on Tuesday that the new call centre would empower residents.

 

“This facility takes government to the people and it will help municipal leadership to communicate better with people on the ground.

 

“Expectations are that it will assist many of our consumers to report on potholes, street light defaults, burst water pipes and any other issues that affect the lives of residents,” Tabane said.

 

Tabane added that the centre will give a test to the municipality’s turn-around time on reported issues.

 

“When a report is made, we will be able to trace the time it was recorded, the person who recorded it and the time taken to attend to such a problem. The caller will also have these details and reference for the call and they can be able to gauge the responsiveness of the municipality to their issues.”

 

The call centre number is 0183889000 and it is free of charge.

 

“Any person can call from the comfort of their homes or anywhere they encounter problems. At present, the centre operates from 7am until 4.30pm due to financial constraints on the municipality’s part. We are looking at reviewing expenditure on this issue so that we train more staff members and be able to operate 24 hours.”

 

Tabane said the municipality would use the facility to communicate with residents who were in arrears with their bills.

 

“The auditor general has highlighted that the municipality has over R600m uncollected revenue.

 

“We will remind all the residents in arrears of up to three months, to keep record of that so that when we act, they will not say the municipality does not give them a chance to make arrangements.”

 

Asked how the municipality would guard against hoax calls, Tabane said the centre had a foolproof system.

 

“When a person calls, we will be able to have his/her coordinates and that will help us vet the extent of the problem.

 

“Unlike in our fire division, we will also have the ability to trace calls but the appeal we are making is for people to use this facility wisely.”

Source: http://www.thenewage.co.za

Teargas used on WSU students- DA Youth


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Johannesburg – The situation at the Walter Sisulu University (WSU), in the Eastern Cape, is becoming increasingly volatile following the use of tear gas on evicted students, the DA Youth said on Thursday.

“The DA Youth condemns the use of tear gas by police officers to disperse these protests,” its leader Mbali Ntuli said in a statement.

 

Students were told to leave the university, its residences and rented accommodation because of labour trouble, administrator Lourens van Staden said on Tuesday.

 

He said the labour deadlock had dragged on for five weeks.

 

Mbali said DA Students’ Organisation members at the university had recorded footage of a police officer using a tear gas grenade to disperse students protesting peacefully at the university’s East London campus.

 

“Students were protesting against the shutdown of WSU for these past five weeks and the forced eviction of students from WSU’s four campuses,” she said.

 

“Because WSU is essentially bankrupt, students are being forcefully evicted off campus, with a deadline for all students to be off-campus by tomorrow [Friday].”

 

Bankrupt

 

Higher education director general Gwebs Qonde said earlier on Thursday that WSU remained technically and commercially bankrupt.

 

Mbali said the situation at WSU was a disgrace.

 

“Many of the students have to travel long distances to get back home, and have no money to do so,” she said.

 

“Neither WSU nor the higher education department has said anything about reimbursing students for the travelling, alternative accommodation or the potentially lost academic year.”

 

With many of the students being poor, they simply could not afford this.

 

Mbali said the situation was being exacerbated by the police’s unnecessary overreaction and the university management’s unfair decision to evict students.

 

“We want a good, fair deal for both the workers and the students,” she said.

 

“Ultimately, this is about fixing the financial mess at WSU, and ensuring the ongoing viability of the university. Forcefully evicting the students is not an option.”

 

Police spokesperson Hazel Mqala said she was not aware of tear gas being used at the university.

 

SAPA