Protector and MPs clash on mandate again


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Cape Town – The row between Public Protector Thuli Madonsela and MPs over the extent of her investigative powers, intensified on Tuesday against the backdrop of her adverse findings against IEC chairperson Pansy Tlakula.

Madonsela faced a barrage of questions on her mandate, partly prompted by her call for a “quiet discussion” on this issue that has bedevilled her relationship with Parliament’s justice portfolio committee since last year.

She was briefing the committee on her office’s annual report, and seeking support for a request for an additional R35m in funding from the Treasury.

ANC MP Mathole Motshekga asked Madonsela to explain her understanding of the term “state affairs”, and said it was regrettable that nearly 20 years of its establishment there was still confusion about the exact role of the office of the public protector.

“If we are not clear about that, then we are going to have a problem on money,” he said.

Madonsela responded that her mandate extended to investigating the state “in its entirety” and that she drew her definition from the Public Finance Management Act.

The question is integral to Tlakula’s rejection of Madonsela’s findings that her role in renting new headquarters for the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) was improper and amounted to maladministration.

Legal advice sought

In a 55-page reply to Madonsela’s report leaked to the media, Tlakula claimed that the Public Protector Act gave Madonsela the power to investigate maladministration on the part of the government, but that although the IEC was an organ of state it “does not form part of government”.

Parliament has asked for legal advice on how to handle the protector’s report on the matter, with some MPs noting that it was unprecedented partly because it involved two chapter nine institutions.

Madonsela told the committee there was nothing strange about chapter nine institutions overseeing each other.

“It is the first time that I’m hearing that they are excluded from my mandate,” she said.

“The auditor general audits all of us and he is a chapter nine institution.”

Turning to Motshekga’s wider question, she said it was strange that there had not been confusion about her mandate until last year, although she had tackled the same kind of cases as her predecessors who were not challenged about their mandate.

“Advocate [Selby] Baqwa was investigating all state affairs. He was investigating at three levels of government and it was never an issue,” she said, referring to the first person to hold her post after the office was established in 1995.

“There is nothing new that we have done, not a single thing.”

Chapter nine institutions refer to institutions established in terms of chapter nine of the Constitution to support democracy.

– SAPA

Zuma shocked at Diepsloot deaths


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Johannesburg – President Jacob Zuma has expressed shock and dismay at the murder of two toddlers in Diepsloot north of Johannesburg, the Presidency said on Tuesday.

“These gruesome incidents of extreme torture and murder of our children do not belong to the society that we are continuously striving to build together,” Zuma said.

“We condemn these murders in the strongest possible terms. Whilst we appeal to the communities not to take the matters into their hands, we also want to urge them to work with law enforcement authorities to find the perpetrators and prosecute them to the fullest extent of the law.”

The girls, aged two and three, were found dead in a toilet cubicle by a resident on Tuesday morning.

Lieutenant Colonel Lungelo Dlamini said they were reported missing on Saturday by their parents.

AgangSA urged the police to act with speed in their investigation.

“We urge the police to act with speed in their investigations to ensure that whoever is or are responsible for the shocking crime against these children are brought to book,” said Vanessa Hani, Women’s Forum co-ordinator.

She visited the family of the girls. The party identified them as Zandile Mali and Yonelisa Mali.

“The story of the girls’ family is too sad for words. Theirs is a story of poverty, denial of dignity – hopelessness that is repeated all over the country.”

“It is a story of millions of our fellow citizens who live like forgotten people after almost 20 years of freedom,” she said.

She said that the family of 11 people – with Zandile and Yolisa included – lived in a cramped shack that afforded them no privacy.

– SAPA

Bloemfontein couple dies in murder-suicide


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Bloemfontein – A couple was found dead in their home in Fichardt Park in Bloemfontein on Tuesday, Free State police said.

A 27-year-old man went to visit his parents and there was no response to his knock on the door even though both their cars were parked in their driveway, said Captain Chaka Marope.

“The man called the police when his parents did not respond to his knocks,” said Marope.

Marope said when police arrived, they broke the door open.

“After entering the house they found a 56-year-old male and his 42-year-old wife lying in a pool of blood.”

The man was found with his own revolver in his right hand.

“It is suspected that the man killed his wife and then shot himself,” said Marope.

The motive for the killings was not known and police had opened an inquest docket.

– SAPA

Whites should return land – Malema


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Pic: (By Obakeng Maje)

Vanderbijlpark – There will be no true reconciliation in the country as long as whites have the land, Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) leader Julius Malema said on Tuesday.

“You [whites] are more than welcome. This is your country, no one should make you [feel] threatened, but you will be unsettled if you are not ready to heed the call,” he told students at the Vaal University of Technology (VUT) in Vanderbijlpark.

“Let’s share the land; let’s share the minerals.”

Wearing a yellow, buttoned shirt and dark sunglasses, Malema stood on the back of a bakkie in the parking lot of the VUT’s main residence on Tuesday.

The students were dressed in red T-shirts and red berets. Some shielded themselves from the sun with umbrellas while others sat under trees.

Malema referred to the land owned by white people as “stolen property”. He said it might have been land which they inherited, but that their grandfathers had killed black men for that land.

“We not going to commit white genocide,” he said.

“You are suffering from a generational curse, because of the people who came before you. To get rid of the curse you must give back the land. You are in possession of stolen property.”

EFF ‘not racist’

Malema said the EFF was not a racist organisation, but was an honest organisation.

“White South Africans should love EFF, because we [are] the only organisation that tells them the truth,” he said.

“If white people want a permanent honeymoon, they must deliver the stolen property,” he said.

Malema was referring to reports that some EFF members had displayed placards with racist messages at its launch in Marikana at the weekend.

According to Gauteng EFF spokesman Patrick Sindane, the messages read: “Honeymoon is over for whites” and “To be a revolutionary you have to be inspired by hatred and bloodshed”.

He said the party was disappointed in those members.

Malema said there needed to be “genuine” reconciliation in the country.

“These people, the black masses are hurting…. The more you become more rejecting to the idea of sharing the land, you will have an unled revolution, and that is anarchy. We don’t need anarchy. Let us talk about a genuine reconciliation,” he said.

“The future is going to be very bright if you decide to share with us.”

Just before Malema arrived at the gathering, students sang songs ridiculing President Jacob Zuma and made gestures mocking the way he pushes his glasses up his nose.

– SAPA

Chiefs to extend Ritchie’s contract?


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The future of Kaizer Chiefs left back, Keegan Ritchie, appears to be unclear as the player’s contract expires in June next year and as yet, there seems to be no word from Naturena that a new deal will be offered.

For more http://www.soccerladuma.com

Shaik denies assault on caddie


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Durban – Convicted fraudster Schabir Shaik has denied the latest allegation of assault on a caddie, claiming that the caddies were being used by people who wanted him back in jail.

The Mercury reported on Monday that Shaik, who was released on parole due to illness, was accused of assaulting and verbally abusing a caddie at Papwa Sewgolum Golf Course in Reservoir Hills.

 

Shaik was also accused of paying the caddie R500 not to lay criminal charges, which he has denied.

 

According to a report in the The Daily News on Tuesday, another caddie alleged that Shaik assaulted him two months earlier.

 

The caddie, Innocent Dlamini, claimed that Shaik beat him with his driver.

 

Shaik has since denied the alleged assault, adding that the caddie might have been a setup to “trap him”.

He said that should he assault anyone he would be sent back to prison.

For mre http://www.news24.com

R34 million CRU project for Mahikeng residents


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By Obakeng Maje

North West MEC for Human Settlements, Public Safety and Liaison Nono Maloyi is confident that his department will close the existing housing backlog in the province, and the challenges faced by those in the housing gap market.

 

Maloyi said this during the launch of the Mahikeng 100 Community Residential Units (CRU) at extension 39 in Mahikeng local municipality.

 

Addressing hundreds of communities attending the official launch of the project, Maloyi said the completion of these units will contribute immensely to service delivery in changing people’s lives for better.

 

“We are faced with a huge housing backlog in the province and the completion of these units will definitely contribute enormously to fast track the housing delivery in the province. Our people are expecting a lot from us and we must deliver quality services on time,” said Maloyi.

 

The departmental MEC encouraged the contractor to ensure quality of the units by working with the National Home Builders Registration Council. 

 

“As much as we want to speed up our service delivery, we must not just run for quantity, leaving the quality behind. There is no use to build and handover shoddy houses to our people in which at a later stage they will come back to us and complain about the quality of our houses, that will be a draw back on its own,” he said.

 

The R34 million project is expected to be completed in February 2014. The department has committed to build 400 CRU’s in the areas of Mahikeng, Matlosana and Rustenburg with a total allocation of R110, 9 million during this financial year.

 

Maloyi further said that the department intends to conduct a feasibility studies in the municipalities of Madibeng and Moses Kotane with anticipation of constructing the units in the 2014/15 financial year.

 

The first phase of 100 CRU’s in the province was built and handed over in the Tlokwe Local Municipality worth R24, 9 million in the last financial year.

 

The CRU’s are one of the departmental housing programmes aimed to facilitate the provision of secure, stable rental tenure for lower income earners and provides a coherent framework for dealing with many different forms of existing public sector residential accommodation. 

 

The units target persons and households earning less than R3500 a month and cannot afford formal private rental and social housing market.

 

Maloyi further expressed his gratitude to committed men and women who selflessly volunteered as data collectors during the departmental socio- economic impact research conducted around extension 39. 

 

MEC bestowed them with certificates of recognition for the work well done.

 

The study revealed amongst others, high rate of unemployment and influx from rural to urban area which is something which need integrated approach to deal with.-TDN

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Marikana miners killings premeditated, Commission hears


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POLICE have always maintained they only fired live rounds at Marikana miners in self-defence. Yet affidavits from mortuary workers indicate that cops had instructed them to be on standby with mortuary vehicles . . . hours before the actual massacre took place.

The affidavits by workers at different mortuaries were submitted to the Marikana Commission of Inquiry yesterday after the commission had been in recess for two weeks.

Evidence leader Advocate Matthew Chaskalson submitted that cops had anticipated that people were going to be killed during their operations.

Chaskalson said this was in line with provincial police commissioner Lieutenant-General Zukiswa Mbombo’s statement, who had earlier said cops were going to end the strike that day.

It has also been confirmed that 4 500 extra rounds of live R5 ammunition were delivered during the Marikana massacre.

The police have always maintained they shot at the miners in self-defence. In affidavits Chaskalson submitted, evidence suggests cops started making calls as early as 8am to mortuaries, demanding extra vehicles. In some instances cops were asked to make the requests in writing and complied.

Mortuary worker Josephine Ngake said Colonel Classen from Phokeng Police Station requested four mortuary vehicles to be sent to Marikana.

“I said I could only send one vehicle and asked Classen to send a letter of request,” she said. Later she received the request by e-mail.

Another mortuary worker, Simon Laka, from the Phokeng government mortuary, said he and other workers were summoned to Marikana. They were told to be there at about 6pm, two hours after the first shooting. He said they spent the night at Marikana and collected about 30 bodies from 5am onwards the next morning, which they took to the Phokeng mortuary.

Police strategist Colonel Duncan Scott denied any knowledge of the order for live ammunition and denied knowing about the request for mortuary vans.

He agreed with Chaskalson that it might have come up at meetings but he could have been preoccupied with other things.

For more http://www.dailysun.mobi

Igesund to focus on youth players


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Johannesburg – Bafana Bafana coach Gordon Igesund has called for a restructuring of the country’s youth teams set-up, in order for players to be better developed before making their senior national debuts.

 

Igesund said South Africa’s Under-17, U-20 and U-23 teams were lying dormant and were in desperate need of more matches, which would allow young players to move through the ranks and gain experience along the way.

 

“If you look at the big picture, we have to start developing a team for 2015, 2017 and 2018,” Igesund said in Kempton Park on Monday.

 

His comments come a day after the Council of Southern Africa Football Associations (Cosafa) U-20 Championships draw in Lesotho.

 

South Africa were drawn in Group C, along with Zambia, the Seychelles and Namibia.

 

The side last played in March and their previous major competition were at the 2009 U-20 World Cup in Egypt where they progressed to the last-16 stage.

 

Igesund said Bafana Bafana should not be used to identify and nurture young talent, but was rather a team that deserved only the best and most experienced players in the country.

 

“The senior national team is a not a place to give caps away all the time,” he said.

 

“They have to start playing in the Under-17s, 20s and 23’s. There are so many players that have to start playing.

 

“If these young players had five or six years of being in the under-17s, 20s and 23 teams, then when they come to the senior national team, they will be much more experienced than they are now.

 

“We have to remember that our senior national team is not a development team. We have to pick the best players at all times.”

 

Igesund has blooded a number of youngsters since his appointment as national coach last year, including Kgosi Ntlhe (19), Ayanda Patosi (20), Bongani Zungu (21), Siyanda Xulu (21) and Daylon Claasen (23).

 

“Over the last three or four months, I’ve given a lot players opportunities and I wouldn’t have done anything differently if I had the chance again,” Igesund said of his squad selections.

 

“Slowly but surely there might be one or two older players out of the system come 2015 or 2018.

 

“I’ve given them (young players) the opportunity, where normally I’d be watching them in the Under-23 team. But because these teams have been inactive, we’ve taken the responsibility of throwing them in at the deep end.

 

“We’ve been putting them into the squad, having a look at them at the risk of losing sometimes.” – Sapa

DA lays charges against ANC North West officials over intimidation


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By Obakeng Maje

ATAMELANG-The DA has laid charges against 4 ANC members that had maliciously damaged and destroyed DA posters in Gannalaagte Ward 5 Tswaing in the run-up to upcoming by-election of 23 October 2013.

 

  

 

A formal complaint was also lodged at a Local Party Liaison Committee meeting of the IEC. 

 

In addition a complaint was forwarded to the national IEC Offices.

 

 

 

“The ANC representatives attending the meeting on Thursday 10 October was requested by the IEC official to reprimand their members to respect property of other parties contesting the by-election” DA Tiaan Kotze said.

 

 

 

Despite the request the ANC defiantly intensified its campaign against the DA by destroying almost all of the posters resulting in damages of more than R15 000, 00.

 

 

 

“Several DA members and the DA candidate witnessed as they went on their road of destruction” Kotze said. 

 

 

 

The intensified destruction started after a funeral on Saturday 12 October, where a government official of the Department of Rural and Land Affairs accused the DA as a “racist Party” that will bring apartheid back, says DA.

 

 

 

“Some threatening messages were written on the posters.  The DA Tswaing will not be intimidated by these actions.  Voters have the Constitutional Right to associate with a political party of their choice” said Kotze. 

 

 

 

DA says, their vote is their secret. 

 

“The ANC promising them food parcels and blankets is an incentive to try and buy the loyalty of the Voter”.

 

 

 

“The intimidation by the ANC and the distribution of food parcels in by-election ward are signs that the ANC is increasingly coming under threat from their former support base” concludes DA Tiaan Kotze.-TDN

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