Mandela grandkid tells of addiction


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Johannesburg – Nelson Mandela’s granddaughter Zoleka is set to launch an explosive personal memoir on Monday that tells of her trials with drugs and sex addiction.

 

Speaking to the Sunday Times, Zoleka said her book, entitled When Hope Whispers, is a brutally honest account of the demons she fought for years. She tells of how just days before her daughter, 13-year-old Zenani died in a car crash, she herself was recovering from a suicide attempt after setting her bedroom on fire.

 

Zoleka, who has been to hell and back, is also a cancer survivor. She was diagnosed with breast cancer last year and initially rejected treatment. She has since had a mastectomy and undergone chemotherapy. She has one surviving child after losing a baby in 2011. The baby was born three months prematurely and died soon after birth from organ failure. 

For more http://www.news24.com

ANC pleased with voter registration


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Johannesburg – The ruling party was pleased with the voter registration progress currently underway, it said on Saturday.

 

“Almost 100 percent of polling stations across the country have been operating since opening time this morning and many South Africans have commended the speed and ease with which they have been able to register to vote in the 2014 general elections,” ANC spokesperson Jackson Mthembu said in a statement.

 

Mthembu said the African National Congress was confident that eligible voters who had not registered would do so following the success of the first day.

 

“Voting is an inalienable right, hard won through the centuries-old struggles of our people.

 

“It is because of their sacrifices that the ANC’s reiterates the call for South Africans in general and young people in particular to get up, step up and be part of shaping their future,” he said.

 

President Jacob Zuma and his daughter Msholozi visited a voting station at the Ntolwane Primary School in Nkandla, KwaZulu-Natal, the SABC reported.

 

Sporadic incidents

 

Zuma was checking if he was still registered in the area while Msholozi was there to re-register from Cape Town to Nkandla.

 

The IEC said voter registration had proceeded peacefully throughout the country.

 

However, sporadic incidents of community protests affected the registration process in “very limited areas”, chief electoral officer Mosotho Moepya told reporters in Pretoria.

 

“The [affected] areas include Bekkersdal in Gauteng, Sterkspruit in the Eastern Cape, Malamulele in Limpopo, the Joe Morolong municipality in the Northern Cape and Lansdowne Road in the Western Cape,” said Moepya.

 

“In all these areas, election officials are working closely with security forces, community leaders, political parties and other stakeholders to ensure citizens’ rights to register to vote are not impacted and voting stations are operational as soon as possible.”

 

Moepya said 99.7% of 22 263 voting stations had been operating normally across South Africa as at 15:00 on Saturday. He said all voter registration centres which had been closed would be re-opened as soon as possible.

 

The IEC’s Gauteng official Masego Sheburi said seven voting stations had been closed in Bekkersdal.

 

Misleading

 

“Seven stations have temporarily closed…[They] were forced to close because of activities in the vicinity of the stations. [We are]… making efforts to re-open them today still.”

 

It was alleged that during a walk-about in the area, Police Minister Nathi Mthethwa advised IEC officials to close their stations immediately due to high tension in the area.

 

Mthethwa denied advising that the stations be closed, saying the report was misleading and unprofessional.

 

Police spokesperson Captain Jabulani Kundethe said at the time that there were only three “distractions” in the morning as stations prepared to open.

 

“Police took control of it,” he said.

 

Apologise

 

According to reports, an angry mob had torched a municipal building and barricaded roads.

 

The mob was also reportedly intimidating community members wanting to register for the 2014 general election.

 

Violent protests erupted in Bekkersdal, outside Westonaria several weeks ago, with people demanding better service delivery and the removal of their mayor. The protests were suspended last Sunday to allow government time to investigate residents’ grievances.

 

Residents reportedly said they would not allow the IEC into the area unless Gauteng Premier Nomvula Mokonyane apologised for comments she made during a recent visit to the area last month.

 

It was alleged Mokonyane told Bekkersdal protesters who did not want her to address them that the ANC did not need their “dirty votes”.

 

Mokonyane said in a statement on Friday: “Given the situation currently and in the best interest of peace and stability, I really would want to apologise to those who may believe, or who were made to believe that I made such attacks to the residents of Bekkersdal.”

 

SAPA

Chiefs edge out gitty Wits


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Johannesburg – Kaizer Chiefs edged a gritty Wits side with a 2-1 victory in their Premiership encounter in Nasrec on Saturday evening.

 

Amakhosi piled on the pressure in the first half but were unable to find an early breakthrough.

 

Siphiwe Tshabalala’s attempt in the 17th minute was parried away by Wits goalkeeper Moeneeb Josephs, and Siyabonga Nkosi thundered an effort across face of goal from the rebound.

 

Kingston Nkhatha had an opportunity on the half-hour mark but he directed his shot over the bar from close range.

 

With five minutes left in the first half, Josephs did well to save an attempt from Bernard Parker to keep the sides level at the half-time break.

 

Nkhatha made up for it, however, when he struck four minutes after the interval, climbing high to reach a cross from Parker on the right and netting a header to put the home side in front.

 

On the hour mark, Nkhatha was denied with only the ‘keeper to beat when a vulnerable Josephs ran out and put his body on the line to block the ball.

 

Wits hit back in the 66th minute when veteran Matthew Booth produced a clever flick which found Ryan Chapman, who buried the ball in the back of the net, just minutes after coming on as a substitute.

 

Chiefs maintained their composure, however, and drew ahead again with five minutes left when Lehlohonolo Majoro smashed his header against the post, with a fumbling Josephs knocking the ball in off the rebound.

 

Josephs pulled off a great save to keep out Majoro in injury time, but Amakhosi had done enough to grab three valuable points, handing high-flying Wits their first loss in four games.

 

SAPA

Boks too much for Wales


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Cardiff – South Africa have maintained their winning dominance over Wales on Saturday with a brutal 24-15 (half-time 17-12) victory based on a suffocating blanket defence and an unerring knack of doing the basics well.

 

As it happened: Wales v SA

 

The Springboks scored three tries through captain Jean de Villiers, Bismarck du Plessis and Fourie du Preez, flyhalf Morné Steyn bagging two conversions and a penalty, and Patrick Lambie also hitting a conversion.

 

Wales had just five Leigh Halfpenny penalties to their credit, meaning that under coach Warren Gatland, they have now lost 21 of their 22 Test matches against southern hemisphere giants New Zealand, South Africa and Australia, the exception a 21-18 win over Australia in 2008.

 

Their sole victory over South Africa, in 27 internationals stretching back 107 years, came back in 1999.

 

The match at the Millennium Stadium was one of attrition, notably in the first-half when a series of high-impact collisions saw Wales forced into three replacements and South Africa one.

 

But for all of Wales’ endeavour, they could not breach a Springbok line led superbly by lock Eben Etzebeth and hooker Du Plessis, the pair also instrumental in their side’s effective driving maul and disruptive lineout play.

 

An electric start after an emotional rendition of the Last Post in mark of Monday’s Armistice Day saw Wales centre Jonathan Davies burst through four tackles.

 

A Springbok infringement at the proceeding ruck gifted Halfpenny an opening penalty, swiftly levelled by Steyn at the other end.

 

Halfpenny kicked his second penalty after Davies again scythed through the Bok midfield in a frantic passage of play, but South Africa responded in magnificent style.

 

Steyn found Bryan Habana in space in his own 22m area, the Toulon wing accelerating past Welsh hooker Richard Hibbard and passing inside to Du Plessis, whose off-load De Villiers juggled before grounding despite Mike Phillips’ desperate tackle.

 

Wales were forced into two replacements, with Liam Williams and Jonathan Davies both injured in the build-up to the try, James Hook and Ashley Beck coming on.

 

The visitors spurned two penalties from kickable distances, and the gamble paid off against a Wales side in disarray, Du Plessis showing great strength to drive over from a slick lineout move to Duane Vermuelen at the back.

 

A second Steyn conversion and suddenly it was 17-6 after 18 minutes, the Springbok flyhalf then also going off injured to be replaced by Willie le Roux, with fullback Lambie moving to pivot.

 

Halfpenny clawed back six points with his third and fourth penalties, Wales dominating possession but unable to maximise their pressure in the danger zone.

 

With tempers raised, Bath flank Francois Louw saw yellow for driving his forearm into a prone Hibbard, and Wales threw everything they had at the Boks, but the visitors’ blanket defence held firm until half-time.

 

The second period started off quite disjointedly, Halfpenny bagging a fifth, long-range penalty in the 54th minute after prop Gethin Jenkins, outstanding in the loose, forced Bok debutant Frans Malherbe into collapsing a scrum.

 

Malherbe was immediately subbed off but Irish referee Alain Rolland had lost patience and when the next scrum also went down, Jenkins and replacement Coenie Oosthuizen were sent to the sin-bin, meaning uncontested scrums.

 

Lambie then scuffed a snatched drop-goal and a penalty attempt as Wales upped their defence against a rattled Springbok team.

 

But two old heads currently plying their trade in Japan came to the rescue, recalled centre Jaque Fourie following up on a brilliant Du Preez clearing kick, flicking the ball inside to the scrumhalf who scooted under the posts for a simple try Lambie converted.

 

Scorers:

 

Wales:

 

Penalties: Leigh Halfpenny (5)

 

South Africa:

 

Tries: Jean de Villiers, Bismark du Plessis, Fourie du Preez

 

Conversions: Morné Steyn (2), Pat Lambie

 

Penalty: Steyn 

 

Teams:

 

Wales:

 

15 Leigh Halfpenny, 14 George North, 13 Jonathan Davies, 12 Scott Williams, 11 Liam Williams, 10 Rhys Priestland, 9 Mike Phillips, 8 Toby Faletau, 7 Sam Warburton (captain), 6 Dan Lydiate, 5 Alun Wyn Jones, 4 Bradley Davies, 3 Adam Jones, 2 Richard Hibbard, 1 Gethin Jenkins

 

Substitutes: 16 Ken Owens, 17 Paul James, 18 Scott Andrews, 19 Luke Charteris, 20 Justin Tipuric, 21 Lloyd Williams, 22 James Hook, 23 Ashley Beck

 

South Africa:

 

15 Patrick Lambie, 14 JP Pietersen, 13 Jaque Fourie, 12 Jean de Villiers (captain), 11 Bryan Habana, 10 Morné Steyn, 9 Fourie du Preez, 8 Duane Vermeulen, 7 Willem Alberts, 6 Francois Louw, 5 Flip van der Merwe, 4 Eben Etzebeth, 3 Frans Malherbe, 2 Bismarck du Plessis, 1 Tendai Mtawarira.

 

Substitutes: 16 Adriaan Strauss, 17 Gurthrö Steenkamp 18 Coenie Oosthuizen, 19 Pieter-Steph du Toit, 20 Siya Kolisi, 21 Ruan Pienaar, 22 JJ Engelbrecht, 23 Willie le Roux

 

 

AFP

Man killed in acrash


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Johannesburg – A man was killed when two cars collided in Witpoortjie, Roodepoort, on Saturday, said paramedics.

 

Netcare 911 spokesperson Santi Steinmann said three other people were injured in the crash. One of them was in a critical condition.

 

“All the injured people were treated on scene and transported to hospital but sadly the critically injured man passed away at the hospital,” said Steinmann.

 

The cause of the accident was unknown.

 

SAPA

Top brass under in W Cape


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Cape Town – Senior Western Cape police officers are being probed for corruption, racketeering and money-laundering, while a local businessman, known for his generosity, appears to be at the centre of the scandal.

 

According to the Sunday Times, Mohamed Salim Dawjee, a Goodwood businessman, is known for plying cops with gifts and money.  Dawjee is also linked to Western Cape commissioner Lieutenant-General Arno Lamoer who is currently being investigated by the Hawks.

 

This comes after national police commissioner General Riah Phiyega made headlines after an Independent Complaints Directorate investigation was launched into her alleged action in tipping off Lamoer over the investigation into him.

For more http://www.news24.com

SA model Amantle got it all


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By Obakeng Maje

 

A model is a person who is employed to promote, display, or advertise commercial products (notably fashion clothing) or to serve as a visual object for people who are creating works of art.

 

Modelling is normally considered to be different from other types of public performance, such as an acting, dancing or being a mime artist. 

 

The boundary between modelling and performing is, however, not well defined, although such activities as appearing in a movie or a play are almost never labelled as modelling.

 

Our crew took time to speak to one of the most successful models in South African,Amantle Mokoubung.

 

Incomparable Mafikeng-born model shed more light about who the real Amantle Mokubung is, so setback and relax while beautiful and gorgeous Mokubung says it all.

 

A 25 year-old model was born in Mahikeng and said she was encouraged by her mom to become a model. Amantle Mokubung was raised by a single parent as her father passed on while she was only two.

 

“I was raised by my mom as my father passed away while I was only two. I drew my inspiration from my mom” Amantle said.

 

Mokubung said she was teased a lot at primary and high school because of her skin condition(acne).

 

“Deep down I thought it will be cool if one day I could appear in a magazine. While studying towards my degree, I started to contact the fashion editors of small publications until I landed my first shoot” she smiles.

 

She said her first shoot was the most amazing thing ever and it made her feel prettier than ever even though it was short.

 

Mokubung said her mother is her role model. 

 

 

“I know it sounds very clinche, but it is true. My mother taught me a lot of things. Remaining well-groomed, and how to handle myself in public was never an issue. Models are expected to look good at all times. My mother is the kind of a person who stops you when you step out of the house, either because one side of your dress isn’t properly ironed, your nail polish is chipped or your heels appear a bit ashy” said Mokubung.

 

 

Types of Modeling

 

 

Amantle said as a conservative person, her mother was very supportive and she first wanted to know what kind of modeling she gets herself into.

 

“I avoided lingerie and swimwear shoots. I grew up being a very independent, responsible and a hardworking child. I am glad that my mother allowed me to try all different options that I was exposed to, including modeling” said Amantle.

 

Amantle with a small waist and curves, representing a typical African woman said, a controversial size 0 debate in the industry will continue until we start seeing a true reflection shape and size of the typical African woman.

 

 

The media perceived modeling as is for only slender built people and this sometime leads young women to eating disorders in effort to live up to perception of beauty which has being painted by the industry.

 

 

As a full time Marketing Strategist, Amantle said a longer hours of sleep and more water will go a long way.

 

“I’ve been getting less sleep lately due to my new modeling commitments, but I try by all means to squeeze in naps whenever possible” she said.

 

What is needed to become a model?

 

Amantle shared her experience about become a model and how to make it through.”Get into it for right reasons, and plan ahead. Knowing the type of modeling which you wish to pursue helps you to channel your efforts in the right direction. Planning ahead will help one incoporate his/her future plans into modeling career” she said.

 

 

Education, Unemployment, Crime and Teenage pregnancy

 

 

Armed with BA degree in Marketing, Amantle stressed how important education is nowadays. “Education has always been and remain important in my ‘world’. My sister continues to remind me that one never stop learning. Whether it be through formal education, interacting with people from all walks of life or just generally”. 

 

“In my previous job, I spent lunch-time mostly with cleaning staff. People never understood my ‘vibe’. Being part of “no sleep” generation allows us to work more in flexible working enviroments” she outlines.

 

Even though Amantle is not married nor having her own kids currently, she is seeing someone….so boys hold your horses.

 

“Balancing work (full time and part time) is very difficult and requires a person who understands the pressure of being in such a “hot” position. It means minimal sleep for me because I ensure that I am a present daughter, sister, partner and aunt, and still excel in everything that am involved in” said Amantle.

 

We asked Amantle about her take on socio-economic burning issues especially faced by youth. Mahikeng-born model pulls all stops when addressing this issue.

“It all boils down to choice. I have read numerous success stories about young entrepreneurs on portals such as Umsombuvu and have come to realise that as difficult as it may be to get a breakthrough in business, it is indeed possible” she said.

   

Amantle said the reality is that not all of us can get jobs, a part of population need to creat jobs.

 

“No one owes you anything, you owe it to yourself to be successful. Be creative, start something. We have enabling enviroment (technology and business funding institutions) but fail to make the most of it due to false entitlement issues” Amantle said.

 

Drug and Alcohol abuse, and Teenage pregnancy are also decisions that people make, she outlines.

 

“We tend to be irresponsible in choices we make and expect positive result in return” Amantle said.

 

Mokubung said most South Africans are good at playing the “guilt trip”.

 

“Because my father passed away” ten years later, the person still has not recovered from rough patch and has introduced certain life-style decisions as a coping mechanism, says Mokubung.

 

“The blame game needs to stop, and we need to spend more time understanding and involving the person that we are. Be firm, take a pen and write your future” 

 

“When writing our future, we need to make sure that we work hard towards achieving what we wish for” concludes Amantle.  

 

Amantle Mokubung is a seasoned model and worked in many projects. To have more information, you can visit her website on http://www.amantle.co.za

 

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