Madiba to receive global farewell from leaders


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Johannesburg – Presidents past and present, global figures and A-list celebrities made their way to South Africa on Monday to pay the world’s respects at a memorial service and state funeral for freedom icon Nelson Mandela.

More than 80 000 people will attend an impassioned, emotional tribute on Tuesday to the country’s inspirational first black president at the FNB stadium in Soweto, where he made his last major public appearance for the 2010 World Cup final.

The service is seen as a final chance for grieving South Africans to unite in a mass celebration of Mandela’s life ahead of the more formal state funeral.

Although Mandela had been critically ill for months, the announcement of his death on Thursday night was still a body blow for a country that had looked to his unassailable moral authority as a comforting constant in a time of uncertain social and economic change.

Parliament was to meet on Monday in Cape Town for a special session to honour the hero who emerged from 27 years in prison to lead his country out of the shadow of apartheid into a multi-racial democracy.

Mandela last appeared in the House in February 2010, the 20th anniversary of his release.

SA version of Gandhi

His former wife Winnie Madikizela-Mandela and grandson Mandla are both ruling African National Congress (ANC) members of parliament, but it was unclear if they would participate in the session.

“We hope some members of the Mandela family will be there,” ANC caucus spokesperson Moloto Mothapo said.

Former president FW de Klerk, who shared the 1993 Nobel peace Prize with Mandela, was also invited.

For the past three days, 24-hour vigils have been held outside the Johannesburg residence where Mandela died – the mood alternating between one of profound loss and relief that his physical suffering was over.

“Madiba was our version, the South African version, of the great Mahatma Gandhi,” said Laloo Isu Chiba, a fellow prison inmate of Mandela’s on Robben Island.

“For many, many, many generations to come, it will be almost impossible to get a person … with his commitment, his dedication and his qualities,” Chiba said.

Winnie and Mandla both attended a Methodist service in Johannesburg on Sunday as part of a national day of prayer for Mandela observed in churches, mosques, synagogues and temples across the country.

President Jacob Zuma used the occasion to make a passionate public appeal for South Africans to unite behind Mandela’s ideals of equality, freedom and justice and to “keep his dream alive”.

11 000 troops mobilised 

US President Barack Obama together with his wife Michelle and three previous occupants of the White House were among the roughly 70 heads of state and government flying in from every corner of the globe.

While Obama will attend Tuesday’s memorial service at the Soweto stadium, others will arrive later in the week for Mandela’s burial on 15 December in his boyhood home of Qunu.

British Prime Minister David Cameron, French President Francois Hollande and UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon are all expected.

Cuban state media said President Raul Castro would attend, but not his ailing older brother Fidel – a long time friend of Mandela’s.

Notable absentees include Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who cited high travel and security costs, and Mandela’s fellow Nobel peace laureate, the Dalai Lama, who since 2009 has twice been denied a visa for South Africa.

Talk show queen Oprah Winfrey and singer-activist Bono, as well as British billionaire Richard Branson and musician Peter Gabriel are expected to be among the celebrity mourners.

Around 11 000 troops have been mobilised to ensure security and help with crowd control efforts during the week-long series of funeral events.

Prior to his burial, Mandela’s body will lie in state for three days from Wednesday in the amphitheatre of the Union Buildings in Pretoria where was sworn in as president in 1994.

Each morning, his coffin will be carried through the streets of the capital in a funeral cortege, to give as many people as possible the chance to pay their final respects.

Friends, colleagues, comrades and family of Nelson Mandela are invited to share their memories and tributes, and to light a candle for him, on his profile at Remembered.co.za.

– AFP

Why was Cape Times editor sacked: Sanef


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Johannesburg – The reasons behind the sudden dismissal of Cape Times editor Alide Dasnois must be revealed, the SA National Editors’ Forum (Sanef) said on Monday.

“In the absence of a statement from the Cape Times or Sekunjalo Holdings – the new owner of Independent Newspapers – explaining why Dasnois was suddenly dismissed, Sanef is concerned whether it has any connection with the publication of a story in the newspaper on Friday,” it said in a statement.

On Sunday, the Mail&Guardian reported that Dasnois was informed of her removal on Friday, and that Monday’s edition of the newspaper would be edited by Western Cape group editor Chris Whitfield.

“I am in the process of seeking legal advice,” Dasnois told the Mail&Guardian at the time.

The story in question, which appeared in the newspaper on Friday, apparently dealt with a finding by the Public Protector that the awarding of a fisheries tender by the agriculture, forestry, and fisheries department to Sekunjalo Marine Services Consortium was “improper”.

The consortium is a subsidiary of Sekunjalo Holdings.

Sekunjalo Investments subsequently sent a lawyer’s letter to the Cape Times claiming the story was inaccurate.

The company also apparently threatened to sue the newspaper, editor, and journalist involved for damages.

Sanef said it was “shocked” and “concerned” at the situation.

“Sanef condemns any interference with the independence of editors and journalists when carrying out their duties. We call on Sekunjalo Holdings to clarify the issues relating to Dasnois’s sudden dismissal without delay and to desist from making threats against the staffers.”

Comment from Independent Newspapers was not immediately available.

– SAPA

Quiet outside Mandela’s Qunu home


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Qunu – There was little activity outside former president Nelson Mandela‘s Qunu home in the Eastern Cape on Monday morning.

At around 10.10 a white Mercedes-Benz, led by a white VW polo with sirens blaring, drove down the closed-off road and entered the main gates.

Shortly before 10:00 three military police vehicles arrived and parked on the grass in front of the main gates.

Police on horseback were patrolling Qunu.

Two white bakkies also arrived at the main gates after 10:00, and men carrying two-way radios got out to greet and talk to the officers at the gates.

Tar and painting

A few cars entered the property through the main gates while heavy goods trucks entered on a gravel road.

Events infrastructure companies also entered on the side road.

Police, military armoured cars, and an ambulance also remained outside.

A large yellow crane was lifting steel rods and erecting a structure inside the property. Nearby a large white tent had been erected.

The structure, a few metres high and wide, could be seen from the N2 which is the main road between Qunu and Mthatha.

Since Mandela’s death on Thursday night mourners have left flowers at the base of the property’s wall.

Police asked journalists to stay on the other side of the N2 which passes the home.

Construction workers were laying tar and painting the road on the N2 between Mthatha and Qunu.

The road was closed-off for a few kilometres before and after Mandela’s house. Qunu is about 30km from Mthatha.

Friends, colleagues, comrades and family of Nelson Mandela are invited to share their memories and tributes, and to light a candle for him, on his profile at Remembered.co.za.

– SAPA

SA prepares for global farewell to Mandela


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Johannesburg – Presidents past and present, global figures and A-list celebrities are making their way to South Africa on Monday to pay the world’s respects at a memorial service and state funeral for freedom icon Nelson Mandela.

 

More than 80 000 people will attend an impassioned, emotional tribute on Tuesday to the country’s inspirational first black president at the FNB stadium in Soweto, where he made his last major public appearance for the 2010 World Cup final.

 

The service is seen as a final chance for grieving South Africans to unite in a mass celebration of Mandela’s life ahead of the more formal state funeral.

 

Although Mandela had been critically ill for months, the announcement of his death on Thursday night was still a body blow for a country that had looked to his unassailable moral authority as a comforting constant in a time of uncertain social and economic change.

 

Vigils

 

Permanent day and night vigils have been held outside the Johannesburg residence where he died – the mood alternating between one of profound loss and relief that his physical suffering was over.

 

“Madiba was our version, the South African version, of the great Mahatma Gandhi,” said Laloo Isu Chiba, a fellow prison inmate of Mandela’s on Robben Island.

 

“For many, many, many generations to come, it will be almost impossible to get a person … with his commitment, his dedication and his qualities,” Chiba said.

 

Sunday marked the formal start of a week-long state funeral for the man who forged a new multi-racial South Africa from the discredited remnants of the apartheid era he helped dismantle.

 

On Monday, Parliament will meet for a special session to honour Mandela, who emerged from 27 years in prison to lead his country out of the shadow of apartheid into a multi-racial democracy.

 

Mandela last appeared in the house in February 2010, on the 20th anniversary of his prison release.

 

His former wife Winnie Madikizela-Mandela and grandson Mandla are both African National Congress MPs, but it was unclear if they would participate in the session.

 

“We hope some members of the Mandela family will be there,” ANC caucus spokesperson Moloto Mothapo said.

 

Former president FW de Klerk, who shared the 1993 Nobel peace Prize with Mandela, was also invited.

 

Winnie and Mandla both attended a Methodist service in Johannesburg on Sunday as part of a national day of prayer for Mandela observed in churches, mosques, synagogues and temples across the country.

 

President Jacob Zuma used the occasion to make a passionate public appeal for South Africans to unite behind Mandela’s ideals of equality, freedom and justice and to “keep his dream alive”.

 

70 heads of state

 

US President Barack Obama together with his wife Michelle and three previous occupants of the White House were among the roughly 70 heads of state and government flying in from every corner of the globe.

 

While Obama will attend Tuesday’s memorial service at the Soweto stadium, others will arrive later in the week for Mandela’s burial on 15 December in his boyhood home of Qunu.

 

British Prime Minister David Cameron, French President Francois Hollande and UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon are all expected, along with a long-list of international dignitaries and marquee celebrities.

 

One leader notable by his absence will be Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, due to the costs involved, according to Israeli press reports.

 

Mandela’s fellow Nobel peace laureate, the Dalai Lama, who since 2009 has twice been denied a visa for South Africa, will also not attend, his spokesperson said.

 

Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas has announced that he will attend Tuesday’s memorial service.

 

Among the other world leaders scheduled to attend is Nigeria’s Goodluck Jonathan and more than a dozen other African heads of state and government.

 

Celebrity mourners

 

Talk show queen Oprah Winfrey and singer-activist Bono, as well as British billionaire Richard Branson and musician Peter Gabriel are expected to be among the celebrity mourners.

 

Around 11 000 troops have been mobilised to ensure security and help with crowd control efforts during the week-long series of funeral events.

 

Prior to his burial, Mandela’s body will lie in state for three days from Wednesday in the amphitheatre of the Union Buildings in Pretoria where was sworn in as president in 1994.

 

Each morning, his coffin will be carried through the streets of the capital in a funeral cortege, to give as many people as possible the chance to pay their final respects.

 

– Add your voice to the many who have already paid tribute to Nelson Mandela Send us your thoughts and photos. 

 

Friends, colleagues, comrades and family of Nelson Mandela are invited to share their memories and tributes, and to light a candle for him, on his profile at Remembered.co.za.

 

AFP

Safa mourns the death of Matlala


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The South African Football Association (SAFA) has joined millions of South Africans in mourning the death of former boxing champion Jacob “Baby Jake” Matlala after a long illness.

 

Matlala passed away at the Charlotte Maxeke Academic Hospital in Johannesburg on Saturday morning (7 December 2013).His death comes just two days after that of former State President of South Africa Dr Nelson Mandela.

 

“A dark cloud has indeed fallen over our country. We hadn’t recovered from the news of the passing on of Madiba, now we are confronted with more sad news. We have lost two great boxers who were fighters inside and outside the ring working for the development of the human course, taking part in many community building projects,” said SAFA President Dr Danny Jordaan upon landing from Brazil.

 

“Even though he was a boxer, Baby Jake was a football fanatic and he shall be greatly missed. His death is a big loss, we love him and will sorely miss him. So much sorrow has enveloped our country. Our heartfelt condolences go to his family, his fans and the boxing fraternity for the loss of such a gentle giant. He was a great ambassador for our country who never allowed his height to be a disadvantage. He was a fearless fighter whose determination put South Africa on the map. May his soul rest in peace.”

 

Matlala is a former WBO, WBU and IBA flyweight and light flyweight world champion.-TDN

Follow us on Twitter@Taung_DailyNews or @IceT_

 

 

A woman dies in a crash near Taung


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By Obakeng Maje 

 

Taung-Police are investigating a case of Culpable Homicide after a car allegedly veered of the road and plagued to the bridge.

 

A woman,45, who was a passenger allegedly died on the scene. 

 

“The incident took place on Saturday at about 03:30 along Mokgareng-Reivilo road” colonel Sabata Mokgwabone said.  

 

“It is alleged that the driver lost control of the vehicle and collided with the bridge. The driver was seriously injured and was taken to Taung Hospital for medical treatment” concludes Mokgwabone. 

 

Investigation continues.-TDN

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