Kaizer Chiefs Defeat Golden Arrows In League Game


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Bernard Parker got the only goal of the game as Kaizer Chiefs heaped more misery on Golden Arrows at Moses Mabhida Stadium this evening.

 

The win helped Amakhosi to the top of the table with 27 points, three ahead of Mamelodi Sundowns, who have a game in hand.

For more http://www.kickoff.com

Taung businessman remanded in custody


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By Obakeng Maje

Taung-A case of a prominent Taung taxi owner, Xolani Nkonyane was postponed by Taung Magistrate Court on Thursday.

 

Nkonyane was allegedly arrested after he was involved in a business robbery that led to attempted murder.

 

The atrocity took place at Molelema village, near Taung two weeks ago after a chinese shop owner was robbed airtime vouchers, groceries and undisclosed amount of money.

 

“Police arrested Nkonyane after they cornered him and his accomplice in a robbery case. Five suspects were allegedly chased by community members after a robbery” captain Pelonomi Makau said.

 

It is alleged suspects opened fire to the community members and fled the scene afterwards.

 

Police were called and chased them.

 

They were cornered at Picong village and other suspects fled.

 

“Nkonyane appeared briefly before court and he was remanded in custody until the 23 December 2013 for bail application” said our mole.

 

Police investigations continue.-TDN

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Malema arrested after clocking 215km/h


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Johannesburg – Economic Freedom Fighters leader Julius Malema was arrested on Thursday evening for speeding, Gauteng traffic police said.

“Mr Julius Malema was arrested by the high speed unit in the Vaal on the N1 driving 215km/h in a 120km/h zone,” spokesperson Busaphi Nxumalo said.

 

“They are still busy detaining him,” she said at 19:25.

 

Malema would be detained at a police station in the Vaal.

 

Further details were not immediately available, Nxumalo said.

 

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Taung man taken to hospital after intimidations


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jBy Obakeng Maje

Taung-Police confirmed that a 47 year-old man who allegedly burnt down a tarven and a church at Dryharts village, near Taung was taken to hospital after he caused a scene at Taung Magistrate Court.

 

Leatswenyane Simon Kgwasi,47 was subsequently arrested a month ago after he allegedly burnt down a church in Dryharts and appeared before court where he was granted bail.

 

“It is alleged that Kgwasi was taken to a local hospital for medical check-up. He allegedly arrived at court and intimidated everyone” colonel Emelda Setlhako said.

 

Kgwasi will appear before court for his pending case next year.

 

Police investigations continue.-TDN

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Winnie Mandela slams media over Mandela feud reports


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Johannesburg – Struggle stalwart Winnie Madikizela-Mandela expressed disappointment on Wednesday evening at the media’s interference with the matters of the Mandela family, her spokesperson said.

 

“Furthermore, she rebukes unambiguously the attitude of the media towards the Mandela family, their mischievous innuendoes and newsroom slugs designed to disgrace the family through their apartheid-style Stratcom tactics,” Thato Mmereki said in a statement.

 

“Numerous articles, op-eds, reports and editorials in outlets such as The Citizen, The Times, The Sunday Tribune and The Star have hammered on the idea that the Mandela family is at war with itself since the news first broke that Madiba is no longer with us.”

 

Madikizela-Mandela said these reports had done nothing but use half-truths to cast a shadow on the Mandela family during their time of bereavement.

 

Madikizela-Mandela is the former wife of global icon Nelson Mandela, who died on 5 December  in his Houghton home in Johannesburg. Mandela was buried in Qunu in the Eastern Cape on Sunday.

 

Dissolute media outlets were last to prescribe “family behaviour” to the Mandelas, Madikizela-Mandela said.

 

“This recent pattern is all the more worrisome in light of certain editors’ decision to negatively use the Mandela name on the front pages of their newspapers to draw revenue,” Mmereki said.

 

Furtive and invasive behaviour 

 

“Mrs Madikizela-Mandela has a wonderful relationship with the media and has been accessible to the media at all times. There is no reason for this furtive and invasive behaviour.”

 

Madikizela-Mandela requested that all media running these “discourteous media commentaries” refrain from doing so, and she placed it on the record that there was no succession or dynasty debate in the Mandela Family.

 

Mandela was survived by his three daughters Makaziwe Mandela, Zenani Dlamini-Mandela and Zindziswa Mandela and in accordance with customary law and tradition the eldest daughter, Makaziwe Mandela, would head the family and would make decisions with the support of her two sisters.

 

“To this end there is no misunderstanding, or debate. Mr Mandla Mandela is respected as one of Nelson Mandela’s grandchildren, the next generation of the Mandela family,” Mmereki said.

 

“Mrs Madikizela-Mandela and the family thank Ms Makaziwe Mandela for the leadership qualities and strength of character that she has demonstrated.”

 

Madikizela-Mandela said now was not the time for the media to debate relevant questions about the Mandela family’s historical role, their legacy and fate, the morality of their actions and the meaning of information they chose to disclose.

 

The family was mourning the loss of the former statesman and should be afforded time and space, she said.

 

“Madikizela-Mandela thanks the nation for messages of comfort and support and requests that her family’s time of mourning be respected,” Mmereki said.

 

Upholding the legacy 

 

The Times reported on Tuesday that locks at the Mandela Qunu homestead were changed days after he died and that Mandla was locked out.

 

According to the report, Mandla’s found his home on the Mandela estate without electricity and water on the day of his grandfather’s burial.

 

Makaziwe Mandela ordered the locks to be changed after she arrived while Mandla was keeping vigil next to his grandfather’s coffin while the anti-apartheid icon’s body lay in state at the Union Buildings in Pretoria for three days, the newspaper said.

 

Approached for comment on the report on Wednesday, Mandla Mandela’s spokesperson, Freddy Pilusa, told The Associated Press: “He [Mandla] doesn’t want to confirm nor deny the report. He wants to focus on promoting and upholding the legacy of his grandfather going forward.”

 

Mandla and Makaziwe have reportedly been involved in a bitter public spat over the control of Mandela’s legacy and leadership of the fractured family.

 

A further outbreak of hostilities was expected over Mandela’s will, the contents of which had not been made public, AP reported on Wednesday.

 

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Vavi lambasts ANC-led government


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Johannesburg – The ANC-led government has failed to decrease unemployment, poverty and inequality, suspended Cosatu general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi said on Wednesday.

“It is obvious that the post-Polokwane administration has spectacularly failed to reverse the crisis of unemployment,” Vavi said in a speech at the memorial service of former Numsa president, Mthuthuzeli Tom.

 

The service took place at the Numsa special national congress at the Birchwood Hotel in Boksburg.

 

“It is also obvious that this administration has failed to deliver on one of the basic promises of the 52nd Conference of the ANC, which was to create decent work.”

 

Vavi said he was speaking as someone who knew Tom and not as the suspended general secretary of the Cosatu.

 

Tom, he said, would have urged the National Union of Metalworkers SA (Numsa) to play a leading role in ensuring that South Africa did not end up as a “predator state”.

 

The alliance was at a crossroads.

 

“The status quo in the alliance is not politically sustainable. We need the ANC to move into a new direction… an uninterrupted struggle to build a truly united, democratic, non-racial, non sexist and prosperous South Africa.

 

“There is an urgent need for a radical shift to the left, on to a path to economic and social emancipation for the poor majority who have not benefited economically from the first 19 years of our freedom,” said Vavi.

 

Changes

 

The ANC must change course and demonstrate that it was committed to radical economic transformation.

 

Vavi said unless drastic changes were effected, the liberation movement ran the risk of falling out of favour with the majority of the working class.

 

“The biggest challenge facing the ANC and the rest of the democratic forces is not a lack of ideas but our failure to implement what has been agreed to and to have the political will to implement what we know is politically and morally correct.”

 

Vavi said Tom would have been “extremely concerned” about the state of the trade union movement.

 

“He would be shocked at how leaders have abandoned the interests of members to pursue anyone threatening their narrow interests – interests that can be best served if the status quo is maintained,” Vavi said.

 

Tom would have been worried that some workers had turned their backs on unions and were taking their own initiative to represent themselves, leading to massive instability in many workplaces.

 

Vavi said the economic crises from 2008 caused the country some problems but it did not have the answers to the “unfolding catastrophe”.

 

Government policies

 

The government had continued with inappropriate neoliberal policies, notwithstanding the 52nd ANC policy package that promised that all policies would centre on the need to create decent jobs as the deliberate policy choice to attack poverty and inequalities, he said.

 

“These failures have occurred within the context where Cosatu proposals have been ignored and the alliance is practically dysfunctional,” Vavi said.

 

Vavi said there were positive achievements since the advent of democracy – workers had enjoyed a range of constitutional guarantees such as the right to fair labour practice, to form and join unions, strike and picket, and the right to collective bargaining.

 

He said more people had access to electricity, sanitation services, housing and other social needs, and despite the problems with the quality of services and two-tier education system, access to education had increased.

 

“These are strides and marks of progress we must celebrate, as they are products of our strife and determination,” said Vavi.

 

“But comrades, we have to be more frank in declaring that democracy has so far benefited the previous ruling classes more than it has benefited the primary motive forces of the liberation struggle.”

 

Vavi said that in 1995 youth unemployment stood at 38%, in 2005 it was 45% but now sat at 55%, while total unemployment was 31% in 1995, and was now 37%.

 

Inequality

 

To translate the levels of inequality to practical figures – each of the 20 highest paid directors in Johannesburg Stock Exchange-listed companies earned 1 728 times the average income of a South African worker.

 

He said agricultural land-ownership also remained concentrated and colonial. And to make matters worse, it was estimated that more than 70% of redistributed land became unproductive after the reform process, due to the absence of post-redistribution support.

 

“It is no wonder that South Africa is failing to even get out of racism,” he added.

 

There was rampant corruption which had made all the above problems even worse.

 

With corruption, Vavi said, the elite in society stole from the poor. Corruption had become endemic in the country.

 

This, Vavi said, was becoming a matter of life and death, literally and metaphorically, because people were being intimidated or killed for exposing or preventing corruption.

 

South Africa might face a “nightmare future” where the country was up for auction to the highest bidder and a society where no one would be able to do business without going through “corrupt gatekeepers”.

 

Factions were formed around access to government power, bringing leaders closer to state tenders, and not around ideologies or political views, said Vavi.

 

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A Taung taxi owner back in court for bail application


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By Obakeng Maje

Taung-A taxi owner is expected to appear briefly before Taung Magistrate Court after he was subsequently arrested last week Tuesday.

 

Xolani Lloyd Nkonyane was arrested after he was allegedly being involved in a shoot-out with police in business robbery at Molelema village, near Taung.

 

“It is alleged five suspects entered a chinese shop in Molelema and robbed it groceries, airtime and undisclosed amount of money” captain Pelonomi Makau said.

 

The community members helped in chasing the suspects after a shop owner screamed for help.

 

They helped in chasing the suspects who were allegedly traveling in a minibus taxi belonging to Nkonyane.

 

“The suspects allegedly opened fire towards the community members and police were called. The five suspects allegedly fled and ran towards Picong village” said Makau.

 

Police cornered the suspects, but four of them escaped and Nkonyane was arrested.

 

He appeared before court and charged for business robbery and attempted murder.

 

Nkonyane was remanded in custody and will appear today for bail application.

 

Although police did not find anything that connects Nkonyane to the case, the investigating officer thinks they have a solid case against him.

 

Nkonyane has previous cases and police investigations continue.-TDN

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