Klerksdorp death toll rise


Image

Pic: (The horrific scene at Klerksdorp accident on N12)

Klerksdorp – Fourteen people died and seven were injured when two taxis collided on the N12 outside Klerksdorp, North West, the public safety department said on Monday.

Thirteen people, including eight children, died on the scene on Sunday evening, and another died in hospital on Monday, said department spokesman Ben Bole.

Both drivers died in the crash. The injured were taken to a nearby hospital.

The accident happened when the driver of a Toyota Quantum travelling from Klerksdorp to Wolmaransstad apparently tried to overtake four cars at once.

North West public safety MEC Nono Maloyi urged motorists to exercise patience and to comply with traffic laws.

“Overtaking in an unsafe area is regarded as negligent driving and this leads to accidents. Losing 14 at once is too much and we are not going to allow that,” he said.

Maloyi said reckless drivers would be dealt with. He also advised drivers to keep their lights on, especially when it rained.

He sent condolences to the families and friends of those who died.

Sapa

Durban ex-MD in court for over R1m fraud


SAPS

Cape Town – A Durban company’s former managing director appeared in the Bellville Specialised Commercial Crime Court in Cape Town on Monday to face charges of fraud.

Lynette Bruce was arrested on Sunday.

Prosecutor Juan Agulhas told the court she had been brought to court on a warrant for her arrest, and that she would appear later in the Specialised Commercial Crime Court in Durban.

Bruce worked for the Durban company, Metro Automation RSA, first as an accountant and later as managing director in charge of administration.

The State alleges that she misappropriated R1 085 089 in 2008.

Agulhas said the Specialised Commercial Crime Unit in Durban had no objection to Bruce’s release on bail.

He told the court she had come from Durban to Cape Town, and was in the process of relocating to Bloemfontein when she was arrested on Sunday.

He said he needed to verify her address in Bloemfontein before her release on bail.

At his request, the case was postponed until Wednesday, when legal aid attorney Hailey Lawrence is expected to launch a bail application on Bruce’s behalf.

 

– SAPA

Alleged cop killers to seek bail


1550824704

Durban – Five men accused of killing a police officer can apply for bail once they all have legal representation, the Pinetown Magistrate’s Court ruled on Monday.

Mthozi Ngcobo, 25, Khulekani Vilikazi, 20, Lungani Mayiwa, 25, Anele Gumbi, 20, and Siyabonga Hlophe, 22, had been expected to apply for bail on Monday.

Their court-appointed lawyer, however, told the court she could not represent all of them due to a conflict of interest.

It was not explained what this conflict was.

Magistrate Ravi Pillay adjourned the matter to 17 December to allow four of the men to get new legal representation.

They are accused of being involved in the killing of Thabo Mlotshwa, 32, of the police’s national intervention unit, on 15 November.

He was buried in a shallow grave after the murder.

 

– SAPA

Mpuma teachers appear for stealing kids’ food


193f59fa97ed4847bdcc9eabca646753

Standerton – Six Mpumalanga primary school teachers accused of stealing food meant to feed poor children will appear in the Standerton Magistrate’s Court on Tuesday.

The teachers, of Gugulabasha Primary School in Sakhile near Standerton, were arrested at the school on Wednesday.

The arrests followed a tip-off about the theft of groceries used in the school nutrition programme, a Sapa correspondent reported.

“Structures were put in place to observe and verify the allegations which were found to be true. The police applied for a search warrant from the local magistrate’s court and went to the school to do a search,” said police spokesperson Leonard Hlathi.

“During the search, police found groceries from six vehicles belonging to the suspects, and they were arrested and warned to appear before the Standerton Magistrate’s Court on Tuesday on charges of theft.”

Hlathi said the charges against the teachers, aged between 40 and 45, were disturbing.

“These schools were even declared non-fee schools because most parents of pupils are not working and poor. For a teacher to be accused of stealing such food is a disgrace to the society,” Hlathi said.

 

– SAPA

Former Cape pastor jailed for duping congregants


OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Cape Town – A former pastor with the New Apostolic Church in Durbanville, Cape Town, was jailed for in effect four years on Monday.

Craig Vernon Freeman appeared in the Bellville Specialised Commercial Crime Court before Magistrate Sabrina Sonnenberg, who also declared him unfit to possess a firearm.

Freeman pleaded guilty to falsely informing two members of his congregation that he was engaged in the development of the farm Rhebokskloof, near Paarl.

By offering them returns of between 28% and 38%, they were duped into investing in the non-existent development.

Richard Williams-Sims invested R3 350 000, and Deon Scritten R200 000, between July 2006 and January 2007.

Neither received their returns, or their money back.

The magistrate said Freeman, a high income earner, had been driven by greed.

She found the sentence suggested by defence attorney William Booth – a fine and a suspended prison sentence, or correctional supervision not involving incarceration – was too lenient.

She agreed with prosecutor Jannie Knipe that either option would send out the incorrect message to the community that prison sentences were reserved for violent crime, but not “white collar” crime.

She said the interests of the community far outweighed Freeman’s interests.

She sentenced him to eight years, of which four were conditionally suspended for five years.

She said Freeman had to repay both victims in full within five years of his release from prison as a condition of the suspended sentence.

The sentence would be put into operation if he failed to repay the money as ordered, she warned.

 

– SAPA

65 Limpopo protesters appear for riots


CrimeTapeSmall

Malamulele – Sixty-five people arrested in connection with riots in Limpopo appeared in the Malamulele Magistrate’s Court, near Giyani, on Monday.

The matter was postponed to 15 January, said police spokesperson Hangwani Mulaudzi.

None of the accused was asked to plead to a charge of public violence, a Sapa correspondent reported.

Fifty-four of them were released on warnings, while the others remained in custody because they were illegal immigrants.

Mulaudzi said they would not be released until their physical addresses had been verified.

– SAPA

Horrific injuries of Pretoria baby detailed in court


Court

Pretoria – A pathologist detailed on Monday the horrific injuries suffered by a 3-week old baby, whose stepfather is on trial in the North Gauteng High Court in Pretoria for allegedly abusing and murdering the child.

Christiaan “Chris” Oldewage, 28, pleaded not guilty to a charge of murdering his wife Juanita’s baby Christiaan “Stiaan” in December 2011.

The baby died of multiple injuries, including a fractured skull, 16 rib fractures, a bruised lung and bleeding kidney, hours after being admitted to the Montana Hospital, in the north of Pretoria.

Oldewage’s wife Juanita, who was charged with him, committed suicide in August by hanging herself in her boyfriend’s flat.

Pathologist Lorraine Prinsloo testified that the baby, which weighed 4kgs, had a severe skull fracture, a laceration to the lining of the brain and 14 fractured ribs, two of which had been fractured twice.

There was also blood in his abdominal cavity, and he had bruised lungs and haemorrhages in the area of the lung, intestines, adrenal gland, kidney, and between the layers that cover the brain.

Prinsloo said babies’ bones were soft and pliable and it took a lot of pressure to fracture the skull.

“Blunt force would cause a fracture like that, for example hitting the baby’s head against a surface or dropping the baby.

“It is possible to sustain this type of fracture in a fall off a bed, but in accidental falls like that, usually there is no other injury to the brain or haemorrhages.

“It’s improbable that the skull fracture was caused by a fall from a bed.

“Except for the injuries, he was an otherwise healthy baby,” she said.

Rib and skull fractures

Prinsloo testified that although the rib fractures were fresh and that the skull fracture was less than three days old, it was likely all the injuries were sustained at the same time.

She said a lot of pressure was needed to fracture the ribs, and that this could have been caused by squeezing the chest or applying any form of blunt force.

A blow to the abdomen, or forcing the baby down on a hard surface would have caused the injuries to his abdomen and kidney.

She said all the injuries, and blood loss, had caused the infant’s death.

Constable Marius Dege testified that Juanita Oldewage at one stage phoned him, complaining that her husband was assaulting her baby.

Both smelled of alcohol and Mr Oldewage was drunk.

He blamed their kitten for the scratches and complained that his wife was assaulting him because she thought he had assaulted the baby.

Dege saw scratch marks on the baby’s face and upper body and said they looked like human scratch marks.

He warned the couple he would take the baby away if they kept on fighting, but relented when Mrs Oldewage asked him not to take the child.

Judge Bert Bam wanted to know from Dege why he did not take the child or at least report the incident.

“I don’t understand your conduct. You thought it was reasonably serious. You didn’t think it was the cat. Why would you do nothing about it? What motivated you? The child was a tiny baby of 2-weeks-old.”

Family in tears

Dege said Oldewage had been aggressive and had not wanted to listen to reason, but later calmed down.

The mother had asked him not to take the child. The baby was in her arms and was not crying when he left, he said.

The baby’s great-grandmother Dorothea Engelbrecht and her daughter Karin Viviers were both in tears when they testified about his short life.

Engelbrecht said the couple rejected her help after Stiaan’s birth and that she was told Oldewage knew how to raise babies as he had raised his brother.

When she visited them early in December, she saw scratch marks on the baby’s face and head, but Oldewage had said the cat was in the baby’s crib.

He and Juanita were drinking and he was very aggressive.

The baby was well, but dirty when Engelbrecht and her daughter took him on a shopping trip two days before his death.

Engelbrecht told her daughter she wished she could raise the child herself, because Oldewage did not have a job.

Hospital

Engelbrecht and Juanita took the baby to hospital later that night because he would not stop crying, but they were sent home.

She later received a call from a boy who said the baby was no longer breathing and her daughter later phoned to say he had died.

Viviers testified that she had to pay money before the baby could be treated at hospital on the night before his death.

Juanita had prayed and been emotional while the baby was treated.

Oldewage was mostly outside and later left, saying he was tired.

When she phoned to say he should urgently go to the hospital, he said the baby was “not that ill”, although he did arrive later.

She said that when she saw the baby a few days before his death he was “not a clean, happy baby”.

The trial continues.

 

– SAPA

Krejcir bail application postponed


Radovan-Krejcir

Johannesburg – A bail application by Czech fugitiveRadovan Krejcir and his three co-accused was postponed by the Palm Ridge Regional Court on Monday.

Magistrate Reginald Dama postponed the matter to Wednesday.

Krejcir, Desai Luphondo and two members of the Hawks, warrant officers Samuel Modise Maropeng and George Jeff Nthoroane, applied for bail.

The State opposed bail and said Krejcir was a flight risk and that he and his co-accused posed a danger to witnesses because they knew where they and their relatives stayed.

Earlier Krejcir’s lawyer told the court he had no intention of leaving South Africa.

“He is bound to stay and has no intentions to leave this country whatsoever,” his lawyer Willie Vermeulen said.

In an affidavit presented as part of his bail application, Krejcir alleged the police assaulted and tortured him before his arrest. He had laid charges of assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm, kidnapping and attempted murder against the police, the court heard.

Maropeng and Nthoroane denied the charges against them and, through their lawyer Francois Roets, said a statement by Krejcir implicating them was a lie.

Prosecutor Louis Mashiane submitted that the four were involved in the kidnapping and assault of a man whose brother was charged with making sure that a 25kg shipment of crystal meth, also known as tik, went through OR Tambo International Airport, to Australia.

The man’s brother, who was known as Doctor, and who was employed at OR Tambo International Airport, disappeared after handing airport clearance receipts to Luphondo. The consignment did not reach Australia.

Luphondo was Krejcir’s drug pusher, Mashiane contended, and said he, Maropeng and Nthoroane were instructed by Krejcir to look for Doctor, and if they did not find him, to kidnap any of his relatives.

Krejcir demanded that Doctor be found or that he be paid R24m for the tik. The brother, who is the complainant in the case, was kidnapped and assaulted at the premises of Krejcir’s company Money Point, in Bedfordview, on the East Rand, for more than four days.

Afterwards, he was left in Thokoza on the East Rand, after having been severely assaulted, Mashiane said.

Krejcir’s wife Katerina Krejcirova testified that her family did not possess false passports as Mashiane stated. She arrived in the country in 2007 on a Seychelles passport.

 

– SAPA

Ministers refute Nkandla reports


55538ace675342ca85119a2aaa3c4c42

Johannesburg – Articles published in The Star and The Pretoria News on Monday about the future of the houses occupied by President Jacob’s Zuma’s support staff at Nkandla, in KwaZulu-Natal, are false, the rural development and public works departments said.

“The ministers of public works [Thulas Nxesi] and rural development and land reform [Gugile Nkwinti] would like to place on record that their offices had never issued a statement in which Nxesi stated that the Nkandla houses occupied by support staff would be sold once President Jacob Zuma’s term ended in about five years’ time,” they said in a joint statement.

The Star reported that it spoke to Vuyo Bavuma, Nxesi’s spokesperson.

However, Nxesi denied that Bavuma was his spokesperson.

“Media enquiries regarding these two separate ministries should be addressed to their respective media liaison officers whose details are available in the two departments’ websites,” they said.

Part of Zuma’s multi-million rand homestead is built on state-owned land managed by the Ingonyama Trust Board.

The Star reported that Nkwinti apparently contradicted Nxesi and said houses on Ingonyama Trust Board land could not be sold as the trust only leased land.

 

– SAPA

Quake hits Gauteng


78fec1ddfa9e44b4b09a9e7c5599d8a9
Cape Town – A tremor hit some parts of Gauteng at 21:19 on Monday night, lasting up to 10 seconds.
Twitter users from all over Gauteng, from Pretoria to Randburg, reported that their walls and floors were literally shaking.

#Tremor took place at around 9:19pm on Monday. No reports of injuries or structural damage at this stage.

— Gauteng Weather (@tWeatherSA) December 2, 2013

So the earth wiggled and for the 1st time, I’ve felt a #Tremor in Pretoria… Weird feeling!

— .????MîcHellé ? (@002Mich) December 2, 2013

People tweeting about a #tremor from Jhb, Midrand, Pretoria, kwaNdebele, Shoshanguve and all the way to Warmbad. Didn’t feel it in Akasia

— inetpro (@inetpro) December 2, 2013

Also felt a #Tremor outside Vaalwater, Limpopo lasted almost a minute

— Lehanie (@Lehanienan) December 2, 2013

@News24 Felt a strong #tremor in Radiokop near Clearwater Mall. Windows was rattling. What a weird feeling!

— Lecinda Weiss (@LecindaWeiss) December 2, 2013

Mandy Wiener reported via Twitter that the tremor was felt most strongly in Pretoria and northern parts of Johannesburg.

Tremor seems to have been felt most strongly in Pretoria and northern parts of Joburg. #Tremor

— Mandy Wiener (@MandyWiener) December 2, 2013

She also reported via Twitter that she had Tweets from people from Modimolle and Bela Bela in Limpopo that they had felt the tremors too.

Gosh people are tweeting me from Modimolle and Bela Bela in Limpopo saying their walls were shaking. #Tremor

— Mandy Wiener (@MandyWiener) December 2, 2013

Some users saw the lighter side of things.

Is the #tremor,, God’s way of saying no to Etolls???

— Muhammed Vahed (@Movahed786) December 2, 2013

E-tolls at 12 and tremors ar 9. Coincidence much? #eToll #tremor

— Rochelle (@rochellebel) December 2, 2013

Wiith #e-tolls five-to,our ancestors are even shaking their heads in disbelief,hence latest #tremor in Gauteng

— Tumi Seloane (@TumiSeloane) December 2, 2013

Mother Nature does not support #eTolls. #Tremor reported in a lot of Gauteng tonight.

— Annie ? ? ? (@26DegreesSouth) December 2, 2013

I wonder who won the tender to make S.A tremor

— Joint Smith (@DeepS4real) December 2, 2013

@gussilber: Another small tremor has just shaken Johannesburg. A sure sign of the impending e-Pocalypse.”

— Clarke May (@Clarke_May) December 2, 2013

Eish Gauteng people claiming the #Tremor they felt was the #etoll gantries firing up. Gautengers have an abundance of humour.

— Sandanathi™ (@sandaxaba) December 2, 2013

Gauteng had a quake about three weeks ago, but no damage or injuries were reported.