A man arrested for dealing with drugs


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Johannesburg – A man was arrested for alleged drug dealing in Wentworth, KwaZulu-Natal police said on Saturday.

 

Colonel Jay Naicker said the 26-year-old man was arrested at his flat on Friday.

 

While searching his flat police found cocaine with a street value of around R1 200 and an electric scale. They also found a stolen firearm and ammunition.

 

The man was expected to appear in the Durban Magistrate’s Court on Monday facing charges of dealing in drugs and possession of an unlicenced firearm.

 

Naicker said in the past month, undercover police officers had bought drugs worth R10 000 on five separate occasions, from the man.

 

SAPA

Premier Modise wishes Provincial Comrades Marathon team well  


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North West Premier Thandi Modise has wished the 80 person team that will be representing the province in the 88

th Comrades Marathon to be run from Durban to Pietermaritzburg tomorrow well.

“The province has produced this year’s Old Mutual two oceans half marathon winner Steven Mokoka, the 2001 Comrades Marathon winner Andrew Kelehe as well as gold, silver and bronze medallists throughout the years and this year is not different from others for the team to do us proud. The team as our road running and ultra marathon ambassadors carries with it our hopes and the aspirations of our youth and our rural communities in this race of endurance,” said Premier Modise.Andrew Kelehe is accompanying and supporting his younger brother Gift who is among the participants in the 89, 6 kilometers annual race.

The provincial government is supporting the team with transport, accommodation and other logistical support.

Gold medals will be awarded to the first 10 men and 10 women to cross the finish line, silver all finishers under 7:30, Bill Rowan Medals to finishers under 9hrs, Bronze to finishers under 11 hours and Vic Clapham medals to finishers under 12 hours.

Prizes will be awarded to category winners. Should the winners of the 2013 Comrades Marathon break the Best Time, previously recorded for the “up run”, he or she will receive a cash payment of there hundred thousands sponsored by CATHSSETA.

 

 

Mashamaite: It’s A Great Honour


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With key injuries to the Bafana Bafana defence, Kaizer Chiefs defender Tefu Mashamaite is likely to find himself in the thick of things on Sunday, when South Africa play Lesotho in an international friendly.

Facing Lesotho in Maseru tomorrow, coach Gordon Igesund will use the game to experiment ahead of the two FIFA World Cup qualifiers against Central African Republic (CAR) and Ethiopia.

The defender believes that by playing as a team, they can win all three of their upcoming fixtures. He said that the players know each other and they are ready for the challenge.

“It is team work. With team work we can win all the games. The guys here know what is needed from them and they are all ready to play for their country and make it proud.

“It’s a great honour to play for your country and you have to represent it with dignity and that’s what we want to do,” the Chiefs defender concluded.
For more http://www.soccerladuma.com

Khune: I Don’t Know What To Say


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After winning four awards at the PSL Awards on Sunday, Kaizer Chiefs goalkeeper and captain Itumeleng Khune went on to win four more awards at the Kaizer Chiefs awards on Friday night.

The new Bafana Bafana captain said that it is all because of God’s glory that he has won these awards.

He told the Siya crew that it has been hard work that has seen him reach where the heights he did this season and he will continue to work even harder.

“Oh. I don’t know what to say but I have to say glory to God for the talent that he has given me. I used to ride trains going to training and I continued to work hard and I have reached this point,” he said.

“I thank the chairman for giving me the chance to play for the biggest club not only in South Africa but in Africa. We want to continue reclaiming the glory next season,” Khune said.

In total Khune walked away with R175 000 for all the awards at Amakhosi on Friday night.
For more http://www.soccerladuma.com

Diepsloot calm, police say


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Johannesburg – The situation in Diepsloot, north of Johannesburg was calm on Saturday following reports of shop lootings and public violence during the last week, police said.

“It has been quiet, there were no incidents reported,” said Lt-Col Lungelo Dlamini said.

On Monday police arrested 45 people for public violence, housebreaking, and possession of unlicensed firearms.

The unrest started on Sunday evening after Somali businessman, Bishar Isaack, was arrested for allegedly shooting dead two men, believed to be Zimbabweans, outside his shop.

Issack appeared in the Pretoria Magistrate’s Court on Tuesday.

Dlamini said Isaack, 39, appeared on charges of murder.

The case was postponed to June 4, when he was expected to bring a formal bail application.

After the shooting on Sunday, local residents gathered in front of Isaack’s shop, threw stones, and looted his business.

Police dispersed the crowd, but other shops were then looted. Several local businessmen then removed their goods and locked their shops.

Nine people were arrested for public violence and possession of suspected stolen goods. They appeared in the Pretoria Magistrate’s Court on Tuesday and the case was withdrawn, Dlamini said.

Rhino Comrades runner robbed


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Durban – A little over 24 hours after arriving in Durban to run his first Comrades in a 10kg rhino suit, London runner Vincent O’Neill’s backpack was stolen on Friday.

O’Neill, who runs marathons in the rhino suit to raise funds to fight rhino poaching, was conducting media interviews at about midday, when he saw that his red pack was missing from where he had left it, minutes after he had arrived at the Comrades Expo at the Durban Exhibition Centre.
For more http://www.iol.co.za

Reeva’s parents in dire straits


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Johannesburg – As lawyers for “Blade Runner” Oscar Pistorius demanded answers from South African police and prosecutors over crime-scene pictures leaked to a British television station, model Reeva Steenkamp’s cash-strapped parents were being forced to sell the exclusive rights to their tragic story to make ends meet.
For more http://www.iol.co.za

Woman dies in head on crash


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Johannesburg – A woman died and four others were injured after her car collided head-on with an Audi on the N3 highway in Hammersdale, KwaZulu-Natal on Saturday morning, paramedics said.

 

Netcare 911 spokesperson Chris Botha said the 26-year-old woman lost control of her Corsa bakkie, before going up an embankment, crashing through a barrier and colliding with the other car.

 

She died at the scene.

 

A mother and her child, as well as the driver and another passenger in the Audi were injured. They were rushed to a nearby hospital.

 

SAPA

Millions hungry despite agricultural growth


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 While the agricultural sector created 54 000 new jobs between January and March this year – a 7.9-percent increase and 12.7 percent up year-on-year – nearly one quarter of all South Africans are still going hungry.

For more http://www.iol.co.za

Kleinfontein raises old race questions


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Kleinfontein – There are no signs that say “Whites Only.”

 

There are, though, men in military fatigues who log the license plates of vehicles approved to enter Kleinfontein, a rural enclave that is home to about 1 000 Afrikaner whites. And there is a bust of Hendrik Verwoerd, the former South African leader who spearheaded white racist rule.

 

This exercise in separate, self-sufficient living near the South African capital, Pretoria, is more than just a throwback to the apartheid era that ended with the country’s first all-race elections in 1994. In recent days, Kleinfontein and its campaign to be formally recognized as a township have become a touchstone for fresh debate about law, freedom and the kind of “rainbow nation” that South Africa is trying to be.

 

Kleinfontein, which is all private property, requires its residents to be Afrikaners, descendants of settlers who arrived from Europe centuries ago and speak Dutch-based Afrikaans, the idiom of South Africa’s former overseers. That brings accusations of racism in a nation whose population of over 50 million is mostly black, but the community skirts race references in its manifesto. Descendants of British settlers, for example, would not be welcome to live here.

 

The community is not organized “on the basis of race,” said Jan Groenewald, chairman of the board of directors of Kleinfontein, which means “Little Fountain” in Afrikaans. Instead, he said, the goal is to preserve a cultural bedrock that stretches back to the lore of the hardy Voortrekker settlers.

 

The dig-in mindset at the austere settlement echoes that of its ancestors, who drew ox wagons into a defensive circle, a tactic that helped them defeat a much bigger Zulu force at the Dec. 16, 1838 Battle of Blood River. The date has near-mystical import for staunch Afrikaners, though the vast majority of whites accepted South Africa’s new, multi-racial order in 1994 as part of a negotiated settlement.

 

“We are here to stay,” read Afrikaans-language signs outside modest brick-and-tile homes linked by dirt roads in Kleinfontein.

 

Residents don’t pay taxes on municipal services because they don’t receive them. They draw water from a spring and are building a sewage system. There is a cafe, a primary school and a care center for the elderly. Zebra, antelope and wildebeest roam in one part of the fenced, 721-hectare (1,780-acre) property. Residents buy many of their goods from outside the fence.

 

“If I was a racist, we wouldn’t speak to a black. We wouldn’t do business with them,” said Annatjie Oncke, a 49-year-old house cleaner living in a caravan park. She and other poor residents do the kind of menial labor reserved for blacks in the era when whites were in charge. Kleinfontein also has engineers and other skilled workers, as well as retirees.

 

In the past, small bands of Afrikaners have sought to establish enclaves elsewhere in South Africa, notably in the Northern Cape community of Orania, founded in 1990. Nelson Mandela, South Africa’s first black president, traveled to Orania in 1995 and had coffee there with Verwoerd’s widow in a show of racial reconciliation. Verwoerd was assassinated in 1966.

 

Kleinfontein has been around almost as long as Orania, but is now under scrutiny in part because it wants local authorities to recognize it as an entity with the right to run its own affairs. The Times, a South African newspaper, reported that provincial lawmakers were informed last year that black police officers were barred from entering the enclave.

 

Last week, members of the Democratic Alliance, a political party, protested outside Kleinfontein.

 

“By creating a ‘whites-only’ area, this community is saying that it has no respect for people who are different from them. It is saying that it fears people who are different,” said Mbali Ntuli, the party’s youth leader.

 

On Wednesday, Kgosientso Ramokgopa, the mayor of Pretoria and surrounding areas, visited Kleinfontein as part of an inquiry into its alleged failure to comply with municipal planning laws. Delegations of the two sides met in a hall with a corrugated iron roof, a church bell mounted outside in a scaffold.

 

Ramokgopa noted the right of every citizen to “reside in any part of the country,” while Groenewald, Kleinfontein’s chairman, spoke of the right to “self-determination.”

 

The mood was diplomatic, and jovial at times. Ramokgopa joked about “koeksusters,” a fried, sugary snack favored by his Afrikaner hosts. Groenewald referred to Mandela’s leadership, but also hinted at his resolve with a mention of Koos de la Rey, a general in the 1899-1902 Anglo-Boer war who did not want conflict but fought hard when it began.

 

South Africa’s national flag does not fly in Kleinfontein, though some residents were seen recently with the “Vierkleur” (“Four-color”), the flag of the Transvaal republic, which in the 19th century formed part of what is now South Africa. A community member handed out a declaration that complained of betrayal and persecution of the “Boer-Afrikaner nation,” and described South African democracy as a sham.

 

“We find ourselves exiles in our own fatherland,” the statement said. “We experience this new dispensation not as a democracy, but as the dictatorship of an alien majority.”

 

For some observers, any uproar over Kleinfontein masks bigger challenges about racial integration in South Africa, where average income levels of whites still outstrip those of blacks. Unemployment is high and residents of some districts have protested violently against the government’s failure to provide basic services, a fact that Kleinfontein’s leaders did not let slip in their discussions with Pretoria officials.

 

Author Eusebius McKaiser said the country is still wrestling with the legacy of “apartheid geography,” in which some districts originally designed for different races still remain largely segregated.

 

“We need to stop gloating about the anger we feel towards people like those who live in Kleinfontein,” McKaiser wrote in The Star newspaper. “They are honest and crude about their revulsion of people who are different to themselves. We are not fundamentally different to Kleinfontein’s people. We are just less honest, more subtle.”

 

Ramokgopa, the mayor, toured Kleinfontein in a convoy of vehicles that kicked up dust and had residents peering at the commotion from their windows. He said the “inherent contradictions” at play over Kleinfontein would emerge elsewhere.

 

“The nature of the conflict in South Africa is defined by race and that’s something that we need attend to,” he said. “The next generation will still be grappling with this question.” – Sapa-AP