Lives of CAR fallen heroes dedicated to campassion and life-Premier


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Lives of CAR fallen heroes were not dedicated to conflict or death-Premier Modise

 

The lives of the thirteen members of the South African National Defence Force who fell in battle in the Central African Republic were not dedicated to conflict or death but to compassion and life, North West Premier Thandi Modise said at the memorial service held in honour of Private Karabo Edwin Matsheka and Vusumzi in Mmabatho on Thursday.

 

Premier Modise in paying tribute to the soldiers hailed them as heroes who were committed to something greater than themselves and had mustered the physical and moral courage to accomplish extraordinary feats in battle.

 

Modise said that they were ordinary men who rose to meet seemingly impossible odds and did extraordinary things for the nation.

 

“These brave men left the safety and comfort of our land in making sure that peace is attained in the Central African Republic (CAR).We join the nation in saluting and honouring them for the supreme sacrifice they have paid for the achievement of Peace in the continent,” the Premier emphasised.

 

Modise said as a country we must always remember them and pay tribute to the stories of the heroes.

 

“We cannot return those who have gone, however we can and we will cherish the virtue of their sacrifice in thought and deed to educate our nation and our children in their spirit;

 

 to love with all our might our beloved South Africa, to take pride in it and work ceaselessly towards progress,” she added.

 

The Speaker of the Provincial Legislature, Supra Mahumapelo and Victor Tsie who represented the South African Military Veterans Association also hailed the fallen heroes as role models and gallant fighters.

 

Keresepe Moncho representing the two families conveyed the appreciation that the families are receiving from the South African Defence Force and North West provincial government which is also supporting the Matsheka and Ngaleka families to meet costs towards the funerals of the two heroes.

 

In recognition of 28-year- old Private Matsheka’s gallantry, Kgosi Jeff Montshioa of the Barolong Boo-Ratshidi Traditional Council has allocated a burial site at Maphacwe Cemetery reserved for Barolong Boo-Ratshidi Chiefs and the honour that his funeral service to commence at 7:00 am tomorrow will be held at the Tribal Kgotla.Private Ngaleka is to be also buried tomorrow in Khayelisha in the Western Cape. 

 

 

Nwest extends municipal traffic boundaries and hours of operations


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Nwest extends municipal traffic boundaries and hours of operations

 

Traffic law enforcement and visibility are to be enhanced with the extension of municipal traffic boundaries and introduction of 24 hour shift operations in Mahikeng, Rustenburg, Tlokwe, Matlosana and Madibeng Local Municipalities. This follows the resolution adopted by the North West Provincial Executive Council (Exco) this week.

 

Premier Thandi Modise has expressed confidence that back to back law enforcement operations between municipal and provincial traffic should reduce road accidents and fatalities on public roads in line with the National Rolling Enforcement Plan and the Decade of Action on Action for Road Safety Campaign.

 

The changes endorsed by Exco on Wednesday were necessitated by the growth of traffic in the municipalities and the need to support provincial traffic on certain municipal roads.

 

Municipal traffic had been confined to working within an 8kilometers radius as approved in the Gazette in 2010 which limited their operation especially in attending to incidents on some of their municipal roads which stretch beyond the radius.

 

Most traffic departments in municipalities have been working a shift of up to 10:00pm therefore leaving roads not policed beyond that time.

 

Research has proven that about 65% of road accidents in the province occur as from Thursday from 3:00pm to Sundays 10:00pm.    

Zille to visit disgruntled Sterkspruit residents


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Democratic Alliance (DA) leader Helen Zille is expected to visit the volatile town of Sterkspruit in the north of the Eastern Cape on Friday to engage with the community on what it needs to turn its situation around. 

 

Sterkspruit has been on the news lately with a series of violent protests that resulted to the total shutdown of the town and the death of a teenage boy in a clash between the police and protestors early in February.

 

The community of Sterkspruit has been calling for a stand alone municipality, breaking away from the ANC run Senqu Municipality which they accuse of neglecting their town.

 

The February protests went out of control with residents going on a rampage pelting passing cars with stones, looting shops and barricading roads with burning tyres.

 

However the violent protests died down after a visit by Co-operative Governance and  Traditional Affairs Minister, Richard Baloyi who made it clear to the community that he does not have the powers to grant them their wish of a stand alone municipality pointing them to the Demarcation Board.

 

 It’s not yet clear what DA leader, Helen Zille brings to the table for this community, but is expected to take full advantage of the anti-ANC sentiments that were expressed by many during the violent protests.

For more details go to http://www.sabc.co.za

Fifa and SA officials to discuss match-fixing allegations


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Allegations that South Africa’s warm-up matches before hosting the 2010 World Cup were fixed will be discussed with the country’s Sports Minister and top football officials at FIFA on Friday.

 

FIFA said on Thursday that its Secretary General Jerome Valcke is meeting Sports Minister Fikile Mbalula and South African Football Association PresidentKirsten Nematandani.

 

Nematandani was briefly suspended by SAFA last December after a FIFA report found “compelling” evidence that some World Cup preparation matches were fixed.

 

SAFA, which announced last year it would set up an investigation into the case, has acknowledged it had been “infiltrated” by Wilson Raj Perumal – a now convicted match-fixer whose promotions agency appointed referees for games including the official opening of the Soccer City stadium in Johannesburg in May 2010. Weeks later the venue hosted the World Cup final.

 

FIFA said in a statement that Friday’s meeting will “make sure all parties do have the same level of information”.

 

“In addition, FIFA looks forward to receive the report from the South African Police to evaluate further steps in the fight against match manipulation,” football’s world governing body said.

 

The South African case has cast a shadow on the country’s successful hosting of the World Cup

The meeting at FIFA headquarters is scheduled on the same morning that its President Sepp Blatter and security director Ralf Mutschke, address a conference in Zurich on the threats posed by match-fixing and corrupt betting.

 

The South African case has cast a shadow on the country’s successful hosting of the World Cup which defied many doubts about its ability to organize the tournament safely.

 

FIFA and SAFA haven’t identified games that might have been fixed but South Africa’s 5-0 win over Guatemala and 2-1 win over Colombia in late May 2010 have long been under suspicion.

 

Three penalties for handball were awarded by Niger referee, Ibrahim Chaibou, in the South Africa-Guatemala game. FIFA also wants to question Chaibou for his handling of other friendly games in Africa, Asia and South America, where a high number of penalties were awarded.

 

All three goals in the South Africa-Colombia game, which was refereed by Kenyan official Samuel Langat, came from penalty kicks. Langat was dropped from FIFA’s list of referees authorized for international matches at the end of 2010, while Chaibou reached the mandatory retirement age of 45 in 2011.

 

South Africa also beat Thailand 4-0 and drew with Bulgaria 1-1 in preparation games ahead of its historic World Cup – the first in Africa.

 

Nematandani and four other officials were initially asked to take a voluntary leave of absence. They were reinstated while SAFA began setting up an independent commission to investigate in consultation with the national Olympic committee and ministry of sport. The inquiry would be headed by a retired judge, SAFA said.

 

In February, the federation said again that the commission would be established “as soon as possible,” but no appointments have apparently yet been made.

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

Parliament’s Defence meeting a “Disgrace”


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A meeting of Parliament’s joint Standing Committee on Defence on Thursday was an internationally embarrassing disgrace, the Democratic Alliance (DA) said.

 

DA MP David Maynier said in a statement: “The fact is that today the committee was a national and international embarrassment.”

 

He claimed committee chairperson Jerome Maake had tried to make sure difficult questions about the deployment of SA National Defence Force (SANDF) troops to the Central African Republic (CAR) were suppressed.

 

“This was clearly an attempt by the ANC’s chief whip, Mathole Motshekga, who was also ominously present at the meeting, to politically manage the ‘CAR situation’ in Parliament.”  Maynier said the committee did not have the capacity to properly investigate the SANDF deployment to CAR.

 

On March 23, 13 South African soldiers were killed and 27 wounded when Seleka rebel fighters attacked them near the CAR’s capital Bangui. Earlier, the Freedom Front Plus claimed an admission that South African troops were not prepared for attack in the CAR meant government had failed them.

 

“The acknowledgement by the Minister of Defence, Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula, that the national defence force had neither been prepared for or expected the rebels to attack them in the CAR, confirms that the government had failed the defence force,” FF Plus  MP Pieter Groenewald said in a statement.

 

“Through this, the Minister acknowledges that there was insufficient support and in particular insufficient information support for the troops in the CAR.” This was after Mapisa-Nqakula conceded South African troops were not prepared to deal with an attack in the CAR. She suggested there were questions about the military intelligence provided to soldiers on the front-line.

 

“We never deployed to the CAR to wage a battle. We never anticipated a battle.” Groenewald said there were serious questions to be asked about military intelligence’s capability.

 

“One of these is how the Minister and President Jacob Zuma were incorrectly advised before the decision was taken to send troops to the CAR. The information was clearly not accurate and military intelligence has to take the responsibility for this,” he said.

CAR leader accepts regional transition road map


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BAINGUI – The rebel leader who seized power in Central African Republic and proclaimed himself president accepted on Thursday a call by regional leaders to speed up a transition to democracy, but could stay in office, his information minister said.

Michel Djotodia led thousands of rebel fighters of the Seleka coalition into the riverside capital of the mineral-rich country on March 24, toppling President Francois Bozize.

Facebook takes on Google


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CARLIFORNIA – Facebook Inc unveiled “Home” softwareon Thursday to place the world’s social network front and centre on Android users’ smartphones, a move that may divert users from Google Inc services and steal some of its rival’s momentum in the fast-growing mobile arena.

Its new family of apps will let users display mobile versions of their newsfeed and messages prominently on the home screens of a wide range of devices based on Google’s Android operating system, CEO Mark Zuckerberg told reporters.

Shares in Facebook climbed 2 percent to $26.83 (17.6 pounds) in the afternoon. Google stock was off 1.5 percent at $793.81.

“Why do we need to go into those apps in the first place to see what’s going on with those we care about?” Zuckerberg told the hundreds of reporters and industry executives gathered at Facebook’s Menlo Park campus.

“We want to bring all this content to the front.”

Facebook executives showed a new “chatheads” messaging service and “coverfeed” — both of which dominate users’ home screens and continuously feed messages, photos, status updates and other content from Facebook’s network.

“Home” brings the competition between the two Web superpowers to the mobile front, which is becoming many consumers’ primary conduit to the Internet. Facebook, the world’s largest social network, and Google, the dominant Internet search engine, are locked in battle for Internet users’ time online and for advertising dollars.

For Facebook, bolstering its mobile presence is critical. Nearly 70 percent of Facebook members used mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets to access its service at the end of 2012, and 157 million of Facebook’s roughly 1 billion users accessed the service solely on a mobile device.

The company has stepped up efforts to ensure that its revenue-generating ads can be viewed on mobile devices and Zuckerberg has said that the company’s engineers are now focused on creating “mobile-first experiences.”

Reports that Facebook was developing its own smartphone have sporadically appeared for years though Zuckerberg has shot them one down, saying that building a Facebook phone would be “the wrong strategy.”

With specialized software that adds a layer on top of Android, Facebook may get many of the benefits of having its own phone without the costs and risks of actually building a hardware device.

Three refs nabbed for sexual bribes


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Singapore – Three Lebanese soccer referees were charged Thursday for receiving sexual bribes in exchange for fixing a match in Singapore, the government’s anti-corruption bureau said.

 

Referee Ali Sabbagh, and assistants Ali Eid and Abdallah Taleb, were charged before a district court for “corruptly” receiving sexual gratification “as an inducement” to fix the match they were to officiate Wednesday, court documents showed.

 

The charge sheets said the three committed an offence punishable under the Prevention of Corruption Act.

 

The three had been due to officiate in Tampines Rovers’ AFC Cup fixture with East Bengal when they were abruptly dropped and questioned by the Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau (CPIB).

 

Replacement officials were brought in for the game, which was won 4-2 by the Indian team.

 

CPIB said in a statement Thursday they had acted on “prior information of match fixing” involving the three referees.

 

“Subsequent investigations revealed that the trio corruptly received gratification… in the form of free sexual service from three females,” the CPIB said in a statement.

 

“Singapore has always adopted a zero tolerance approach towards corruption, and match fixing of any form is not condoned in Singapore,” it said.

 

The CPIB added that it “investigates into match-fixing through bribery cases and will not hesitate to take action against any parties involved if they had given or received bribes to fix a match”.

 

Singapore has a long record of match-fixing scandals and criminals from the tiny but wealthy Southeast Asian country have been blamed by Europol for orchestrating an international network responsible for rigging hundreds of games worldwide.

 

In February, Singapore came under pressure to act against the cartels, whose activities fuel illegal gambling estimated to be worth billions of dollars, when the head of Interpol called for the arrest of an alleged ringleader.

 

Singapore police later said the suspect, Tan Seet Eng or Dan Tan, was assisting investigations, but he was not arrested or charged with any crime. – Sapa-AFP

“CAR attack must worry SA”


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Cape Town – Questions remained on why South African troops were singled out, apparently by rebels, in the Central African Republic, Defence Minister Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula said on Thursday.

 

Briefing Parliament’s standing committee on defence, she conceded South African troops were not prepared to deal with an attack in CAR, which left 13 SA National Defence Force soldiers dead.

 

Both the minister and a SANDF lieutenant-general hinted at a third force at play during the clash on March 23.

 

“We were not equipped in a way that will be able to repel that kind of battle. We never deployed to the CAR to wage a battle. We never anticipated (a battle),” Mapisa-Nqakula said.

 

The minister said the troops had been well aware of rebels outside the CAR capital Bangui who wanted to take over power in that country. However, there were still many unanswered questions.

 

“I’m still wondering how we lost it there, what happened.”

 

The SANDF troops were equipped and had the necessary armoury to deal with the rebels they expected to encounter. But rebels were armed with mortars and heavy-calibre weapons.

 

“I think that is what we did not anticipate, that the kind of rebel you would end up protecting yourself from is the kind of rebel which will come in heavy vehicles and will have high-calibre machinery,” Mapisa-Nqakula said.

 

She could not respond to opposition party MP’s concerns on why military intelligence had provided the wrong information to troops. The minister said there was a “phenomenon” they could not identify which was playing itself out in Africa.

 

“If you anticipate a rebel army of about 400 to 500 and suddenly on the day you are confronted by this rebel grouping, you suddenly find thousands of people who can’t even speak the language of the local community there, that should worry us.”

 

Mapisa-Nqakula said the same “phenomenon” had been present during fighting in other countries, such as Mali and the Democratic Republic of Congo, meaning there was cause for alarm.

 

“As South Africans, because of where CAR is, the strategic nature of its location, it’s something that should worry us.”

 

The minister’s claim of a third force was backed up by Lt-Gen Derrick Mgwebi, who told MPs SANDF analysis had showed the level of training of rebels and the equipment at their disposal. But, what soldiers were confronted with were groups not part of the Seleka rebels. He went as far as insinuating the attackers were not even from the CAR.

 

“You look at the uniforms, you look at the boots, you look at the level of equipment they have and you look at the speed at which they move, you realise who you are confronted with.”

 

Mgwebi would not identify where the opposing troops came from, but indicated he knew.

 

“The type of uniform… can give one an indication which areas within that region they are coming from,” he said.

 

As soon as soldiers were ambushed the SANDF was forced to increase its level of readiness and reconfigure its troops.

 

“If we didn’t, we could have probably been in a worse situation than we were.”

 

Mgwebi said of the 27 wounded in battle, 18 had already been discharged from hospital. Of those still in hospital, one was in a critical condition.

 

Mapisa-Nqakula later denied troops were deployed to protect assets of individuals and companies connected to the African National Congress.

 

“The story doing the rounds, that’s in the Mail and Guardian, about assets of individuals which really have nothing to do with what the defence force was doing in the CAR.”

 

She insisted troops were protecting military assets, which included 27 vehicles sent to the CAR in December last year.

 

Mapisa-Nqakula sprang to the defence of SANDF soldiers who reportedly shot dead child soldiers. She said this was not inhumane, as SANDF troops were forced to defend themselves against armed children.

 

“We are not expecting our soldiers to blow kisses at them.”

 

Some of the troops in the CAR had already returned home. Mapisa-Nqakula refused to divulge details about when other troops would arrive home, insisting it was an operational matter.

 

On Wednesday, President Jacob Zuma announced South Africa would withdraw its troops from the country.

 

Earlier this week, ousted CAR president Francois Bozize accused Chadian special forces of helping remove him from office, also indicating they were responsible for the attack on South African troops. – Sapa

Furman fully recovered and raring to go


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Bafana Bafana midfielder Dean Furman has fully recovered from the injuries that he sustained in South Africa’s boisterous 2-0 win over Central African Republic (CAR) in a 2014 FIFA World Cup qualifier. The match was played in Cape Town last month.

 

The England-based midfielder was taken off late in the first half after sustaining a gash above his eye and on the nose. He was immediately rushed to hospital where he underwent further tests.

 

Although results of the scan came back positive, showing no broken bones, there were concerns that the wounds would take time to heal.

 

But the hard tackling midfielder has since put that injury behind him, playing a key role for his League One club, Doncaster Rovers, which is fighting for promotion into the English Championship. He came on at half-time in their 1-0 defeat to Coventry last Friday, and then made his first start in a 1-0 home win over Swindon that took his side to the summit of the standings.

 

“I have fully recovered and in very good condition. There are still some scars to show from that memorable battleground but I am very fine now. 

 

“It was very painful at the time but I still wanted to go back to the field to play but I had problems with my vision so I could not continue. Fortunately the lads won the match which is good. But as for me I am now 100 percent good and would like to thank everyone for the support,” said Furman from his base in England.

 

“My family were there in Cape Town to support me and the boys; and that makes one feel great. Some of them flew from England to come watch the match. And to the people of Cape Town, I would like to thank them from the bottom of my heart for the great atmosphere that led to our victory.”

 

After three matches, South Africa is second in Group A with five points; two behind leaders Ethiopia, CAR is third with three points while Botswana is bottom of the table with a single point. 

 

Furman believes the top spot is there for the taking following victory over CAR.

 

“We are still there and we know it’s going to be difficult but getting that win over CAR was important for our course. Now we need to take that confidence into the next game to keep the momentum going. We have come a long way and we need to keep up the fight and do well in the next two away games against CAR and Ethiopia,” said the midfielder. 

 

He is concerned though with the situation in CAR where South Africa are scheduled to play in June but thinks that is for the administrators to solve rather than players.

 

On club matters, Furman is confident that Doncaster will be promoted but cautioned against losing focus with just five matches remaining in the league race in which two top teams get automatic promotion.

 

“It’s going to be a tight finish so it’s important that we keep focussed and keep fighting all the way. The number one priority is gaining promotion but winning the League One title would make it all more special,” said Furman, who is on loan at Rovers from Oldham Athletic.

 

“At the moment the focus is not my future, we have to finish the league first before I can sit down with the club and discuss my future. It is not about me now, but about the club and the mission at hand.”

 

Rovers are currently on 75 points, two ahead of second-placed AFC Bournemouth. Brentford is third on 70, followed by Sheffield United on 69 and Swindon Town on 68.

 

On Saturday Rovers will face Tranmere and the Carlisle United on Tuesday.