Absa Premiership
Full Time: Polokwane City 1-0 Orlando Pirates
Date: 15 February 2014
Venue: Peter Mokaba Stadium
A single goal from Sipho Jembula handed Polokwane City a shock 1-0 win over Orlando Pirates in an Absa Premiership match at the Peter Mokaba Stadium on Saturday afternoon.
For more http://www.soccerladuma.co.za
Daily Archives: February 15, 2014
Katsande to captain Chiefs
By Obakeng Maje
Windhoek-Kaizer Chiefs will lock horns against Black Africa on a return match to continue with their quest in conquering Africa.
Johannesburg-based team won the first leg convincingly by 3-0 and Chiefs coach Stuart Baxter rested some reguarly players back home.
The hard as nail midfield Willard Katsande is expected to lead Amakhosi after Bafana and Chiefs skipper given a well-deserved rest by enterprising coach.
Chiefs will play against Namibian team at 20:00 on Saturday.-TDN
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EFF: We are the government in waiting

Pretoria – Ongoing legal woes and “political persecution” will not derail EFF leader Julius Malema’s ambition of becoming the next president, party officials said on Thursday.
The party would roll-out “intervention programmes” to prevent Malema’s sequestration, Economic Freedom Fighters spokesperson Floyd Shivambu said in Pretoria.
“Whoever thought that they are going to prevent Julius Malema from being president of South Africa are basically day-dreaming. We are not in a crisis,” said Shivambu.
“The EFF is going to be the government of South Africa and the sooner people get used to that, the better. We are speaking here as a government-in-waiting so get used to us because you will be seeing us frequently, as a government.”
The party and its members were undivided in supporting Malema in his court battles to avoid sequestration.
“That provisional sequestration will never be final. The legal processes we are engaged in are going to be successful. If they are not, that money is going to be paid even if it was R20m or R50m,” he said.
Malema was provisionally sequestrated by the North Gauteng High Court on Monday. The application was brought by the SA Revenue Service.
Malema owes the taxman more than R16m after failing to submit tax returns between 2006 and 2010.
A draft order was signed and made an order of the court. Malema and anyone else who does not want the order to be made final has until 10:00 on 26 May to give reasons as to why this should not happen.
Shivambu said the party could simply raise R16m by getting R32 from each of the almost 500 000 members it claimed it had.
The party’s justice portfolio head Dali Mpofu said “a full-frontal attack” would be launched against all provisions which banned Malema from assuming public office owing to his beleaguered financial status.
“From our ideological perspective, this is just palpable nonsense. It is going to be a huge fight and I am more than optimistic that it is going to be successful,” Mpofu said.
“The fight is in the high court now. It might go to the Supreme Court of Appeal, and it would go to the Constitutional Court. Through all those stages we will be mounting the biggest political fight to protect the poor from being disenfranchised.”
Mpofu said “misleading claims” were being spread by the SA Revenue Service and the media insinuating that Malema would not be able to assume public office after the May general elections.
“The Constitution says every adult citizen has the right to stand for public office and if elected, to hold office. It doesn’t say every solvent citizen or every white or black citizen,” Mpofu said.
“We will not allow a situation where any citizen is disenfranchised because they are poor. They don’t call us fighters for nothing.”
– SAPA
Blame yourself, Malema tells protesters

Pretoria – Economic Freedom Fighters leader Julius Malema on Saturday, told residents of Stofel Park in Mamelodi, east of Pretoria, that they were to blame for the lack of services in the area.
“These roads are like this because you’re to blame,” he said.
“You have been voting for the same people.”
Malema was addressing hundreds of supporters who had gathered for the launch of the party’s elections truck.
He told residents that the power was in their hands to bring change and improve their lives.
There was no water, electricity, toilets or decent roads in the area.
Malema said the fact that government had no money should not be used as an excuse to not deliver services.
“Government might not have money but they [can] caterpillar trucks to flatten roads to make them usable.”
He urged residents to change their votes and go with a party that would deliver.
“The reason you’re here is because you keep on voting for the same people.
“Change is you – change your vote,” he said.
Malema addressed residents as part of his election campaign.
The national general elections would be held on 7 May.
– SAPA
Oscar’s lamentation ‘contrived’

Johannesburg – Oscar Pistorius told his Twitter followers the three sentences he penned for his dead girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp, were expressed from “my heart”. But to PR guru Marcus Brewster, the brief tribute was contrived and insincere.
“Oscar’s statement is overly polished, and so refined as to undercut the sincerity of it. If it was sincere, my question is why was the comment not made on another day? He would tell us how he really misses her (Steenkamp) every day that he wakes up. But every other day he has been silent.
For more http://www.iol.co.za
Scarred by false diagnosis

Johannesburg – A woman who was misdiagnosed with breast cancer and given a double mastectomy has won a R2.8 million damages case.
But Estelle Kunneke’s nine-year battle to get the Limpopo Department of Health to compensate her for the trauma she endured will not bring back her body or her self-esteem.
For more http://www.iol.co.za
Madibeng graft officials to lose properties

North West -Properties belonging to Madibeng Municipality officials found to have been involved in corruption, will be forfeited to the State as the proceeds of crime.
Every cent they earned with underhand tactics will be recouped and guilty parties arrested.
North West Premier Thandi Modise has given her sternest warning yet that heads will roll as the implementation of a minister’s report on maladministration, fraud and corruption gains momentum.
For more http://www.iol.co.za
Staggie’s day parole reinstated

Johannesburg – Former Hard Livings gang leader Rashied Staggie’s day parole has been reinstated, the correctional services department says.
Staggie’s day parole would be from 17 March to 17 September, said spokesperson Manelisi Wolela in a statement on Friday.
“His day parole comes with strict conditions that will include, among others, thorough supervision, agreement to electronic tagging and tracking and non-contact with victims and gang members”.
Staggie was granted parole on 23 September, but it was revoked in December because he met members of gangs and made unauthorised visits.
Day parole
In 2003 he was sentenced to 15 years in prison on charges of kidnapping and rape. In 2004 he received another 13 years for gun theft from a police armoury.
The sentences ran concurrently and he served 11 years before his release on day parole in September.
Wolela said Staggie would be on full parole from 18 September until the end of his sentence on 23 March 2017.
“Placement on parole is an internationally accepted practice that forms part of the total rehabilitation programme in correcting offending behaviour and in managing inmate populations.
“Parole is an incentive for continuous good behaviour,” he said.
– SAPA
Real jobs the solution – Cosatu

Johannesburg – A transformed economy and decent, sustainable jobs are the solution to strikes and protests taking place throughout the country, Cosatu said on Friday.
“The long-term solution to strikes and protests lies not just in regulations and police action but through the transformation of our economy,” said Congress of SA Trade Unions spokesperson Patrick Craven, “and the creation of thousands of decent, sustainable jobs, decent wages and a far more equitable distribution of the country’s wealth.”
The trade union federation was referring to President Jacob Zuma’s state-of-the-nation address on Thursday night.
Zuma criticised the loss of lives during strikes and protests which were taking place throughout the country. He also touched on regulations to prevent arbitrary strikes and retrenchments.
“We note however his off-the-cuff announcement of ‘regulations to prevent arbitrary strikes and retrenchments’ and urge him to clarify what he means and to reassure us that any such regulations will be fully discussed by roleplayers,” Craven said.
He said very few of the proposals Zuma mentioned during his address at Parliament were new, which was concerning.
He described the speech as a “repetition of many pledges already made in previous SONAs” and that “there was not enough focus on the way forward”.
Craven said the Cosatu had consistently backed the policies Zuma mentioned, including the Industrial Policy Action Plan, the Infrastructure Development Programme and parts of the New Growth Path.
“It is also worrying that the economics of the National Development Plan (NDP) are still being highlighted as a solution to our socio-economic challenges,” Craven said.
“The NDP’s market-led solutions if implemented will roll back many of the areas of progress spoken about in SONA [state of the nation address], which have been made through state-driven interventions.”
White males the problem
Cosatu was still calling for the reshaping of the economic elements of the NDP, “as agreed at the 2013 Alliance Summit, in line with the resolution for radical economic transformation”, he said.
He said the country’s task now was to achieve the same advances on the economic front as it had on the political front.
“Ownership of the country’s wealth and resources is still concentrated in the hands of a small, mainly white, male elite, who run big monopoly companies, many foreign-owned,” he said.
“Inequality between that elite and the workers whose toil creates the wealth they enjoy is getting wider and wider.”
He said poverty and inequality were at the heart of all the strikes and community protests which were taking place countrywide.
“Cosatu fully backs the president’s plea for protests and strikes to be conducted lawfully and peacefully.”
– SAPA
Family murder accused waiting for psych bed
Johannesburg – A Durban man accused of beating his wife and two teenage children to death appeared in the Chatsworth Magistrate’s Court on Friday, the NPA said.
The matter was postponed to 10 March so that a bed could be secured for him in a mental institution, KwaZulu-Natal National Prosecuting Authority spokesperson Natasha Ramkisson said.
“After his last court appearance we were unable to secure a bed for him in a mental institution.”
In his previous appearance, Magistrate Prem Singh ruled that Rajan Kandasamy, 44, should undergo psychiatric assessment.
Ramkisson said space would be available on the day of his next appearance.
Teenage
“He will appear in court and thereafter go to the institution.”
Kandasamy allegedly used a gada — a traditional Indian mace carried by the Hindu god Hanuman — to kill his wife and their two teenage children, aged 18 and 17.
Their bloodied and battered bodies were found in the family’s home on 29 December.
Their friends called the police after they failed to attend a memorial service.
SAPA