MEC MALOYI TO HAND OVER 250 HOUSES IN GREATER TAUNG


Taung-MEC for Human Settlements Public Safety and Liaison Nono Maloyi will on Tuesday hand over about 250 houses to the Taung families in the greater Taung local municipality.

The Houses are part of the 8000 houses that are expected to be handed over between February and March 2014.

“The benefiting families are mostly those that have been staying in mud houses while others are those who lost their houses due to floods in the area. The benefiting families are from villages such as Manthe, Tlapeng and Tsokonyane respectively” departmental spokesperson Ben Bole said.

The department has prioritized families headed by the elderly, child and people living with disability. The Taung villages were previously hit by heavy floods where lifes were lost and thousands of rands lost due to property damages.

“The handover is part of celebrating twenty years (20yrs) of freedom, and also in line with the Outcome 8 of the National Development Plan vision 2030 which is intended to improve the quality of people’s lives and bring back dignity to the marginalised communities across the province” Bole said.

The hand over programme is also part of the department’s service delivery initiative and reduction of housing backlog in the province.

The handover will take place as follows:

Date: 18 March 2014

Time: 14H00

Venue: Tlapeng tribal authority
-TDN
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Premier Modise urges parties to recommit themselves to end strike


Marikana-Parties involved in the platinum mining sector wage dispute should intensify efforts to find a win-win solution to bring the protracted strike to end, North West Premier Thandi Modise appealed on Monday.

“There is a need for parties to renew their commitment to end the strike which has entered its eighth week as it is impacting negatively on our economy and putting a strain on relations between striking miners and our communities,” Premier Modise said.

Modise has expressed concern regarding continued acts of violence and intimidation of non-striking workers and called on striking workers to respect public and private properties and the freedom of movement of other citizens and those who wanted to go to work.-TDN
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Pistorius trial enters week three


Johannesburg – Monday will see day 11 unfold in the murder trial of Paralympian Oscar Pistorius in the North Gauteng High Court.

On Friday, a former police officer admitted to the court that evidence was mishandled on the scene where the paralympian shot his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp.

Giliam van Rensburg said he was dismayed to see a colleague pick up the handgun found on Pistorius’s bloodied bathroom floor without protective gloves.

“So I asked him ‘what are you doing?’ ” said Van Rensburg, adding that at this the ballistics expert looked down and realised he was bare-handed.

“And then he said ‘Sorry’,” said Van Rensburg, a now retired station commander who was the first policeman to arrive at Pistorius’s home after he shot Steenkamp on Valentine’s Day last year.

The admission came as Van Rensburg was answering questions from prosecutor Gerrie Nel, testifying notably that there was no sign of forced entry into the disabled track star’s home.

Pistorius has pleaded not guilty to premeditated murder, claiming that he believed there was an intruder hiding in a locked toilet cubicle in his home when he fired four shots into it, fatally wounding Steenkamp.
SAPA

500 000 workers set for strike action


Johannesburg – The National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa (Numsa) called a one-day strike for Wednesday to highlight youth unemployment in the country, where one in four people are jobless, the union said.

The 340 000-member union draws its members from car manufacturing, the metal industry, transport and general workers.

The strike would be the latest in a string of work stoppages.

“It is a strike that members in all other unions can join. We think half a million workers will take part,” Karl Cloete, deputy general secretary of Numsa, told Reuters on Sunday.

 

In December, Numsa, the biggest bloc in the Cosatu, said it would not support the ANC in the upcoming election.

Many South Africans are disgruntled by the slow pace at which the ANC is rolling back poverty two decades after the end of apartheid.

A strike over wages in the platinum sector has been going on for nearly two months and has cost employees more than R3.8bn ($354m) in lost earnings.

The strike has cost mining companies R8.6bn in revenue so far, according to a tally updated almost every second on the Chamber of Mines’ website.

Oscar Trail: hinging on forensic science


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WASHINGTON DC – One of the key aspects of the Oscar Pistorius trial has been the forensic evidence – what it shows, and whether or not it’s valid.

In the US, it’s a reminder of a case that many Americans still see as a watershed moment for the country’s justice system.

The OJ Simpson trial also hinged on the opinion of forensic scientists.

Washington DC’s crime museum has a whole section devoted to forensic science  – a discipline that used to be shrouded in mystery.

Taking fingerprints or measuring bullet holes was inexact and criminal trials were a case of ‘he said, she said’.

But now, things have changed – forensic science can make or break a case, and TV crime shows have raised its profile significantly.

But on top of that, the famous trial of OJ Simpson back in 1994 also gave the discipline a much higher profile, as the issue of the glove – which the prosecution said linked him to his ex-wife’s murder – got the whole country talking … just as South Africa and the world is now discussing the evidence shown in the trial of another famous athlete.

As the Oscar Pistorius case continues, in the absence of witnesses, it’s the forensics that are coming to the fore – but instead of a glove, here it’s a cricket bat, a bathroom door and even the athlete’s own prosthetic legs that are taking centre stage.

And when asked if that trial reminds them of any big American cases, it’s clear that people here see parallels with OJ:

Said former police officer, Michael Cerisano: “I think forensics plays a big part. I remember in the OJ Simpson trial, there was the famous line Johnnie Cochran brought out, ‘If it does not fit, you must acquit’, when they had OJ try the glove on.”

Forensic scientist Victor Weedn was a named witness in the OJ case, and says the forensics are similarly important now for Oscar Pistorius: “In both the OJ Simpson case as well as this case, it’s largely hinging on forensic science, because you have the defendant, has a story which of course doesn’t match with the prosecution. But the prosecution doesn’t have any other witnesses to go to, they have to go to the forensic evidence as their only witness.”

But, he says, for Pistorius, guilt is already established. So the role of forensics is more subtle.

“In the OJ Simpson case, for instance, there was the glove – you know – ‘If it doesn’t fit, you must acquit’. I’m not sure I see that in the same way in this case. 9.49 //10.08 They’re not really going to hard evidence that he was there or not there, we know that. This is more subtle than that. Essentially what we have is a case where we have the defendant’s testimony, which says one thing, and the prosecution has to come up with something which is not going to be from witness testimony but has to come from the forensic evidence.”

Back at the museum, an exhibit of a disturbed bedroom with rumpled sheets, bullet holes and bloodstains eerily brings to mind the scene of the crime now being discussed in Pretoria.

Here, using forensics to search for clues is just a bit of fun for visitors. But for Pistorius – as for OJ – the science and what a court makes of it will be lifechanging.

-eNCA