One died, another one critical injured


By Obakeng Maje
Wolmaransstad- A case of culpable homicide has been registered after a vehicle knocked down two male pedestrians aged 21 and 24 at Extension 10 and N12 road junction on Saturday at around 04:30.  

According to the information, one died on the scene while the other one sustained serious injuries, and was taken to the hospital for medical treatment.

“It is not yet known what could have led to the collision, and investigation continues” colonel Sabata Mokgwabone said. 
-TDN
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A man bludgeoned to death in Mahikeng


By Obakeng Maje
Mmabatho- A 24-year-old suspect is expected to appear in Mmabatho Magistrates Court on Monday for the alleged murder of a 40-year-old man at approximately 04:30 on Friday,says North West police. 

“It is alleged that an argument that led to a fight ensued between the two. The suspect allegedly took out a knife and stabbed the victim in the chest, and he died on the scene” colonel Sabata Mokgwabone said.  Investigation into the matter continues.-TDN
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Hartswater crash driver arrested as 12 people succumb to injuries


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By Obakeng Maje
Hartswater police are investigating a case of culpable homicide after a bakkie which was fully loaded with passengers collided into a taxi. The incident happened Saturday at about 15H00 and 16H00, on N18 between Taung and Magogong.

The emergency services personnel had to utilise the jaws of live to free other passenger who were trapped inside the taxi as a result of the impact of the vehicle collision.

The passengers from the bakkie were flung off and strewn all over the N18 and others landed into a nearby water canal.

“During our investigation on the accident scene four lifeless bodies were retrieved from the canal and other bodies were scattered on the road. Twelve people were certified dead on the accident scene and one died while admitted at the hospital” lieutenant Olebogeng Tawana said.

Twenty six occupants who survived the accident with critical injuries, have been transported to Hartswater, Taung and Klerksdorp Hospitals to receive medical treatment.

The driver of the bakkie, a 59-year-old man have been arrested and charged with culpable homicide, he will appear before the Hartswater Magistrate’s Court Monday.-TDN
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Khuma: A township in ruins


Following a recent 5.5 magnitude earthquake that left a trail of destruction in the township of Khuma near Orkney, North West, a frail 81-year-old man finds himself living alone in a house declared unsafe for occupation.

David Bohloko has no identity book and thus cannot receive a social grant, nor access other state benefits for people of his age. Compounding his problems, he has no immediate family.

During the August 5 quake his house was dislodged from its foundation. The walls cracked and an outside room was completely destroyed. Bohloko’s only piece of furniture is a mattress on top of plant pots, which he sleeps on.

A young woman has made it her responsibility to look after him. Lucy Masangane and other locals reported Bohloko’s plight to government officials.

“We went to register him on the database of those affected by the earthquake so that he could get help, but nothing has been done,” she says.

Masangane says a meeting was held with the local mayor who apparently told Bohloko to continue living in the house, despite it being declared unsafe.

More than 600 houses were damaged during the earthquake. A 31-year-old man was killed and at least 34 miners were injured.

Government at the time said those affected would be helped. Severely damaged homes were declared unsafe for occupation. Some families were moved to a community centre.

People’s names were taken and they were promised food parcels. Bohloko, to this day, has not received anything.

“There are people in the same street who received groceries but he was not given any,” Masangane says.

“When we inquired, we were told they would look into the matter, but to this day nothing has been done for him.”

Masangane is unemployed, but has been feeding Bohloko. She has decided to move into his house to be nearer to him in case he needs help.

“I make plans to get food so that I can cook for him,” she said.

A street away from Bohloko is the home of Mmalehlogonolo Mosaei. Standing in the middle of her badly damaged house she remembers August 5 and the funfair atmosphere when government officials visited the area.

“They assessed our houses and said they were not safe for us to stay in. Government said they would help us to rebuild the house, but since then they have not come back to us,” she says.

The unemployed mother of 10 says the family has been staying in a two-bedroom shack since the earthquake. She points to the cracks in the walls and says she lives in fear of the house falling down.

Some of her young children play near the house. She asks them to play further away from the unstable structure.

After registering her name on the database of those affected, she was optimistic that government would take care of her.

“[But] now we are hurting because they [government] are not telling us anything or giving us hope of when we would be assisted,” she said.

The shack leaks when it rains. Some of the children share one bed while others sleep on the floor with her. Her biggest worry is crime.

“Living in the shack, we are always scared that criminals can break in as it will be very easy for them to remove one of the corrugated iron sheets. It is not a nice feeling,” Mosaei says.

Just like Bohloko, she has had to watch as others around her receive groceries while she struggles to make ends meet. Her cupboards are empty except for a 10kg bag of mielie meal she bought on credit.

“We have not received help from the municipality or government, despite having given our details and explaining that no one is employed in the family,” she says.

SA Social Security Agency (Sassa) North West spokesman Smanga Selemeni on Tuesday told Sapa that after the quake information was collated on which families were affected and to what extent.

“This was used to determine who gets what… If we are not giving some families, probably they did not appear on the list. Also, the distribution of those food parcels is governed by the regulations of the Social Assistance Act.”

In terms of the act, prospective beneficiaries need to submit information on their household income and whether anyone in the family receives a social grant.

“Other families could have been excluded as a result of those regulations,” Selemeni said.

North West provincial government spokeswoman Bonolo Mohlakoana says an assessment on the extent of the damage is complete, but a request for funding has not yet been sent to the National Disaster Management Centre.

Asked why it has taken so long for this to happen, Mohlakoana says there are not enough structural engineers to assess the houses. Also, the list of properties needing assessment keeps growing as people phone in to report damage.

“The assessment has been done. Now they are working on the cost implications, which we will send to the National Disaster Management Centre soon.”

-Sapa

Seventh heaven for Amakhosi


Mandla Masango scored his fourth Premiership goal of the season as Kaizer Chiefs limped to a 1-0 win over Maritzburg United at FNB Stadium on Saturday night.

Masango scored from the penalty spot on the stroke of half-time as Chiefs bagged their seventh consecutive league victory of the season, maintaining their 100 percent start to the 2014/15 campaign.
For more http://www.thenewage.co.za

Eleven people died in a horrific accident near Taung


By Obakeng Maje
Taung- Northern Cape police are investigating a case of culpable homicide after eleven people perished in a fatal accident.

Lieutenant Olebogeng Tawana said a bakkie driver lost control and ploughed into a taxi.

“We can confirm that eleven people died in a fatal accident after a terrible accident took place on Saturday on N18. The number might escalates as we still have to confirm if one of the persons who passed away was part of the accident” lieutenant Olebogeng Tawana said.

Police investigations continue.-TDN
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11 died in a fatal accident near Taung


By Obakeng Maje
Taung- Northern Cape police are investigating a case of culpable homicide after eleven people perished in a fatal accident.

Lieutenant Olebogeng Tawana said a bakkie driver lost control and ploughed into a taxi.

“We can confirm that eleven people died in a fatal accident after a terrible accident took place on Saturday on N18. The number might escalates as we still have to confirm if one of the persons who passed away was part of the accident” lieutenant Olebogeng Tawana said.

Police investigations continue.-TDN
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Hotel kicks out municipal team


STAFF from a North West municipality competing in the Southern African Inter-Municipal Association (Saimsa) games in Buffalo City Metro have been ejected from their hotel.

The participants from Ditsobotla Local Municipality, which is currently under administration, yesterday said they were kicked out of Gonubie Hotel because their accommodation bill had not been paid.
For more http://www.dispatch.co.za

EFF defectors burn their berets – report


Johannesburg – The EFF was unconcerned by a report on Friday that about 100 of its Northern Cape members had defected back to the ANC.

“Members of the ANC come to the EFF every day and we don’t make platforms to announce it,” spokesperson Mbuyiseni Ndlozi said.

“This is just a political stunt.”

The New Age reported on Friday that the 100 EFF members left the party, branding its leader Julius Malema a dictator.

According to the report, the members were welcomed back to the ANC in the Frances Baard region.

They reportedly burnt their red EFF berets, T-shirts and membership cards outside the Social Centre in Kimberley.

Former EFF Northern Cape leader Kabelo Mzolo told the newspaper the policies advocated by the party were in the wrong hands and that Malema used the EFF for his own ends.

Ndlozi said he did not know who Mzolo was and that it was debatable whether the group were actually EFF members.

“We are launching branches every day. There is a lot of progress happening across the country.”

He said the ANC was unable to accept that the EFF “is here to stay”.

SAPA

NWU Potch campus an ‘apartheid enclave’ – Nzimande


Johannesburg – The North West University’s (NWU) Potchefstroom campus is still rooted in apartheid ideas, Higher Education Minister Blade Nzimande said on Friday.

“The Potchefstroom campus of NWU remains fundamentally an apartheid institution, if not an enclave, in urgent need of transformation,” he said in a statement.

He was reacting to a report on apparent fascist initiation practices at the institution.

Nzimande said according to the report it was clear “that there are deep-seated practices at the institution related to its welcoming programmes for first-year students that violate human rights and dehumanise first-year students”.

Earlier this year, Nzimande asked the university council to investigate reports in February of Nazi-style stiff-arm salutes first-year students allegedly made during an initiation ceremony at the Potchefstroom campus.

He received the report of the investigation by an independent task team on 27 June.

Nzimande said that, at the time of receiving the report, he was asked not to make it public.

“I have decided not to comply with this request. It is unacceptable that a report that exposes a deep moral corruption at a major public university should be kept from the university community and the people of this country.”

Nzimande said the report indicated the problems in question were specific to the Potchefstroom campus and that the initiation practices at residences mainly targeted first-year students, especially those not from the dominant Afrikaans feeder schools.

The initiation practices had been carried out for so long that they had come to be considered cultural practices in the residences, said Nzimande.

“It is also clear that these practices are well known to the management of the residences, with some actively participating in the processes.”

He said that, according to the report, it was clear the university and campus management were not only aware of the practices, but refused to act against them, despite available evidence.

“A culture of fear exists at the institution and people do not talk freely.”

Nzimande said it seemed the university’s institutional model had fostered “a largely mono-cultural environment that appears to be designed mainly for white Afrikaners on the Potchefstroom campus”.

The minister agreed with the report’s recommendations and had asked for feedback on their implementation on a quarterly basis.

The task team that conducted the investigation included SA Human Rights Commission member Leon Wessels, NWU human rights committee chairperson Rehana Rawat, political analyst Somadoda Fikeni, and nuclear power expert Bismark Tyobeka.

SAPA