Former referee Clifford Malgas convicted of corruption


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The Belville Commercial Crimes Court on Friday convicted and sentenced former SAFA Referee, Clifford Malgas on two counts of corruption and perjury related to his role in attempted match fixing during the 2011 SAFA Second Division play-offs that took place in Cape Town.

He was sentenced to an effective four years behind bars.

Malgas was sentenced to two years for corruption and another two years for perjury, bringing the total sentence to four years.
None of the sentences were suspended and he will therefore serve an effective four years behind bars

The court convicted the disgraced official following overwhelming evidence that he colluded with convicted criminal, Philemon Setshedi, who himself was convicted and sentenced for corruption in 2013.

In her judgment, the magistrate said the act of compromising the integrity of sport was a very serious offence that warranted a custodial sentence.

As stated before, the South African Football Association is working very closely with the South African Police Services and National Prosecutions Authority to pursue the persons who are implicated in wrong-doing during the SAFA Second Division Playoffs in 2011 and corruption in football generally.

The Association, SAPS and NPA will leave no stone unturned to ensure that all corrupt elements within football are brought to book.

“We welcome this custodial sentence as it sends a strong message to criminals that they do not have a place in our sport.

“SAFA has adopted a zero-tolerance to any form of crime and anyone harboring such evil tendencies be warned,” said SAFA President Dr Danny Jordaan.
-TDN
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Russian chill permeates G20 summit


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Brisbane – Russia’s Cold War-style standoff with the West sent a chill through G20 talks aimed at heating up the world economy on Saturday, as leaders kicked off a summit in Australia.

Global warming also emerged as a focus for leaders including Barack Obama, Russia’s Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping of China, posing another distraction for the Australian hosts after they had committed to confining the Brisbane summit to an ambitious growth agenda.

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott reminded his fellow G20 leaders that together their countries amount to 85% of the planet’s gross domestic product and 65% of its population.

The world is going through anxious times and wants reassurance “that there are people who know what they’re doing, that there are people who have a plan, a plan for growth and for jobs”, he said at the start of the weekend deliberations.

Abbott also urged the leaders to use first names in addressing each other, “because whatever disagreements we might have, I think it helps if there can at least be personal warmth amongst us”.

‘Ice Cold War’

Yet Abbott himself came into the summit locked in a war of words with Putin over the downing of a Malaysia Airlines passenger jet over Ukraine in July.

Australian anger at Putin was underlined by the Saturday edition of Brisbane’s Courier-Mail newspaper. Its front page showed an Australian kangaroo boxing a growling Russian bear, over the headline “Ice Cold War”.

While the Ukraine crisis does not figure in the formal G20 deliberations, tackling climate change, Ebola and Islamist terrorism are expected to feature in the leaders’ final declaration on Sunday.

In Brisbane, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon echoed former Soviet Union leader Mikhail Gorbachev’s fears that tensions between Russia and the West had brought the world to the brink of a new Cold War.

“In the heart of Europe, the Ukrainian conflict has raised the fear of Cold War-style divisions that can impact our collective efforts to solve problems… this has global implications in all aspects,” he told reporters, urging G20 leaders to debate the issue.

Putin in the hot seat

Putin arrived in Brisbane facing an icy reception after the prime ministers of Britain and Australia accused him of being a bully and harbouring imperialist ambitions in the context of the Ukraine separatist crisis.

Moscow hit back with strong language against the West that included a warning for France against further delay in handing over a warship promised under a 2011 contract, as Putin and French President Francois Hollande prepared to hold bilateral talks on Saturday evening in Brisbane.

Putin is also due to meet German Chancellor Angela Merkel at the summit, and started Saturday with a separate meeting of the BRICS countries – Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.

Interviewed by the TASS news agency, the Russian strongman said his government was prepared to deal with a potentially “catastrophic” fall in oil prices.

Their decline to four-year lows is a boon for growth in other G20 countries but threatens to explode Russia’s deficit and is already depressing the ruble.

An overhaul of the global energy market could be a surprise outcome of the G20 summit with plans for a new agency to protect against oil and gas supplies being used as foreign policy tools, The Australian newspaper said.

Putin also assailed other G20 countries for imposing sanctions over Ukraine and the Malaysia Airlines plane incident.

But he said he would not raise the topic of sanctions at the G20. “Why should I draw attention to this, ask for something? It’s pointless.”

Climate change

Obama meanwhile was due to announce a $3bn pledge to a UN fund aimed at mitigating the effects of climate change in the world’s poorest countries, after emerging from a pre-G20 trip to China with a pact with Xi on greenhouse gas emissions.

The conservative Abbott, a sceptic on man-made climate change, wants the G20 instead to deliver on its commitment of lifting economic growth by up to two trillion dollars in the next five years through policy reforms.

The idea in Brisbane is to flesh out the growth plan – and also to close corporate loopholes that allow some multinational companies to PAY a pittance in tax depending on where they are domiciled, after a major dispute erupted over Luxembourg’s beneficial tax deals with a slew of companies.

The prime minister of Luxembourg at the time was Jean-Claude Juncker, who is now the head of the European Union’s executive commission.

In Brisbane on Saturday Juncker defended his position over the sweetheart deals, and endorsed a global fight against tax evasion in the WORKS FROM the G20.

– AFP

Teen’s naked body left on mountain


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De Aar – Northern Cape police on Tuesday were searching for people involved in the murder of a teenager whose naked body was found on a mountain in Sunrise, De Aar.

The 18-year-old’s body was found on Saturday, said Colonel Priscilla Naidu.

“The badly bruised body of Raumoney Marsha Candice Frolick from De Aar was found by children who were playing nearby,” she said.

“She sustained visible injuries to her face, neck and head.”

The teenager was last seen at a local tavern on Friday evening.

Sapa

Only 1 in 18 African drug users seek help


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Kimberley – Africans are less likely than their international peers to seek treatment for drug addiction, an expert told the national SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENTsymposium in Kimberley on Wednesday.

“According to Mr Jason Eligh of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, only one in 18 people who use drugs in Africa seek treatment, opposed to the world average of one in six,” social development spokeswoman Lumka Oliphant said in a statement.

The chairman of the Central Drug Authority, Mogotsi Kalaeamodimo, told the symposium it was important to dispel the stigma associated with DRUG ADDICTION TREATMENT.

The department of social development and the Authority organised the symposium to discuss and develop methods for treating people with drug and ALCOHOL ADDICTION.

The department advocated family-based programmes to deal with social problems, including substance abuse, and educating communities about drugs.

Sapa

Letsholonyane hopeful of Bafana goals on home soil


Bafana will be aiming for a win at Moses Mabhida Stadium on Saturday, which would be enough to see them safely qualify for next year’s Afcon tournament, wherever it will be held

Reneilwe Letsholonyane believes that the time is right for Bafana to start scoring at home, where they are yet to notch up a single goal during this qualification campaign.

“Previously, we’d do well at home, but lose away, not even getting a draw,” Letsholonyane said on Wednesday.

“It’s different because we’re getting three points away and we’re not winning at home yet, but at least we’re getting a point, which is not bad.”
For more http://www.goal.com