Man in court over murder of 14-year-old


Mahikeng – A man arrested for allegedly stabbing a teenager to death appeared in the Itsoseng Magistrate’s Court, North West police said on Tuesday.

Bojosi Mokaleng, 19, appeared in court on Monday and his case was postponed to 6 January for a formal bail application, Colonel Sabata Mokgwabone said.

He allegedly stabbed Thapelo Mogale, 14, in the back with a knife in Deelpan village, near Lichtenburg, on 24 December.

He was arrested with his 23-year-old brother but charges against the brother were withdrawn.

SAPA

Stolen cars recovered during raid


Johannesburg – A man was arrested and two stolen vehicles were recovered at Soweto’s Jabulani hostel on Tuesday, police said.

Police spokesperson Kay Makhubela said the vehicles were found during a raid at the hostel.

A Mazda 323 was reported stolen in Newlands, Johannesburg.

A minibus taxi was reported stolen in Parys in the Free State, he said.

Another minibus taxi suspected of being stolen was also found at the hostel and impounded.

A man, 31, was arrested and expected to appear in the Protea Magistrate’s Court soon.

 

SAPA

Cheating in matric exams – Umalusi


Pretoria – Results will be withheld in 58 matric examination centres in KwaZulu-Natal and the Eastern Cape following copying, monitoring body Umalusi said on Tuesday.

Evidence of “group copying” was found in these centres, Umalusi council chair Professor John Volmink told reporters in Pretoria.

“This is a new phenomenon… Umalusi is very concerned about this trend and takes the view that strong action be taken against those learners and supervisors who have made themselves guilty of these acts of dishonesty.

“Umalusi will therefore not approve the release of the results of these centres.”

He said an initial basic education department report identified 74 exam centres in KwaZulu-Natal and 43 in the Eastern Cape for auditing.

Following a probe, in KwaZulu-Natal 39 centres were implicated in cheating and 19 in the Eastern Cape.

Volmink said the irregularities did not affect the integrity and credibility of the exams as a whole. KwaZulu-Natal had 1 741 examination centres and the Eastern Cape had 924, so the irregularities occurred at two percent of the centres.

“So in the view of Umalusi this number does not compromise the integrity of the examination as a whole in these provinces, or indeed in the country.”

When asked how the irregularities were discovered, Umalusi CEO Mafu Rakometsi said pupils provided the same answers.

“These problems were detected at the marking centres… the students are providing the same answers, the same right answers, the same wrong answers.

“It is clear that there is sharing of notes, it is clear that there is dictation.”

Go ahead

Giving an example, he said whoever gave the dictation to pupils said “go ahead” and the pupils wrote “go ahead” on their answer sheets.

He said if pupils wanted to cheat it was the duty of teachers, principals, and supervisors to stop them.

“It means that the supervisors have allowed it and this situation cannot be tolerated,” he said.

The department had told Umalusi the investigation into these centres would be completed by the end of March and that “drastic measures” would be taken to deal with it once and for all, Rakometsi said.

Volmink said apart from these incidents the 2014 matric exams, although not perfect, were “fair and credible”.

Umalusi was satisfied the examinations were “fair and valid and credible” and it commended the department for “running a successful and credible examination process”.

Umalusi approved the release of the exam results, written by 550 127 full-time and 138 533 part-time candidates.

“Umalusi is satisfied that nothing has compromised the integrity or credibility of the exams as a whole.”

On 25 November, the education department said matric results would be published in newspapers with only pupils’ ID and exam numbers. The decision was made after a task team recommended that the practice of publishing pupils’ names be reviewed.

The results would be released next week.

SAPA

Road deaths alarming – JPSA


Johannesburg – The toll of 1 143 road deaths during the festive season so far is alarming and saddening, the Justice Project SA (JPSA) said on Tuesday.

“What is truly alarming is that this average is almost twice the average of 54 per day during the eight-day period last year [22 to 30 December 2013],” the organisation said in a statement.

“Justice Project South Africa is deeply saddened and somewhat alarmed by the announcement today that 1 143 people have been killed on our roads.”

Transport Minister Dipuo Peters announced that the 1 143 people died in 924 crashes during the festive season up to 28 December.

KwaZulu-Natal had the most fatal accidents, with 249 deaths from 211 crashes, Peters told reporters in Durban.

In Gauteng there were 174 deaths from 156 fatal crashes. The Eastern Cape had 161 deaths from 129 fatal crashes.

Limpopo had 138 deaths from 106 fatal crashes, Mpumalanga 110 deaths from 90, the Free State 95 deaths from 63, and the Western Cape 91 deaths from 78 fatal crashes.

Peters said that while there was a decrease of 50 fatal crashes and 25 deaths compared to the same period in 2013, the surge in accidents and deaths since 23 December was worrying.

The JPSA disagreed with Peters.

“Contrary to what has been said, this does not represent a decrease in road fatalities, nor does it indicate that the same old festive season interventions that have been tried over and over again are having the desired effect,” the organisation said. It said head-on collisions remain a leading cause of deaths on the road.

“The festive season is far from over and if things continue as they are, the 2014 festive season road death statistics looks set to surpass those of 2013.”

 

SAPA

Heavy fines for fireworks by-law violation


Johannesburg – People violating by-laws regulating fireworks in Johannesburg will be slapped with a R1 500 fine, the city emergency service said on Tuesday.

“In terms of the city’s by-laws, no person should use fireworks within 500m of any explosives factory, explosives storage place, petrol depot or petrol station, inside any building, at any public place or at any school, old age home or hospital,” said spokesperson Robert Mulaudzi.

He said no one under the age of 16 was allowed to handle or use fireworks, except if they were supervised by an adult. Retailers may not sell fireworks to a child under the age of 16.

“Fireworks should be handled by adults, and children should watch the display from a distance.”

To stage a fireworks display, permission must first be sought in writing from the fireworks working committee or from the chief fire officer in that particular region.

“The application must reach the committee or the chief fire officer 14 days in advance to allow members of the public to launch any objections.”

Permission must also be sought to set off crackers in private yards. In the application, the person must outline the plan of the house, including any overhead pylons. A site inspection by the emergency management services would also be conducted.

Those planning their own fireworks shows were urged to keep in mind the dangers inherent in their use, and to remember safety tips:

Pick a site that is appropriate for lighting the crackers.

Safety is a priority and clothes must be resistant to fire.

Set up the display during daylight hours.

Check the wind direction before starting the display.

Pick up all the remains of the fireworks and keep them out of children’s reach.

In addition, people should read the instructions provided with each firework. Mulaudzi said.

“Never throw lighted crackers, always stand well back. Never return to a cracker once it is lit because it may go off in one’s face.

“Always give fireworks plenty of room to explode. Light crackers in an open space, be considerate and not endanger other members of the public,” he said.

SAPA

Maths, physics results worse than 2013 – Umalusi


Pretoria – The 2014 matric results for mathematics, mathematics literacy and physical science were worse than in 2013, monitoring body Umalusi said on Tuesday.

Mathematics had undergone major changes in content with the inclusion of Euclidean geometry and probability, Umalusi council chairperson Professor John Volmink told reporters in Pretoria.

He said the curriculum would prove a challenge to most pupils.

“This was shown in the learner performance in that there is a significant increase in the failure rate compared with 2013,” he said.

“However, learners at the top experienced the mathematics examination much easier.”

In mathematics literacy pupils did “significantly worse” in 2014 than in any previous year.

He said upward adjustments were made to the marks at all levels for mathematics literacy. Normal mathematics had no adjustment at the bottom end and a slight downward adjustment at the top end.

Volmink said the results of all but 58 examination centres, where irregularities were found, would be released next week.

In physical science, pupils performed worse than in 2013 and an upward adjustment was made at all levels. Life sciences was the “easiest in the group of subjects” taken and the marks were decreased.

In business studies the performance was the worst compared to any other year and the marks were increased.

In mathematics there were more failures, but also more distinctions. Volmink said the crux of the matter was how children were being taught. He said there had been no real improvement over the last five years.

“To be quite frank, we thought the results would be much worse because large sections of the mathematics curriculum was not there last year.”

He speculated there might have been more emphasis on teaching the subject, otherwise the results would have been worse.

He said for the basic education department, 58 subjects were presented for standardisation. After moderation the raw marks for 35 subjects were accepted, 13 subjects had marks increased, and 10 decreased.

Volmink said evidence of “group copying” was found in the 58 centres in Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal.

“This is a new phenomenon… Umalusi is very concerned about this trend and takes the view that strong action be taken against those learners and supervisors who have made themselves guilty of these acts of dishonesty.”

Probe into cheating

Following a probe, in KwaZulu-Natal 39 centres were implicated in cheating and 19 in the Eastern Cape.

Volmink said the irregularities did not affect the integrity and credibility of the exams as a whole. KwaZulu-Natal had 1 741 examination centres and the Eastern Cape had 924, so the irregularities occurred at two percent of the centres.

When asked how the irregularities were discovered, Umalusi CEO Mafu Rakometsi said pupils provided the same answers.

“These problems were detected at the marking centres… the students are providing the same answers, the same right answers, the same wrong answers.

“It is clear that there is sharing of notes, it is clear that there is dictation.”

Giving an example, he said whoever gave the dictation to pupils said “go ahead” and the pupils wrote “go ahead” on their answer sheets.

He said if pupils wanted to cheat it was the duty of teachers, principals, and supervisors to stop them.

The department had told Umalusi the investigation into these centres would be completed by the end of March and “drastic measures” would be taken to deal with the problem, Rakometsi said.

Volmink said apart from these incidents the 2014 matric exams, although not perfect, were “fair and credible”.

Umalusi approved the release of the exam results from the basic education department, the Independent Examinations Board (IEB), the SA Comprehensive Assessment Institute, and the higher education department.

Social Development Minister Bathabile Dlamini said on Tuesday her department had opened its gender-based violence “command centre” for counselling to IEB matriculants who would get their results on Wednesday.

Dlamini appealed to parents to beware of signs of depression in their children so they could seek help for them.

Public schools’ matric exam results will be released next Tuesday.

SAPA

Du Preez’s piece racist – presidency


Johannesburg – The presidency on Tuesday called an opinion piece by columnist Max du Preez about President Jacob Zuma racist and mind-boggling.

“The piece smacks of prejudice and racism given the manner in which Mr du Preez describes the president,” the presidency said in a statement.

“The presidency is alarmed by the personal attack on President Jacob Zuma.”

In an article published by Independent Newspapers, titled “Zuma – SA’s one-man wrecking ball”, Du Preez says the SA Revenue Service (Sars) and the Hawks were the “latest victims” of Zuma’s “demolition of democracy”.

“The devastation caused by… Zuma will take years to rebuild, even if he were to leave office tomorrow.”

Du Preez offers his analysis of the political machinations he believes are behind the appointment of Tom Moyane as Sars commissioner in September, and the suspension earlier this month of Hawks head Anwa Dramat.

In its statement, the presidency called the article a “mind-boggling opinion piece” and said it had not been given an opportunity to respond to the “serious allegations”.

It said when processes such as taking disciplinary action against public servants took place, these would have nothing to do with Zuma.

“The knee jerk reaction of blaming the president for everything that happens in institutions without any attempt to verify the information indicates lazy and mischievous journalism,” it said.

The presidency took exception to a reference Du Preez makes to Zuma’s “corrupt relationship [in the words of a judge] with his financial adviser”.

The presidency said the remark in question – when Judge Hilary Squires was reported by the media to have said Zuma had a “generally corrupt relationship” with fraud-convicted Schabir Shaik – had already been refuted.

In November 2006, Squires wrote to Business Day indicating he never uttered those words.

Responding to the presidency’s statement on his writing, Du Preez told Sapa: “My only comment is that my column was an opinion piece, not reportage.”

In a tweet he said: “I’m a liar and a racist. Shame on me”, along with a link to the presidency’s statement online.

SAPA

MEC Gaolaolwe sends condolences to Maine bereaved family  


North West MEC for Social Development Fenny Gaolaolwe has described the passing away of the departmental female staff as ‘shocking’ and ‘gruesome.’ Gaolaolwe was reacting to the sad news of the passing away of Refilwe Maine who was allegedly killed by her husband on Monday. Maine was working for Victim Empowerment directorate in the department.

“We received with sadness the news of the sudden departure of one of our own staff member.”On behalf of the department, I offer my deepest condolences to Maine family and to their  loved ones in this difficult moment,” Gaolaolwe said, adding that the gruesome killing of a woman took place at a time when the province and the country at large are still observing 365 days of activism for no violence against women and children.According to the police statement the suspect allegedly hanged himself after leaving suicide note.

Police were called to the house in Extension 13 on Sunday, when a friend visited the couple after they failed to answer their cellphones and found them dead.

Cases of murder and inquest were opened.
-TDN
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