Lungisa ordered to step down as ANC leader in Nelson Mandela Bay


​CAPE TOWN – Newly elected African National Congress (ANC) Nelson Mandela Bay chairperson Andile Lungisa has been ordered to step down.
The ANC councillor is part of a 25-man regional executive committee elected last week.

However, according to the party’s constitution, Lungisa was not eligible to stand in that elective conference because he is also a PEC member.

Prior to the conference, ANC secretary general Gwede Mantashe had issued a directive that Lungisa not stand but he defied the instruction.

ANC Eastern Cape Secretary Oscar Mabuyane says Lungisa was informed of the latest decision.

“We’re dealing with the matter within our internal organisational arrangement. This morning, I had a discussion with the regional secretary there and they’re working on that matter and we think this matter will be easily sorted out.”

Source: http://www.ewn.co.za

Mahumapelo: ‘Defamation case against NWBF still on the roll’


BY REGINALD KANYANE
Bokone Bophirima Premier, Supra Mahumapelo vehemently dismissed media reports alleging that he has withdrawn his defamation case against the North West Business Forum (NWBF).

Provincial Government spokesperson Brian Setswambung said the case has been removed from the court’s urgent roll with costs reserved. Setswambung further said this followed an agreement between the two parties.

“Lawyers representing Mahumapelo served the NWBF’s Fana Moraka, Sello Mogodiri, Themba Gwabeni and Oupa Mphomane with papers calling on the group to end its smear campaign against him. 

“The papers also demanded that the group stops its attacks on Mahumapelo’s reputation and good name, among others. Mahumapelo’s lawyers demanded that the group stops its actions and provide a written apology or face litigation,” Setswambung said.

He said Mahumapelo initiated legal proceedings against the group following its endorsement of two songs which purported the Premier to be corrupt. 

“This was followed by a sustained campaign on various media platforms where the same allegations were repeated, including a media briefing on 14 February 2017 in Mahikeng.

“The Premier would like to set the record straight and debunk the myth that claims that the defamation case against the NWBF has been withdrawn,” Setswambung said.


“The fact of the matter is that the case has been removed from the urgent roll and the respondents, who agreed to the removal were consulted. The matter will still sit, albeit not on an urgent basis,” he said.

 

Setswambung said the group has, in its papers, stated that they do not intend to defameahumapelo or commit any violence or influence any party to do such.  

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Bloemhof learner dies after ‘food poisoning’


BY BAKANG MOKOTO
MEC for  Education and Sport Development department, Sello Lehari said they are saddened by the untimely death of Tshegofatso Witkooi (15) at Thuto Lore Secondary School in Bloemhof on Monday.

Witkooi passed away upon arrival at Boitumelong clinic where she was rushed to after constant vomiting after school lunch break.   

Lehari said the cause of death is not yet known and the department is waiting for autopsy results from the forensic pathology.

“We want convey our message of condolences to the family. We have also arranged counselling for Tshegofatso’s family, learners and teachers at the school. 

“The department is also aware of the unfounded allegations by the Progressive Student Movement (PSM) that the learner died as a result of food poison at the school,” he said.
Lehari wishes to inform the public that the cause of death is not yet known to the Witkooi family or the department and wishes the PSM or any member of the public to give the family the descent grieving period it deserves. 

“A memorial service for Witkooi will be held next week at a date that will soon be communicated while the funeral will be on Saturday, 25 March 2017,”Lehari said.
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Portfolio Committee concern over ‘state of affairs’ at schools


North West Legislature Portfolio Committee on Education Lambasts Department for Challenges Found at Schools
North West Provincial Legislature’s Portfolio Committee on Education, Sports, Arts, Culture and Traditional Affairs met with the Department of Education to address challenges the Committee had discovered while conducting oversight visits to over 200 schools around the province, including special schools.

The Committee Chairperson, Boitumelo Moiloa said they had discovered, amongst others, challenges of Infrastructure; schools whose roofs were blown-off; Storm damaged school buildings; lack of security at schools: vacant posts and challenges in filling them; employment of Foreign Educators, issues of temporary educators; and National Schools Nutrition Programme.


MEC for the Department of Education and Sports Development, MEC Sello Lehari and the Head of Department (HOD) Dr. Itumeleng Molale including senior management of the department attended the meeting.

Infrastructure Director, Lebogang Tire made a presentation to the Committee on progress made in attending to schools that have been identified in previous reports on school visits. 


He also reported on Special Schools, schools affected by the storms and those vandalized or torched during service delivery protests. 


Although Moiloa commended the department on progress made in filling of vacant principal posts and progress made in paying outstanding salaries of temporary educators, she stated that she was not happy with the department’s delay in responding and dealing with emergencies at schools. 


She also expressed her unhappiness with dire conditions the Committee found at the schools. 


“Ablution facilities in most of the schools I visited are in the worst conditions. In Batlhalerwa and Moshosho Primary School the pit toilets are full. In Loselong Primary, the Department of Labour has written a letter that the school must be closed because of the inhumane condition of the ablution facilities. 


“There is a school in Bojanala where 3 classrooms were built by the School Governing Body (SGB) without an inspector or engineer, approving the construction. What if that building falls on the learners?” she said.


Moiloa said Area Managers were supposed to be on the ground checking all these things.


The Committee also raised sharply the case of Onkgopotse Tiro Comprehensive School principal, Teach Kgonothi who took the Department to court after admitting and being found guilty of fraud and corruption.


Moiloa said she feels that the department is disregarding and disrespecting the Legislature. 


“It saddens me that this Committee tabled this issue in the Legislature House and a Resolution was taken that the settlement agreement between the department and Mr Kgonothi must be implemented. 


“The Settlement was not even expelling him after having admitted that he committed fraud and corruption, but it was offering him a post in office, instead he took the department to court,” Moiloa said.


Responding to the issues raised by the Committee, Dr Molale, indicated that the delay in addressing the challenges at schools is caused by budget constraints. 


“Our budget gets over stretched due to amongst others, increased storm damages and schools that are torched by communities during service delivery protests. These are not budgeted for but learners have to go to school and therefore the department has no choice but to provide interim resources. 


“The department appreciates the Oversight work done by the Committee as it enlightens us to the existing challenges that schools have on the ground,” Molale said.


The department is expected amongst others, to submit the judgement on Mr Kgonothi’s case, including Heads of argument by the department.


A detailed report on Mokasa primary school principal ,allocation of 60 mobile classrooms to prioritised schools; a security report for schools; and a refined National School Nutritional Programme menu that is suitable for the mental and physical health of learners. All reports are expected within 7 working days.

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MEC Motlhabane concerned about vandalism of learner transport buses 


By Thabo Sematle
Community Safety and Transport Management MEC, Dr Mpho Motlhabane condemns vandalism of contracted learner transport buses by the learners in the province. 

Motlhabane condemned the recent incident where learners of Blydeville in the Ditsobotla Municipality vandalized the scholar transport bus.


“This bus transport learners was from their residence in Blydeville to Boikhutso Village. The arrangement was made since there is no high school in Blydeville and many of these learners had to walk long distances to the nearest school. 


“What saddens the department is that this operation has not been very long in the area, it’s only been a month in operation but already been vandalised,” Motlhabane said.


He further said the operation came recently as an intervention after the community demanded the service which they have since acceded to. 


“Through the involvement of the Ditsobotla Local Municipality and the Department of Education and Sport Development, we then made means to introduce an operator here.


“Again in recent weeks, learners from Welverdien in the same area of Ditsobotla also protested and demanded learner transport operation after the operator who was contracted by the department withdrew his services in the area following continuous vandalism of his bus,” he said.


Motlhabane added that the service provider wilfully terminated his contract with them due to continuous vandalism of his bus. He further said the department had to start the procurement processes of appointing another service provider.


“It was notably disturbing that the same learners who led the previous service provider to terminate his contract, have now ran to the media and claimed not to be attending school because they don’t have transport, whereas they are the ones that drove the service provider away,” Motlhabane.

The MEC said if learners and communities continue with this kind of behaviour, the department will end up struggling to get learner transport service providers in certain areas of the province. “No one will allow his property to be damaged especially deliberately. We humbly request our learners to behave and stop these strange acts of vandalism,” he said.


Motlhabane said the department continue to be committed to provide learner transport service to learners traveling more than 7km to schools across the province.

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Chika’s murder: ANC to hold media briefing over suspects’ acquisition


BY REGINALD KANYANE
ANC in Bokone Bophirima’s Dr Kenneth Kaunda region will hold a Press Briefing on Wednesday following the acquittal of the accused in the murder of the late David Aubuti Chika.

Regional spokesperson, Ntombi Koloti said Chika was killed in 2012 ahead of the 53rd ANC National Conference in Mangaung.

“The Briefing will be held at Matlosana PCO, 216 Vanilla Building, OR Tambo Street, in Klerksdorp,” Koloti said.

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Our Constitution is the most powerful tool we have to effect land reform


BY MMUSI MAIMANE

The 1913 Land Act dispossessed millions of black South Africans, denying them the right to buy land in most of South Africa or even to farm white-owned land as tenants or sharecroppers. Further legislation caused millions more to be forcibly removed from the land they lived on and owned during Apartheid. These inhumane, immoral laws had devastating socio-economic repercussions, causing and continuing to cause tremendous pain and loss of dignity, and entrenching the deep racial inequality, poverty and resentment that still plagues our society today.

Our Constitution was designed to achieve justice and redress, and to prevent arbitrary, destructive deprivation ever happening again. However, the ANC government’s land reform efforts since 1994 have been an unmitigated failure. The failure rate, depending on the measurement of success, has been calculated as between 73% and 90%.

Last Tuesday, the EFF led a debate in Parliament calling for an amendment of Section 25 of the Constitution to allow expropriation of land without compensation. The motion was rejected by MPs of most other parties, including the ANC. Three days later on Friday, President Zuma echoed EFF sentiments in an address to Traditional Leaders calling on “black parties” to unite to enable expropriation without compensation. Fortunately, Zuma does not have the backing of his party or government, though the ANC commonly blames the Constitution for land reform failure.

Land reform is a social, moral and constitutional imperative. It can and should be made to work. There is nothing in the Constitution that limits the government from implementing land reform rapidly and successfully. In fact, our Constitution is the most powerful tool we have for achieving justice and redress in land reform. Changing it will not fix our land reform problems. Instead, it will put South Africans at risk of experiencing the same deprivation and disaster now being suffered in Zimbabwe.

The ANC and the EFF like to scapegoat the Constitution for failed land reform when in fact it is due to failed policy and corruption. It is disingenuous and lazy to blame the Constitution. One major policy downfall is that government has prioritised allocating land over helping beneficiaries to farm it productively, resulting in unproductive land, which helps neither the recipients, nor South Africa at large. The transfer of skills and support into beneficiary communities is absolutely critical to a successful land reform process.

Another is the unintended consequences of state ownership with long-term leases for beneficiaries. Without title to the land, beneficiaries are unable to access the credit they need to farm productively. In many cases leases are not given at all or, worse still, are given to “strategic partners” rather than the beneficiaries themselves, creating avenues for elite enrichment and corruption. With neither title nor lease, there is little to distinguish “beneficiaries” from squatters on state-owned land.

Corruption is the biggest problem of all. Land reform deals often involve inflated prices that enrich the elite. Last month, the Sunday Times reported on a Limpopo farm that Agriculture Minister Gugile Nkwinti lined up for two ANC cronies. The deal cost R130 million of public money, while 31 farm workers went unpaid and a productive farm fell into disrepair. The Mala Mala land claim deal cost taxpayers R1 billion and yet the “beneficiary” community has not seen any benefits and remains in deep poverty.

Government puts much blame on the “willing seller willing buyer” approach. But if government were serious about acquiring land for reform, they could go onto the open market and buy farms for a bargain, without having to go through the arduous land claims process. Currently, arable land in SA is very cheap because of the drought. There is an unprecedented number of commercial farms on the market, especially smaller farms. The fact is that the ANC government lacks the will, competence and integrity to effect successful land reform. It has failed despite the Constitution, not because of it.

Policy uncertainty and the ANC’s radical economic transformation rhetoric is already deterring long-term investment in agriculture. A move to expropriation without compensation will open the way for the kind of uncontrolled, arbitrary land seizures that happened in Zimbabwe in 2000, which has reduced the country from an exporter of grain, to a recipient of food aid for over four million people.

Where the DA governs, we make land reform a priority and it happens faster than anywhere else in South Africa. This is why the DA-led Western Cape has delivered in total over 75 000 title deeds since 2009, more than any other province. This number includes the transfer of title deeds to housing beneficiaries in urban areas – the DA believes that urban land reform is a very important empowerment tool. In national government, we would enact legislation to secure the property rights of those who live on state land, state-owned land reform projects and former homelands. We want poor people to own their own property and not have their property controlled by Traditional Councils or by the state.

And we would buy well-priced arable land on the open market and allocate it transparently. We would target young, black aspirant or emerging farmers and provide both title deeds and appropriate support to enable productive farming, ensuring sustainable funding models. As we have done in the Western Cape, we would provide an on-going package of financial support, technical and managerial assistance as well as invest in supportive infrastructure.

Also as in the Western Cape, we would support farm ownership equity schemes whereby workers share in the ownership of existing, successful commercial farms enabling a progressive transfer of ownership and skills and providing access to markets – an approach which has been found to be far more successful than a wholesale transfer of land to people who may be ill-equipped to farm it successfully.

The DA’s combination of well-considered policy and effective, honest implementation will rapidly expand property ownership and wealth creation for black South Africans. And when they finally have title to their own land, they will be glad that the Constitution protects their right to own it.

Mmusi Maimane

DA Leader

(NB:Mmusi Maimane is DA Leader and he wrote this piece on his personal capacity. So, TDN does not condone nor against whatever raised by him. This remains Maimane’s personal point of view and this should not affect any TDN’s Associates in any forms. 


Deputy Minister Mañana visits Kuruman


BY KEDIBONE MOLAETSI

Deputy Minister of Higher Education and Training, Mduduzi Manana will launch the 2017 Apply Now/Khetha Career Guidance Campaign by visiting three schools in Ga-Segonyana Local Municipality in Kuruman on Friday.

The department spokesperson, Busiswa Gqamgeni said the “Apply Now/Khetha Career Guidance Campaign” is aimed at encouraging secondary school learners to apply on time for admission to post-school institutions.

“This will avert possible stampedes and long queues that take place at the beginning of each academic year. The Career Guidance component of the campaign seeks to inform learners about career choices available within the post-school sector.

“The roll-out of the campaign is targeted at far-flung and often neglected rural areas, villages and townships to ensure that learners in those areas make informed career choices,” Gqangeni said.

Manana will have a conversation with learners from Grade 09 to 12 and further promote the “100 Occupations in high demand” list released by the Minister in 2014.

Date: Friday, 17 March 2017

1.KP Toto Technical and Commercial Secondary School, Bathlaro (08:00 – 09:30)

2.Galaletsang Science High School, Mothibistad (10:30 – 11:45)

3. Phakane Secondary School, Kagung (12:15 – 13:30)

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Minister of Energy To Visit Vryburg


BY REGINALD KANYANE

THE Greening Technologies are part of the working for Energy Programme launched by the department in 2009, says Minister of Energy, Tina Joemat-Pettersson.

Joemat-Pettersson along with Naledi Local Municipality mayor, Neo Schalk will be handing over the Greening Technologies to Tygerkloof Combined School on Friday.

The department spokesperson, Thandiwe Maimane said Joemat-Pettersson is also expected to visit the smart grid intervention project in the Naledi Local Municipality.

“The objective of the Working for Energy Programme is to provide sustainable clean energy solutions to rural and low income urban communities with special emphasis on job creation, skills development and community enterprise development. The focus of the programme is on bioenergy derived from bio-waste, with more emphasis on agricultural waste.

“Minister will also use this opportunity to engage with the community of Vryburg on issues of service delivery with special focus on sustainable provision of energy for socio-economic development,” Maimane said. 

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Minister Zulu To Lead Public Session On Global SME Ministerial


LindiweZulu

BY KEDIBONE MOLAETSI

Minister of Small Business Development, Lindiwe Zulu and United State of America Small Business Administration, Mr Eugene Cornelius, will lead a media briefing which will serve as a public session of the Global SME Ministerial at Sandton Convention Centre on Tuesday.

Zulu said the Global SME Ministerial is one of the key highlights of the Global Entrepreneurship Congress that is currently underway.

“The briefing follows a closed Global SME Ministerial earlier in the day where Ministers responsible for small business development across the globe discussed policy experiences to promote entrepreneurship and to accelerate the pace of small businesses development and growth.

“Informed by research and input from policy advisors, Ministers shared national entrepreneurship strategies and reflected on emerging policy interventions and programme ideas which sought to promote job creation and economic growth,” she said.

The details of the media briefing are as follows:

DATE:          Tuesday, 14 March 2017

TIME:           16:00 to 17:15

VENUE:        Sandton Convention Centre – Bill Gallagher Room Level 2

Ministers from the following countries, among others, will be in attendance; Benin, Guatemala, Mali, Nigeria, Saudi Arabia, Thailand, Tunisia, USA and Zambia.

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