Obama warns tyrants in Africa


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Cape Town – US President Barack Obama warned on Sunday that Africa could only fulfil its rising potential with leaders who serve their people, not tyrants who enrich themselves.

 

In a strident call for democratic change and good governance, Obama used the political legacy of ailing Nelson Mandela and South Africa’s emergence from grim years of apartheid as proof that freedom will ultimately prevail.

 

“In too many countries, the actions of thugs and warlords and human traffickers hold back the promise of Africa,” Obama said at a speech at the University of Cape Town.

 

“America cannot put a stop to these tragedies alone, and you don’t expect us to. That is a job for Africans. But we can help you and we will help you,” he said, announcing major new US programmes to boost electricity and health care.

 

“History shows us that progress is only possible where governments exist to serve their people and not the other way around,” said Obama, in a line that drew loud and prolonged cheers from his audience of more than 1 000 people.

 

The speech was delivered from the same spot where American political icon Robert F Kennedy delivered his famous “ripple of hope” speech in 1966, which called on students to decry the “racial inequality of apartheid”.

 

Obama’s goal was to inspire a new generation of Africans with the belief that they could ignite political change and the potential of their continent.

 

He slammed leaders who “steal or kill or disenfranchise voters”, saying that the ultimate lesson of South Africa was that such brutal tactics will not work.

 

“So long as parts of Africa continue to be ravaged by war and mayhem, opportunity and democracy cannot take root,” said Obama.

 

“Across the continent, there are places where still, fear often prevails,” Obama said, warning of “senseless terrorism” from Mali to Mogadishu.

 

“From Congo to Sudan, conflicts fester,” Obama said, hitting out at those who argue that American calls for democracy and freedom are “intrusive” or “meddling”.

 

He also condemned the rule of Robert Mugabe in neighbouring Zimbabwe, where he said the “promise of liberation gave way to the corruption of power and the collapse of the economy”.

 

Like the rest of Obama’s trip to South Africa, the speech was rich in emotion when he mentioned his hero Mandela, who lies critically ill in a Pretoria hospital.

 

“You have shown us how a prisoner can become president,” Obama said. AFP

 

Diamond trader tells of home heist


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Kimberley – A Kimberley diamond trader and owner of Florio-Poone Diamonds CC, was on Thursday held at gunpoint in her Monument Height’s home by two men who robbed her of her family’s jewellery and diamonds worth more than R1 million.

The incident comes after a recent spate of attacks and robberies on local diamond traders, including the owner of Pikwane Diamonds, Trevor Pikwane, who was shot in the chest during an apparent armed robbery in April.
For more http://www.iol.co.za

Poo-throwing threat over tuck shops


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Kimberley – The Independent Community of Kimberley (ICOK) has called on residents to rally against illegal tuck-shop owners by littering and throwing faeces at the entrances of government buildings as well as the homes of councillors on July 2.

The ICOK on Thursday said it had requested the Public Protector to investigate fraudulent leases where bribes of goods, money and airtime was allegedly being given to a local attorney, law enforcement authorities, municipal and South African Security Agency (Sassa) officials in exchange for securing business premises for foreign nationals.
For more http://www.iol.co.za

Elderly woman shot dead


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Mqanduli, Eastern Cape – A 61-year-old woman has been murdered at Ntsingisi near Mqanduli in the Eastern Cape, police said on Friday.

Major Zamukulungisa Jozana said two men shot her in her house on Thursday evening. The motive for the attack was not immediately known. – Sapa

Woman mistakes glue for gloss


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Wellington – A New Zealand woman accidentally glued her lips together when she picked up a tube of super glue while reaching for her lipgloss in the dark, the Otago Daily Times newspaper reported on Friday.

Dunedin Police Senior Sergeant Steve Aitken said the emergency operator thought the woman might be gagged or suffering from a medical condition when she called for an ambulance shortly before midnight on Thursday.

“She could only grunt,” he said.

The 64-year-old woman was taken to Dunedin Hospital and is understood to have been released with her lips unstuck. – Sapa-dpa

Youth lose faith leaders will do right thing


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The youth of South Africa are resilient, resourceful and responsive – but it remains to be seen whether they can play an active role in the fight against corruption by using the ballot to hold their political leaders accountable for improving governance.
For more http://www.iol.co.za

‘Emotional’ Pistorius slips on blades


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Johannesburg – A bearded and much skinnier Oscar Pistorius was “overcome with emotion” as he pulled on his carbon fibre running blades for his first track training since the killing of girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp, his agent says.

With a short beard and a blue hooded Nike sports top, the lean-looking double-amputee Olympian did some light jogging at his first formal session in around five months on Thursday.

He then described his return to a regular track routine for the first time since he fatally shot Steenkamp at his home on 14 February as “bittersweet” to his agent, Peet van Zyl.

“It was a very emotional experience for him to put the blades back on, to walk back onto the track, get the smell of the track,” Van Zyl, who went to the track at the University of Pretoria with Pistorius, told AP on Friday.

“It was tough for him. He said to me it was like a bittersweet feeling and emotion for him to be back on the track.”

Pistorius’s return to training was seen in a brief video clip released by his family. In the footage, which is around two minutes long, the athlete is first sitting on a chair at his usual training track at the university pulling on his running blades.

He then does some light jogging on the sunbathed track and, finally, wipes his face with both hands as he walks off the track, hinting at the emotion Van Zyl described.

Pistorius was charged with premeditated murder for Steenkamp’s Valentine’s Day shooting death. He denies murder and says he shot his girlfriend accidentally, believing she was an intruder in his house.

Pistorius’s next court appearance is 19 August, when prosecutors may indict him and a date could be set for the start of his murder trial, possibly in September or October.

He faces a life sentence with a minimum of 25 years in prison if he is convicted by a judge of premeditated murder.

Investigation

Police said the investigation into Pistorius’s shooting of Steenkamp was “at an advanced stage”, but declined to give further details, saying they “cannot be drawn into discussing the merits of the case”.

Prosecutors have said police will conclude their investigations by August and continue to probe the circumstances of Pistorius’s pre-dawn killing of Steenkamp, whom he shot multiple times through a toilet cubicle door.

In the last few months, the 26-year-old Pistorius has lost weight – about 10 to 12kg – and spends much of his time doing household chores at the Pretoria home of his uncle as he awaits his murder trial, Van Zyl said.

Pistorius looked much leaner in the video footage than he was at the London Olympics and Paralympics last year.

Pistorius telephoned Van Zyl and his coach, Ampie Louw, about a week ago to say he was ready to train again.

“[He] said, ‘Guys I think I’m ready to resume training,” Van Zyl said.

Van Zyl and Pistorius’s family, who also released a statement along with the footage, said Pistorius’s return to regular training was to help his own mental process ahead of a likely lengthy murder trial, and he was still not planning on competing anytime in 2013.

“His focus at this time remains entirely on the court case,” the Pistorius family said. “His family and those close to him have encouraged him to spend a few hours a week on the track, to assist him in finding the necessary mental and emotional equilibrium to process his trauma and prepare for the trial.”

Thursday’s visit was the second time Pistorius has been seen on the university track since he killed Steenkamp.

Returning to the track

A March sighting spurred speculation he was back in training, which was denied by his family, who described him then as being in “an extremely traumatised state” and not willing to contemplate training at that time.

Then, Pistorius was photographed by a schoolgirl on a cellphone while he was walking on the track, but he made that visit without the knowledge of anyone else, his agent said, and waited for a group of athletes he took to the track to leave before he put on his blades and just walked around.

His new routine will involve around three to four sessions a week and be run by Louw, Pistorius’s long-time coach and the man who introduced him to athletics when Pistorius was a teenager and still at school.

Van Zyl said Pistorius had discovered he was desperately missing running and training.

“I think the emotions yesterday show how much he really did miss being back on the track and being able to run,” Van Zyl said.

“Obviously with the world championships, both Paralympic world championships and IAAF world championships getting closer, it’s even tougher for him not be running or training or competing.”

– AP

Obama hopes to strengthen trade links


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Johannesburg – President Barack Obama will make a special effort to lay the groundwork for more aid to Africa, and especially South Africa, during his short stay in Johannesburg and Cape Town.

He has arrived at a time when South Africans are preoccupied with the health of former president Nelson Mandela, who remains in critical condition in hospital.
While in Senegal, Obama said that Washington had a “moral imperative” to help the world’s poorest continent feed itself.
For more http://www.news24.com

Farmer fined R30K for animal cruelty


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A farmer from Groot Marico, in North West, has been fined R30 000 for neglecting to feed a herd of 600 cattle, the Beeld newspaper reported on Thursday.

Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) inspector Jaco Pieterse told Beeld that four of the emaciated animals later had to be euthanised.

Van Wyk was found guilty of animal cruelty by the Groot Marico Magistrate’s Court, and was ordered to pay the SPCA’s legal costs.

Half of Van Wyk’s sentence was suspended for five years.

Pieterse said the SPCA was notified of the case by the local police in 2010.

They sent inspectors to the property and found that the cattle had neither food nor water. – Sapa

ANC’s Kham suspended for misconduct


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Cape Town – The ANC in North West has suspended the party’s chief whip in the Tlokwe municipality for his role in the embarrassing incident in which an ANC mayor was replaced by DA councillor Anette Combrinck.

This occurred after the ruling party’s councillors refused to vote.
For more http://www.iol.co.za