Minister tackles children issues


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Social Development Minister Bathabile Dlamini says government and different stakeholders should play a key role in addressing the issue of child and women abuse.

Speaking on the SABC’s Morning Live, Dlamini said some of the issues that will be discussed at the launch of National Child Protection Week at the Durban International Convention Centre are abuse, rape and human trafficking.

The launch of the CPW will correspond with the opening of the Orphans, Vulnerable Children and Youth (OVCY) Conference on May 27, 2013. The theme for this year’s campaign is “Working Together to Protect Children”.-Edited by Sthembiso Sithole.
For more http://www.sabc.co.za

SA’s road accidents claim 18 lives


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At least 18 people have been killed and 30 others injured in five separate accidents across the country in the past 24 hours. In the latest accident, four people were killed and more than 25 injured when a bus transporting ZCC members overturned on the N1 in Mookgopong, Limpopo.

In the same province two people were killed and ten seriously injured when a minibus taxi overturned on the R71 in Mankweng outside Polokwane.

Still in Limpopo, five people were killed in an accident involving a truck and a car in Makhado.

In the Free State, four people were killed and three injured in a collision between two vehicles in Welkom and in the Northern Cape three people have been killed after the car they were travelling in rolled down an embankment outside Kuruman.

Limpopo Roads and Transport spokesperson Kagiso Mootane says, “The one that happened at Mookgopong, between Mookgopong and Modimolle, which was a bus from Modjadji, the one that was carrying a ZCC members from Gauteng province that are residents of Limpopo, where we lost four people and the other one is that one at Makhado we lost five people. And at Mankweng, around Ga-Thoka, a Toyota quantum was travelling at R71 from Tzaneen direction where a Toyota quantum lost control and overturned. We lost two people there on the scene.”
For http://www.sabc.co.za

Phiyega shows no remorse: Mpofu


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Lawyer for the wounded and arrested Lonmin miners in Marikana Dali Mpofu has accused National Police Commissioner Riah Phiyega of showing no regret for the killing of the miners last year.

Mpofu says a newspaper article reported that Phiyega said police were not sorry for what happened at the Lonmin Platinum Mine in Marikana in the North West, after 34 miners were killed.

Phiyega, who is testifying at the Commission of Inquiry sitting in Rustenburg, has refuted that. However, Mpofu says she did not refute the report which was published last year.

“And there seems to be this reluctance, without taking legal obligations and all that kind of things, simply to say ‘We are Sorry’.”

Phiyega says, “So why should I be sorry for the thing that I have said to you I did not do? And when it comes to lives, my statement, my attestation to this commission, I have expressed my issues, my sentiments on that matter, so I’m concerned when you are saying I have failed to do so, when I’ve done it in the ears and eyes of everybody here.”

Last week, she came out in defence of the officers who were on the ground during the shooting on August 16, 2012. However, Phiyega also reiterated that she was not a trained police officer and therefore would not answer certain questions.
For more http://www.sabc.co.za

Dept must pay R3.9m to former pupil


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Durban – The KwaZulu-Natal High Court has ordered the provincial education department to pay damages of R3.9m to a former pupil accidentally hit by a teacher, the Mercury reported on Monday.

According to the paper, the teacher hit the young boy in the eye with the tip of his belt while he was beating another pupil.

The incident happened 10 years ago when Simphiwe Shange was a Grade 9 pupil at Gcwalulwazi High School in Eshowe.

Shange was left partially blind in his right eye after deputy principal Moses Biyela unbuckled his belt and hit another pupil.

The Mercury reported that Judge Dhaya Pillay ruled that the MEC was liable for the incident and awarded damages of R3.9m plus costs.

The paper reported that the claim included the costs for loss of earnings, future eye operations, special school fees, and general damages.

– SAPA

Ace credits mates for MTN8 award


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Moroka Swallows midfielder Lerato Chabangu has dedicated his MTN8 Last Man Standing award to his team-mates.

Ace pocketed R80 000 after being named the MTN8 Player of the Tournament on Sunday night at the Premier Soccer League 2012/13 awards and a modest Chabangu feels the individual award was down to teamwork.

“This is a reward for all my hard work, but I must give credit to my team-mates and my family for encouraging me through the ups and downs,” Chabangu tells KickOff.com.

“So I dedicate this award to my teammates for all the encouraging words. They supported me throughout the season,” he says.

The award, however, comes on the back of being dropped from the Bafana Bafana squad to play the 2014 World Cup qualifiers next month against Central African Republic and Ethiopia.

Chabangu reckons the accolade will motivate him to bounce back into the national team fold.

“Firstly, I just want to wish the national team well for the upcoming matches and I think they can make us proud.

“I’m sad that I didn’t make the squad, but it is a wake-up call for me to work harder to return to the national team and this award is motivation for me in a sense that hard work pays off in the end and if I work hard, I will be back in the Bafana squad,” he concludes.
For more http://www.kickoff.com

Shabba: Itu deserves it all


Kaizer Chiefs midfielder Siphiwe Tshabalala says it has been an honour being captained by Itumeleng Khune, the 2012/13 PSL Footballer of the Season.

Khune was the big winner at the Premier Soccer League’s end-of-season awards evening held at Gold Reef City on Sunday night, walking away with the Footballer of the Season, Players’ Player of the Season, Goalkeeper of the Season and Nedbank Cup Player of the Tournament awards, earning himself a cool R575 000 in prize-money.

ALSO READ: Khune cleans up at PSL awards

Shabba tells KickOff.com no-one deserves it more than ‘SpiderKid’.

“I’m really happy for him. I think he deserves all his awards because he was key for us,” he says.

“As captain of the ship, he led by example. He is such an inspiration to the nation. I’m very grateful and honoured to have him as my captain.”

* Get the latest edition of KICK OFF Magazine, on sale from today, to find out more about the wonder season of Itumeleng Khune, who was also voted your KICK OFF Footballer of the Season.

For more http://www.kickoff.com

Wounded ranger stable in hospital


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Johannesburg – A ranger shot and wounded during an operation to apprehend suspected poachers in the Kruger National Park was in a stable condition in hospital on Monday, South African National Parks (SANParks) said.

“He is in a stable condition, but he is still in the ICU (Intensive Care Unit),” said spokesman William Mabasa.
For more http://www.iol.co.za

Man found with dead student’s cell


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Johannesburg – A 28-year-old man allegedly found in possession of a murdered Midrand student’s cellphone will appear in the Randburg Magistrate’s Court on Monday, Gauteng police said.

“He is appearing on a charge of possession of stolen goods,” said Lieutenant-Colonel Lungelo Dlamini.

He said the man was arrested on Thursday night. He was allegedly found in possession of a cellphone belonging to Philasande Ngum.

Ngum, 19, was found dead in the veld in President Park, Midrand, on Wednesday.

She was last seen alive at a Midrand shopping mall on May 3. Later, her mother received a call from a man demanding R1 500 ransom money, which she paid into her daughter’s account.

She was a student at the Midrand Graduate Institution.

Sapa

Feathers fly in chicken price war


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Johannesburg – The battle around raising tariffs on imported chicken has descended into a smear campaign, with opposing lobbies calling each other liars and producing completely contradictory facts to support their positions.

 

Chicken importers and producers both claim the other is dooming South Africa to job losses as high as 125 000. Both claim the other is steering South Africans towards dangerous food insecurity and stealing a staple protein from the mouths of the poor.

 

These rival doomsday scenarios are contained in submissions to the International Trade Administration Commission (Itac), which must decide on the tariffs, but increasingly also in public campaigns by the Association of Meat Importers and Exporters (Amie) and the SA Poultry Association (Sapa).

 

Sapa has asked Itac to raise tariffs on most kinds of chicken to the maximum 82% allowed under World Trade Organisation rules and a decision is expected soon after the commenting period ended early this month.

 

Itac will meet on June 11 and invite both lobby groups to make final presentations before making a recommendation to Rob Davies, the minister of trade and industry, says Rika Theart, Itac’s senior manager for tariff investigations.

 

“Approximately 20” submissions on the proposed tariffs were received before the May 10 cutoff date, she said in answer to emailed questions.

 

Among those who made submissions were the US Egg & Poultry Association, which has in the past blasted existing South African antidumping duties against their members as “illegal”.

 

Court action

 

Amie is making a last-ditch attempt to stave off the higher tariffs by launching a court case, putting out polemical advertisements and starting a petition campaign in butcheries.

 

The cornerstone of their campaign is the claim that the tariffs will make chicken up to 50% more expensive.

 

“I don’t know if it will influence Itac, but we want to get a message out to consumers,” says David Wolpert, the CEO of Amie.

 

Their campaign has collected about 10 000 signatures in less than two weeks, he says.

 

He has also launched urgent court proceedings against Sapa and Itac because Amie feels it was not given enough time or information to effectively counter the application for higher tariffs.

 

Sapa declared most of the figures in their application “confidential” and will now have to justify that classification in court.

 

The industry around meat importing also provides 15 000 jobs that could be threatened, Wolpert said in reaction to Sapa’s claims that up to 20?000 jobs in local chicken production will be lost “in the short term” if the industry is not protected.

 

Sapa’s CEO, Kevin Lovell, calls some of the Amie numbers “twaddle”, while Amie says the same about Sapa’s numbers.

 

Chicken prices

 

According to Lovell, the maximum tariffs Sapa requested will push up chicken prices by between 10% and 15% – a “small price to pay” to defend their industry from an allegedly imminent jobs blood bath.

 

The numbers are complicated by the fact that “chicken” refers to a number of different products and the proposed duties on them differ.

 

Sapa and Amie agree the most important local product is “bone-in pieces” – wings, thighs, drumsticks and breasts sold in bags or braai packs.

 

The requested tariffs range from between R2.20 and R11.11 per kilogram for different forms of chicken. Most chicken is already subject to tariffs of 27%, so the increase would be less than these new requested tariff levels.

 

Once imported chicken is made more expensive, local producers will “probably” raise their prices to more or less the same level, said Lovell.

 

According to chicken prices cited in the rival lobby groups’ submission to Itac, the extra tariff on bone-in pieces will likely be slightly less than R7 per kilogram.

 

Probe

 

According to Theart, Itac is conducting a thorough investigation of the sector.

 

“Itac follows a developmental approach to tariff setting, bounded by industrial policy objectives.

 

“The focus is on the outcomes: increased domestic production, investment, job retention and creation, as well as international competitiveness.”

 

Welport claims imported chicken is already more expensive and competes on quality rather than price.

 

“The industry does have problems, but they are looking for an easy way out,” he says.

 

Amie blames the local producers’ woes on a “poor business model”, which is “not only flawed but ethically questionable”. Its main point of attack is the controversial practice of “brining” (injecting chicken with salt water).

 

 – Dewald van Rensburg, City Press

 

Livestock theft suspect back in Court


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By Obakeng Maje

Taung-A suspect who was arrested for Livestock theft will appear before Taung Magistrate Court today.

Tshepo Mompati was arrested after he allegedly stole three cows at Longaneng village ans auctioned them at Hartswater.

He was arrested and his case was postponed.

He is expected to appear before magistrate for formal bail application today.

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