Louca extradition order granted


april 10 george louka

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An order for the extradition of George Louca, accused of murdering South African strip club owner Lolly Jackson, has been granted by a court in Cyprus, the National Prosecuting Authority said on Friday.

Spokesman Mthunzi Mhaga said that South Africa’s right to extradite Louca had been confirmed by the court.

It was not yet known when Louca would be flown to South Africa to face charges of murder, theft, possession of suspected stolen property and fraud.

He was arrested by Cypriot police in March after evading arrest by the South African police.

Jackson, the owner of the Teazers franchise of strip clubs, was shot dead at a house in Edleen near the OR Tambo International Airport on May 3, 2010.

Louca, also known as Louca Smith, allegedly phoned Gauteng crime intelligence boss Joey Mabasa and confessed to killing Jackson shortly after the murder.

Louca previously told the Sunday Times that he did not believe he would be granted a fair trial. – Sapa


Conjoined twins flown in for Red Cross care


IOL news jun 8 CT CONJOINED TWINS-8343 (25977899)

 

The two infants look like they’re hugging each other. They are conjoined twins, sharing an umbilical cord, upper abdomen and chest.

Born at the Dr Malizo Mpehle district hospital in Tsolo, near Mthatha, on Wednesday, they arrived at Cape Town International Airport on Thursday.

The twin girls were taken to the Red Cross Children’s Hospital. Their names have not yet been released.

The war memorial hospital, the only children’s hospital in sub-Saharan Africa, has treated two sets of conjoined twins in the last three years.

In 1964, its staff performed SA’s first separation of conjoined twins, and 48 pairs have been successfully separated in the hospital since.

 

Western Cape Health Department spokeswoman Faiza Steyn said it was not clear when doctors would attempt surgery on the twins.

She said their case was not considered an emergency.

“These twins need to be fully examined and may not be operated on or separated for several months. They may even be sent home in the interim to grow and develop more, if that is deemed the safest course of action.

“These decisions cannot be made until they have undergone a full investigation to identify the areas of conjunction and the anatomy and normal functioning of heart, lungs, intestine, liver and urinary tracts.”

Eastern Cape Health Department spokesman Sizwe Kupelo said the girls were moved after being born to a bigger hospital in Mthatha to be examined by doctors.

He said doctors at the Nelson Mandela Academic Hospital had assessed them to check whether they shared vital organs.

“The girls have a combined weight of four kilograms. They share an umbilical cord. They have a joined upper abdomen and chest.”

This is the fifth set of conjoined twins born in the area in two years, Kupelo said.

SA Red Cross Air Mercy Service spokeswoman Vanessa Horn said the twins had been flown to Cape Town in the Metro/AMS fixed-wing aircraft.

She said they were then transported by the Metro ambulance service to the Red Cross War Memorial Children’s Hospital. – Cape Times

 


Sharapova wary of Errani threat


It will be power and star-appeal against guile and honest endeavour on Saturday when Maria Sharapova takes on Sara Errani for the French Open title in Paris.

Second-seeded Russian Sharapova won through to the Championship match with a 6-3, 6-3 win over fourth seed Petra Kvitova of the Czech Republic, while 21st seed Errani of Italy ousted Australian sixth seed Samantha Stosur 7-5, 1-6, 6-3.

The stakes could hardly be higher for Sharapova, who is already assured of regaining the world No 1 spot she last held in 2008 before a shoulder injury nearly wrecked her career.

The 2004 Wimbledon, 2006 US Open and 2008 Australian Open champion, will become just the 10th woman to complete a career Grand Slam if she takes Saturday’s final, her first at Roland Garros.

Errani, who was not rated among the favourites for the title coming into Paris despite winning three claycourt build-up tournaments, will be playing in her first Grand Slam final.

A win would make the 21st seed just the second Italian woman to win the French Open title after Francesca Schiavone two years ago.

Sharapova will start as a strong favourite and if she can reproduce the kind of form she showed against Wimbledon champion Kvitova, Errani could struggle to counter her power.

Sharapova at an imposing 1.88m will tower over her opponent who is 24cm smaller.

The Russian is the biggest-earner in women’s sport and a global superstar. Errani, prior to this Roland Garros, was a relative unknown, who seemed destined to a life in the middle ranks of the WTA tour.

But both have in common that in the last few weeks they have been the dominant figures in the claycourt season setting their paths for the showdown that they will face at Roland Garros on Saturday.

Sharapova won two of the biggest buildup tournaments to Paris, at Stuttgart and Rome. Errani won three lesser titles in Acapulco, Barcelona and Budapest as she suddenly, at 25, emerged as a world class player, at least on clay, her favourite surface.

The Russian, who is 10 days older than Errani, scoffs at suggestions that she is odds-on to win the final.

“I think she has won the most clay court matches this year. She’s been so great on this surface. It’s her favourite surface to play on,” she said.

“The way she’s been competing in the last two weeks, I mean, I’ve seen a lot of her matches. The way she competes and moves and gets herself back in position, makes you hit a lot of balls.

“She’s certainly a very dangerous player”

There is little to go by in the archives as the two have never met on the court.

Errani, who recently switched to a longer handle on her racquet in a bid to put more sting into her shots, will take inspiration from Schiavone who uspet the odds to beat the more powerfully-built Stosur for the French title in 2010.

But she agrees that, at the end of the day, what counts is that she needs to continue to believe in herself and play her own game on Saturday.

“I didn’t expect to be here (in the final). I don’t feel like top 10 but now I will be, so it’s a strange sensation,” she said.

“Maybe my problem always was that I couldn’t believe too much to win with the strong players.

“But now I beat three in a row I’m in the final in a Grand Slam. So I have to maybe try to think a bit different.”

Zambia For Nelson Mandela Challenge


It is official, Bafana Bafana will face Zambia in the 2012 edition of the Nelson Mandela Challenge on November 14.

The African Cup of Nations champions have come to an agreement with the South African Football Association (SAFA) to honour the great African Statesman, Nelson Mandela, by playing in this year’s challenge.

 

A Soccer-Laduma source  in Zambia told the Siya crew that the two Southern African countries have already agreed to the game an have signed the agreement.

 

“I know Kalusha Bwalya was in South Africa to finalise the whole deal and sign the agreement on the game. Zambia has always been camping in South Africa in their recent games including the camp before the Afcon 2012 and this game is also as part of a thank you to South Africa,” explained the source.

 

Called for comment on the issue SAFA CEO, Robin Petersen, confirmed to the crew that the game on November 14 will be played against Zambia.

 

“Yes I can confirm that and you can clearly put it that the Zambia FA and SAFA have agreed on the game and they will be playing in the Mandela Challenge against Bafana Bafana. What remains now is the official launch where the Nelson Mandela Children’s Fund will be present, but yes, I can confirm that the 2012 Nelson Mandela Challenge will be between South Africa and Zambia,” Petersen concluded.

 soccerladuma.co.za

Magistrates want salary increase


Court house

JOHANNESBURG – The Magistrate’s Commission is expected to meet with the Independent Remuneration Commission on Friday to discuss possible ways to increase the salaries of magistrates.

Earlier this week Eyewitness News revealed some magistrates were considering a ‘go-slow’, as some prosecutors seem to be earning better salaries.

 

While no one will speak officially on this issue, it was understood that Friday’s meeting will revolve around possible increases in magistrates’ salaries.

 

The meeting is expected to see the Magistrate’s Commission explaining to Independent Remuneration Commission head Judge Willie Seriti, how new magistrates are earning around R650,000 a year, while experienced prosecutors are earning R850,000.

 

The Commission is also likely to explain that this means some prosecutors refused to be appointed as magistrates.

(Edited by Clare Matthes)

Top 5 things you’ll never hear celebs say


IOL travolta jun 8

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An IOL Lifestyle story about the things that dogs would never say caused IOL staff to start musing on the things that celebrities would never say. Here’s what we came up with…

 

1.

Jeremy Clarkson: The icebergs are melting so you all need to slow down and buy more efficient cars.

2. John Travolta: I’m here and I’m queer!

3. Kim Kardashian: Maybe I should put on more clothes and less make-up.

4. Steve Hofmeyr: I always supported the Stormers.

5. Khanyi Mbau: I’m marrying you for love, darling.

 

Floods cause chaos in Cape


cape floods1

By Sibongakonke Mama and Nontando Mposo

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Three people died in road accidents on Thursday resulting from heavy rains and poor visibility across the province, and the homes of thousands of city residents were flooded in the first heavy downpour of winter.

And there is more to come. The SA Weather Service has issued a warning for very cold, wet and windy conditions, with a 60 percent chance of showers, until Saturday morning.

Wind speed will remain at 30km/h with a minimum temperature of 11°C until a drop to 10°C on Sunday. Heavy rainfalls are expected to drench the Cape Metropole, Cape Winelands and Overberg districts today.

The weather service has warned of a gale-force north-westerly wind reaching 40 to 45 knots at times, and of rough seas with swells of up to 6m off Cape Point. Clear skies will arrive by Sunday.

On Thursday two men were declared dead on the scene after two heavy-duty trucks collided on the R45, near Voelvlei dam outside Wellington, said EMS spokeswoman Keri Davids.

The accident happened at about 2pm and brought traffic to a standstill while both men had to be freed from their vehicles using the Jaws of Life.

On Du Toit’s Kloof Pass, outside the Huguenot Tunnel, two more heavy-duty trucks were involved in a head-on collision. One driver was declared dead on the scene and the other was taken to hospital in a serious condition.

Cape Town’s Disaster Risk Management Centre reported flooding across informal settlements on the Cape Flats on Thursday.

Charlotte Powell, spokeswoman for the centre, said it had received reports of flooding from Philippi, Strandfontein, Khayelitsha and Delft.

“We don’t have exact numbers of how many homes have been affected, (but) we can expect numerous dwellings to be affected by the floods,” she said.

“We also received reports that the Vygieskraal River’s banks had burst. However, when we did our investigation we found that the river was just full.”

On the other side of town, the River Club in Observatory was forced to close when its parking area was flooded as the adjacent Liesbeek River’s levels rose.

People were turned away at the club’s gates and those who insisted on going in were warned by the security guard that they were doing so at their own risk.

The club’s manager confirmed that the club was closed because of a flooded parking area but refused to comment.

Powell said Voorspoed High School in Hanover Park had also been affected by the storms on Thursday.

“We have means in place to deal with the floods. People are still coping. It’s not yet necessary for us to activate our emergency shelters or evacuate people from informal settlements,” said Powell.

However, a Cape Argus team witnessed some residents in Brown’s Farm, Philippi, living in pools of water after the rain, and clearly in need of temporary relocation and dry clothing and provisions.

Vumeka Mguye, of Block 6, had to wear gumboots to walk around her house.

“I woke up at 7am and there was already water inside my house. I had to get my daughter ready for school in that dam.

“I’ve asked one of the few neighbours whose houses aren’t flooded to babysit (my children) because they can’t stay here. We don’t even know where we’ll sleep, my place is filled with water,” said Mguye.

Mguye said gumboots and clearing water out of her home were the order of every day during winter.

“We’ve been living in this water since 2004. The water comes in through the front door and the back of the house. Our cupboards are wet, are clothes are soaked. I’m always in and out of the clinic during this time because of my flooded home,” said Mguye.

Nosakhele Mqhakayi, 35, of Section 2 in Philippi, said winter made it difficult for her to raise her children.

“It’s not good to have small children in a flooded house. Five of them sleep with me in one room. Water leaks into that room from the floor, through the roof and the walls. We constantly have to scoop water from the floor with a bucket,” said Mqhakayi.

By 1pm Mqhakayi and her children had already scooped 78 litres of water from their bedroom floor.

“I’ve had to, somehow, cover the walls up with whatever material I can find. I have a disabled child who has to sleep in that room with me,” said Mqhakayi.

The Disaster Risk Management Centre said it was on high alert and well prepared should disaster strike.

“We’ve got plans in place and we’ve put our NGOs on high alert. We’ve made sure we’ve got enough food, blankets, clothing, etc, to provide relief,” said Powell.

She urged residents to report emergencies to the city’s 107 line.

“This line should be used if one’s life or property is endangered – dial 107 from a landline or 021 480 7700 from a cellphone. Flooding, blocked drains and service disruptions can be reported to the city’s Customer Contact Centre at 0860 103 089,” said Powell.

 

Ways to weather the storm

 

The City’s Disaster Risk Management Centre has urged Capetonians to exercise caution during bad weather by following these guidelines:

* Use sandbags to protect critical areas.

* Keep a careful eye on open flames and extinguish fires before going to bed.

* Private home owners living close to the beach need to be prepared for possible storm surge impacts to their property.

* Motorists should slow down and maintain safe following distances on roadways.

* Avoid areas such as the Sea Point Promenade, Kalk Bay, Atlantic Seaboard, False Bay coastline and Strand/Gordon’s Bay beachfront due to possible storm surges

Enquiries and/or complaints regarding burst and leaking water mains, faulty and leaking water meters or blocked and overflowing sewers can be reported by SMS to 31373.

Enquiries and/or complaints regarding electricity faults can be reported by SMS to 31220.

The City’s Transport Information Centre can be contacted at 0800 65 64 63 for information on delays on roadways and deviations.

Cape Argus


Cele: I hope Zuma speaks soon


IOL pic may25 bheki cele

By Shanti Aboobaker

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An unfazed General Bheki Cele spent Thursday working out at the gym with the English rugby team.

The suspended national police commissioner had not been told he was to be fired, he said, and the first he had heard about it was in the media.

“I heard from you that I am fired,” he told Independent Newspapers, adding that he felt “very, very good” and said he had “no stress”.

“I don’t suffer from (Richard) Mdluli’s disease,” he joked, referring to reports of the suspended crime intelligence boss being ill.

Cele’s comments come after Independent Newspapers was told by three police sources he had been fired.

He said: “I hope the president (Jacob Zuma) speaks soon, so one can deal with facts rather than rumours.”

On Thursday, Cele lunched at his favourite fish restaurant in Durban’s upmarket Florida Road area and was shopping for groceries when Independent Newspapers reached him in the late afternoon.

Presidential spokesman Mac Maharaj again refused to comment on “rumours” and “speculation” over what action Zuma might take after considering Judge Jake Moloi’s report on the police lease deals scandal, involving Cele, sacked public works minister Gwen Mahlangu-Nkabinde and controversial businessman Roux Shabangu.

“The rumours remain rumours. The speculation remains speculation,” Maharaj said.

“I won’t say (the rumours) are not true. I will say when the president informs me.”

 

He said Zuma was “studying” Moloi’s report, but would not comment on what progress had been made.

Asked whether the president was considering calls for a more transparent process to appoint a new national police commissioner, with speculation rife that Zuma might replace Cele with Nathi Nhleko, director-general of the Department of Labour and another former colleague of Zuma’s from KwaZulu-Natal, Maharaj said people could “make all their calls”.

“If they want to rewrite the constitution, they can. You make these calls because you think you can do a better job (than the president),” Maharaj said.

Cele’s spokesman, Vuyo Mkhize, said the suspended police chief was ready to take the fight to the courts.

“We are not preparing. Right now we are prepared. The legal papers are prepared,” Mkhize said.

“Let me confirm we have every intention of pursuing this matter all the way to the courts, to ensure (Judge Moloi’s) report is declared legally unsound and invalid.”

He said legal papers would be filed “as soon as an official decision is made as to whether the general keeps his job” or not.

Mkhize said legal processes could be pursued even if Cele was not sacked.

“We want the report to be erased from the public record. This process would have to be initiated (by the president). It would be up to him.”

He said they had not heard from the presidency, but were in no rush to contact it either.

“We are happy to bide our time. Bear in mind that we have waited for nine months now, so what’s one more hour or one more day.”

He said Cele would be happy to serve in another position if asked.

“The general’s passion is about service delivery in general – not just policing.

“So if the ANC were to say to him he should redirect his passion to delivering exercise books to schools, you can bet your bottom dollar he will bring the same passion, enthusiasm and efficiency to that task,” Mkhize said.

Cope MP and spokesman on police Leonard Ramatlakane said the party was concerned by Zuma’s “silence in the midst of reports” Cele had been fired.

He said the allegations against Cele were so damning he should not continue in his position as national police commissioner.

“He should have resigned soon after the public protector released her findings,” Ramatlakane said.

“Cope believes the inevitable firing of Cele, whose office has been riddled with unpopular decisions, will help stabilise the destroyed police morale.”

Freedom Front Plus MP and spokesman on police Pieter Groenewald said Zuma should make his decision public.

“If the speculation is true that Cele has already been fired, the question arises why Zuma has not announced it. The lingering of Zuma is creating further uncertainty and undermining the morale in the police,” Groenewald said.

“Further allegations that Cele wants to return to politics in KwaZulu-Natal are also creating the impression that Zuma is waiting until Cele is politically accommodated, but in the meantime Cele is still receiving a salary.”

 

“The acting commissioner (Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi) cannot function properly if he is only there temporarily.”

The Star


DA closing in on ANC, warns Vavi


vavi march 7

By GAYE DAVIS

Cosatu general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi has called for a shift in attitudes and an ethical turnaround in the alliance, warning that a lack of quality leadership and sidelining the poor had opened the door for the DA to mount a serious challenge for power by 2019.

Vavi blamed leadership failures on a “dearth of political conscious(ness)” among “too many” union and political leaders who had become distanced from the people.

“Too many of our leaders stay in Sandton, in former whites-only suburb, and a lot of them have become visitors in the theatre of class struggle,” he told the almost 1 000 delegates at the National Union of Metalworkers’ congress in Durban/ eThekweni on Thursday.

Seduced by the comforts of capital, he said, many leaders had become distanced from those bearing the brunt of the jobs crisis and dysfunctional health and education systems.

Vavi put the ANC on notice that Cosatu would at its September congress discuss putting a single demand before the ruling party’s national elective congress in Mangaung in December: the full implementation of the Freedom Charter.

Cosatu had been calling for 18 years for changes that would lead to a non-racial, prosperous and democratic SA, but it was now the most unequal society in the world.

Numsa, Cosatu’s second-largest affiliate, has already vowed to put pressure on the ANC to fully implement the Freedom Charter by nationalising mines, banks and other key sectors of the economy.

This position is not shared by the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM), Cosatu’s largest affiliate.

A position on nationalisation will have to be thrashed out at Cosatu’s elective conference in September. Divisions within the federation and its affiliates were caused not by political or ideological differences but by a “battle for resources”. The ANC was also now “contested terrain”, Vavi said.

“We are at the point now where… if we don’t change (within Cosatu), this revolution is going,” Vavi said.

In Europe there were daily protests over rising levels of unemployment, but in SA, where the crisis was far worse – with almost one in four people without work – Cosatu and its affiliates were seen as being the crisis, Vavi said.

Where there were protests, such as “the 10 or so service delivery protests a day, the leadership of the alliance (is) not in the forefront”.

Within Cosatu, shop stewards committed to servicing the interests of workers without expectations of reward were “disappearing – fast”.

He called for “a new ethos” that would prevent the ANC from losing control to the DA as was the case in the City of Cape Town and the Western Cape.

Vavi said the DA was showing increased confidence. That it had been able to mount a march on Cosatu headquarters involving some 3 000 unemployed African youths “means they are saying they want to take us on at some point, perhaps in 2019. They say we will be so weak at that time…”

The ANC and its alliance partners were unable to “take back” the Western Cape, which it had lost through divisions and factional battles. It had held off the DA’s attempt to win Port Elizabeth (Nelson Mandela Bay metro) by the narrowest of margins. “Already the DA has five percent of people in the townships – something unheard of in the past.

“We fight for positions, our focus is on positions. We have to create a new ethos, a new principle in the organisation,” Vavi said.

Leaders accused of wrongdoing should rather step down than be forced to after “months of bringing the name of the (ANC) down”.

Vavi referred to, but did not name Humphrey Mmemezi, a Gauteng MEC still in his post despite claims he had abused his government credit card on luxuries.

He also referred to, but did not name, the Northern Cape ANC provincial chairman John Block, facing numerous fraud and corruption charges yet who was likely to be re-elected this weekend and who was supported by members of the provincial government at his court appearances.

“If we don’t change, so that a person like that can know he’s guaranteed of no support… knows that he must resign – if we can’t do that, we will continue to face own goals.

“Unless we change that, we are gone because our battles are about hands off and not about unemployment, poverty and inequality.”

Too many of our leaders “did not spend hours waiting for a Panado at a public hospital because they belonged to medical aid schemes”.

“It’s a distant issue for them, they are not affected immediately,” Vavi said, to loud applause.

With their children in private schools, too many leaders were unaware of the “pain of dysfunctional schools” and an education system that each year marginalises thousands more young people entering the labour market without hope of attaining a skill.

“And what do we do? We come to conferences and make (nice) speeches, yet the situation of the working class does not change.

“Year in, year out, people remain trapped in their poverty… yet we clap hands, we sing the praises of our leaders,” Vavi said.

“So we go to this (Cosatu) congress to say one central thing: there has to be a mindset change among the leadership and activists of the federation and in the leadership of the ANC and the SACP. We have to change, for the sake of our revolution and for the sake of our people.”

Political Bureau

SAFA identifies five prospective candidates for Bafana Bafana head coaching job


BY Obakeng Maje

The South African Football Association’s (SAFA) Technical Committee, under the leadership of its Chairperson, Mr Fanyana Sibanyoni, convened on Thursday, 07 June 2012 to take forward the process for the appointment of a new Senior Men’s National Team’s Head Coach.

The Committee developed a set of criterion for the appointment of the Coach, key of which was that SAFA would only consider a local Coach for the position. This eliminated a large number of the potential applicants.

The Committee developed 12 criteria that they believe are critical for the Coach, and then identified five coaches that they decided were best suited to those criteria, based on their knowledge of local coaches.

The five coaches were contacted on Thursday, 07 June 2012, as well as their clubs, to request if they were prepared to come and do a presentation to the selection panel that will interview them.
The five coaches that were identified, in no particular order, are:

  •  Steve Komphela
  •  Gordon Igesund
  •  Gavin Hunt
  •  Ephraim ‘Shakes’ Mashaba and
  •  Neil Tovey

All of the coaches have agreed to be interviewed, and will be provided with the agreed set of criteria and given a maximum of two hours for presentation and the interview. This process will start next week Wednesday, 13 June 2012, and conclude the following Monday, 18 June 2012.

The final recommended candidate will be presented to the NEC on 30 June 2012 or earlier.

The selection panel will consist, as a core, of members of the Technical Committee together with the SAFA Technical Director and CEO, and the Chairperson of the International Board/Commercial Committee.

“We are also going to approach Jomo Sono and Kaizer Motaung to serve on the panel. Additional members might also be appointed in broader consultation,” said SAFA CEO, Dr Robin Petersen.