Sjambok attack ruins runner’s Comrades


IOL news june 5  ND sjambok again (25915933)

By BARBARA COLE

An up-and-coming running star who had set his sights on finishing in the top 10 in the Comrades Marathon, ended up being beaten on the roadside by a mysterious sjambok-wielding “madman”.

Onlookers were outraged at the unprovoked, painful attack on Mthandazo Qhina, 34, near the on-ramp to the N3 in Sherwood, just a few kilometres from the finish line in Durban.

They watched astounded as an unknown “demented” man wandered unchecked into the middle of the road, swearing and mumbling to himself, before whacking the runner on his backside with a sjambok. Qhina was felled by the attack, and the scruffily-dressed man disappeared into nearby bushes.

Although he passed Cowies Hill in 10th position, some race experts felt that the attack in the final stages was not responsible for keeping Qhina out of the coveted top 10 gold medals. Witnesses to the attack disagreed and Qhina’s mentor and friend, Henning Ludeke, said from Cape Town on Tuesday that the assault could well have cost him a spot in the top 30 positions.

“It did have a negative effect for sure,” Ludeke said. “Mthansdazo was already cramping, which was slowing him down, but if he had not fallen, he could have taken half-an-hour to reach the finish line instead of an hour.”

Qhina, who hails from Qunu in the Eastern Cape – where former president Nelson Mandela has a home – and who now lives in Cape Town, had to settle for 68th place. Although he was competing in his first Comrades, he boasts an impressive record and had every reason to believe he would do well.

A member of the Nedbank Running Club in Cape Town, Qhina won the Peninsula Marathon in February, with one observer commenting that he “took off from the gun like a scalded cat” and then crossed the line more than seven minutes ahead of the runner-up.

Qhina also came sixth in this year’s prestigious 56km Old Mutual Two Oceans Marathon.

And right until the final stages of the Comrades he was doing well, being placed 22nd at Drummond, the half-way point, and 10th at Cowies Hill with 18km to go.

Then he began to suffer from cramping and slowed down at Sherwood, where unbeknown to him, the “demented” man was wandering in the road.

Suddenly, the man wielded his sjambok, downing the professional runner.

“There were about 30 or so burly men on the side of the road braaiing and no one stopped this man on the road,” said an angry witness Trudy Andrews, who alerted the Daily News to the incident.

The crowd began shouting at the attacker, Qhina said on Tuesday through his friend Ludeke.

“There were a lot of witnesses,” he said, adding that he received “quite a hard hit”.

Qhina told Nick Bester, the national manager of Nedbank running clubs, he had thought the man hit him because he was disappointed to see him walking.

Andrews was upset that Qhina’s race had been spoiled, saying that at that point, he was a front runner and lying about 14th or 15th.

“I was angry and absolutely horrified. I know how much preparation goes into getting ready for the race,” she said on Tuesday night. “This was a very fit man and I reckon he could have made it (back) into the top 10. He held his backside when he was attacked. He must have been in total shock.”

About 20 runners overtook him while people tried to see if he was all right, Andrews said. “He seemed devastated that after doing so well, people were overtaking him.”

No one knew who the madman was, but she understood that he was often spotted in the area. Her grandson, Shaun Ferns, took photographs of the collapsed runner and the Daily News tracked him down from a partial number on his vest.

Ludeke said

Qhina had not complained to anyone as he was a shy person. The incident had not de-motivated his friend at all and at this stage, Qhina planned to have another attempt next year.

Gary Boshoff, the general manager of the Comrades Marathon, said this was an isolated incident and despite security, there was no way of predicting that a madman would cause a disturbance.

“The reason the runner fell out of the race was that he was cramping, nothing else,” Boshoff said.

“He could not go any further at the same pace.” – Daily News


MISS EDA ROSE:IN FULL BLOWN!!!!


Carren Eda Lamperini aka Eda Rose is a 23 year-old chikita that’s out, about and determined to make her mark within theSouth African Entertainment Industry. This young lady is not only a Radio Personality (Trans Africa Radio) but an Actress, Shoe/Bag Designer and Singertoo.

In 2010, she joined YFM 99.2‘s 6-month Y-Academy Internship Programme on a venture to learn more about radio. After Graduating, she got hired as a Co-Host on the Breakfast Show (Flava In The Morning) 6-9am, Monday-Friday with Mo Flava.

This month saw her winning the Ikusasa On Air Radio Personality of the Year’ Award, thanks to the Ikukasa Youth Expo (first South African Youth Awards). Just two weeks ago,Eda modelled for David Tlale’s ‘Legit line Van Der Tlale’ in Vosloorus, which she remembers as being an absolute honour…But that’s not all! Eda is one of the two faces ofSouth Africa for the first International Hair Extravaganza Awards that are taking place inAugust this year.

Eda currently resides in Bryanston, backing that up with studies of Accounting andFinance Honours obtained from London, UK at the London Metropolitan University, which proves you can have both Beauty and Brains! She’s travelled quite a lot too, having been to countries such as the UK, Italy, Amsterdam, U.S.A, BostwanaNamibia and U.A.E.

With her love for R&B Music, one wouldn’t be surprised she ventured into Singing too. For a good time, Eda enjoys hanging out in the Greenside and Sandton areas. In 2011Edaentered Miss Earth, becoming a semi-finalist. She recalls how she learnt a lot and enjoyed the experience.

Eda plans to Build Her Brand further, with aspirations of acting in more movies, an album release, presenting her own show and simply making more moola. WATCH THIS SPACE!

Bridgette Makhela

 

Bafana drop one spot


Bafana Bafana have dropped one place in Fifa’s latest rankings, released today.  

South Africa were ranked 67th last month and KickOff.com heard a few days ago that they were supposed to move up two more places, but the 1-1 draw with Ethiopia last Sunday means they dropped instead.
 
Bafana have also dropped one place in Africa to 15th.
 
Meanwhile, Bafana’s next opponents Botswana have dropped a massive 10 places from 106 to 116 in world rankings, while dropping to 32nd spot on the continent.
 
World Cup 2010 winners Spain remain the top side in the world, followed by the South Americans Uruguay, who have replaced Germany in second spot.
 
Ivory Coast are still holding on to first spot in Africa.
 
World top 10
Spain, Uruguay, Germany, Netherlands, Brazil, England, Argentina, Croatia, Denmark and Portugal
 
Africa top 10
Ivory Coast, Ghana, Algeria, Libya, Mali, Zambia, Tunisia, Egypt, Gabon and Sierra Leone
 
 
Follow us on Twitter @Taung_DailyNews  

Tiyani wa ka Mabasa

‘Only language Sanral knows is money’


IOL mot pic jun6 N2 Wild Coast Toll Road 1

By IOL Motoring Staff

Wild Coast social worker John Clarke has urged Gauteng drivers to contribute to the Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance’s fund-raising campaign and send a signal to Government that litigation by attrition is not in anybody’s long-term interests.

Clarke has recently returned from two-weeks on the Pondoland Wild Coast where he consult with rural residents over their own legal battle with Sanral over the N2 Wild Coast Toll road, says his clients have taken considerable heart from Outa’s stunning success so far.

He said: “A rational analysis of the issues indicates that a big win for Outa could discourage the use of ‘litigation by attrition’ strategies in the future.”

Litigation by attrition refers to the simple expedient of making a court case so expensive for the opposing side that it cannot afford to keep going.

POINTS IN COMMON

Clarke added that there were at least five common profile points between Sanral’s e-tolling proposal and the N2 shortcut proposal:

Covert deals struck with Private sector commercial interests to use public assets for private commercial gain.

Well-connected politicians, former cabinet ministers and senior government officials appear as significant beneficiaries of the scheme, at the expense of cash-strapped road users.

Huge media campaigns to market the schemes rather than open engagement with the stakeholders to find better solutions.

Sidelining of senior Sanral executives who question the dominant line.

Recourse to the courts with a ‘litigation by attrition’ strategy when opposition surfaces.

“He refused to budge”

Clarke said that when he interviewed Sanral CEO Nazir Alli in July 2006 it was clear that he was only prepared to compromise if forced to do so by the courts.

“I met with him to try to find a negotiated solution to the impasse over the preferred route and tolling concession with respect to the proposed shortening of the N2 between Port Shepstone and Mthatha,” he explained. But he maintained he would ultimately be vindicated through the courts.

“As a social worker I hate having to raise funds to fight court battles but it became obvious that Alli was banking on a ‘litigation by attrition’ strategy.

“If money is the only language one’s opponent understands, then one has to find the money.”

THE RIGHT STUFF

Clarke said that in order to achieve justice through the court three things were necessary: the right case, the right client and the right advocates.

“Outa, as a broad-based civil society organisation representing the motoring public, is the right client, they have an extremely just case and their legal team have already shown they are very clever and very hard working.

“The only advantage that Sanral has over Outa is that Alli has the treasury at his disposal to fund his defence and thus to ‘litigate by attrition’.”

POSITIVE RAMIFICATIONS

After 10 years of futile efforts to negotiate with Sanral on the N2 Wild Coast Toll Road proposal the matter is now awaiting a court date from the North Gauteng High Court to be decided.

Clarke said: “The best we have been able to achieve is to persuade the minister of transport not to co-defend the application with Sanral and the other respondents.

“So if OUTA succeeds in matching the money that the government is forcing them to raise in order to have the absolute stupidity of the e-tolling scheme exposed in court, it is bound to have positive ramifications for the N2 case.

“Let’s hope it will convince Mr Alli to show some humility with respect to the N2 Wild Coast scheme, and listen to what Bishop Geoff Davies pleaded for him to do six years ago: consult with the people he claims to be serving.”

 

The gloves are off


Copy of NP mrs  rajbansi 2

By Viasen Soobramoney

The gloves are off as councillors in the Minority Front take on the party’s leaders.

On Monday, the party’s eThekwini caucus raised issues of financial irregularities, nepotism, and a lack of democracy at their weekly meeting.

However, the party leaders, including Shameem Thaukur-Rajbansi, failed to attend the meeting.

Ismail Cassimjee, the party’s eThekwini caucus chairperson, described as “disrespectful” their non-attendance.

He accused his seniors of having “cold feet”and not wanting to discuss issues relating to the party’s finances.

“We know of two cheques that were made out to religious organisations which subsequently ‘bounced’.

NP MOULANA CASSIMJEE1

Ismail Cassimjee

 

“We believe that we should be made aware of the financial status of the party. We have not seen a single financial statement. We do not know who our accounting officers are or how they were appointed,” said Cassimjee.

Some of the issues councillors want addressed include: –

* Financial statements for the party shortly before and after the death of Amichand Rajbansi.

* Who is the accounting officer of the party?

* How was the accounting officer appointed?

* And whether this appointment was in line with regulations set down by the Independent Electoral Commission, from which the party receives its funding.

Cassimjee also said that councillors were baffled by certain appointments within the Minority Front after the death of their former leader, Amichand Rajbansi, claiming that it “smacked of nepotism”.

These include: –

* Jaidev Maharaj, Thakur-Rajbansi’s brother-in-law, in the position of national researcher.

* Anesh Maharaj, also Thakur-Rajbansi’s brother-in-law, as the Minority Front’s legal adviser.

* Rajesh Singh, allegedly Thakur-Rajbansi’s cousin, in the position of KZN Researcher.

* Sunitha Maharaj, Thakur-Rajbansi’s sister, as chairperson of the National Executive Committee.

Cassimjee said that councillors were not even aware that the party had a National Executive Committee (NEC).

“To the best of my knowledge there is no NEC operating in the MF. There have not been any elective conferences so it is shocking to see documents in the public domain listing names of people that make up an NEC.

Cassimjee was referring to documents lodged in court in connection with an application by Roy Bhoola to keep his MF seat in the National Assembly.

Visvin Reddy, a former lieutenant in the MF, who was instrumental in setting up the party’s constitution, said the party had never held an elective conference nor did it have a NEC during his time with the party.

Another former MF councillor, Paris Singh, who spent almost 15 years with the party, also denied any knowledge of a NEC.

“I left the MF in March 2011. During my term with the MF there was no National Elective Conference or a NEC in place,” said Singh.

Cassimjee said he was part of a group that wanted the MF to be democratic.

“There is a clear indication of the autocratic behaviour of a leader within a so-called democratic party. At the end of the day, we owe our positions to our voters and we have to stand up for what is right by them,” he said.

The speaker of the eThekwini Municipality Logie Naidoo, said that his office received a letter from the chairman of the Minority Front’s eThekwini caucus, Ismail Cassimjee, stating that the caucus had taken a decision to remove Patrick Pillay from the party’s Exco seat.

Subsequent to that, he received a letter from Shameen Thakur-Rajbansi stating the caucus had no authority to make that decision and that it was not ratified by the party’s leadership.

“We realise that there is a problem within the Minority Front and we will not meddle in party matters.

“Until we receive a collective decision from the party with regards to this matter, we will not act.

“As it stands, Patrick Pillay remains in the party’s Exco seat in the eThekwini Municipality,” said Naidoo.

 

Shameem Thakur-Rajbansi responds:

1. Jaidev Maharaj has been the Minority Front’s Gauteng National Organiser since 1999 and our National Researcher. He is my former brother-in-law, but was appointed by Mr Rajbansi.

2. Anesh Maharaj has been the MF attorney since 1998 and was appointed by Mr Rajbansi. He is unrelated to me since he is divorced from my sister.

3. Sunitha Maharaj, was a councillor in eThekwini from 2000 to 2003 but resigned for personal reasons. She was the MF’s candidate for the 2011 Local Government Elections but was not appointed. She remains the chairperson of the Minority Front Executive Committee, which is an unpaid position, but was retained by Mr Rajbansi for her legal expertise because she is a lawyer. She is my sister.

4. Rajesh Singh was the MF’s Msunduzi Councillor from 2000 to 2006. He was selected by Mr Rajbansi to be the MF researcher since July 2011, but due to our leader’s subsequent illness, his appointment was finalised by me. He is unrelated to me, save to say we belong to the same religious institution.

5. The MFEC ( Minority Front Executive Committee) met frequently. However, after the demise of Mr Rajbansi and due to party adjustments we had not met so frequently.

6. The last National Conference was after the 2009 Elections.

7. The eThekwini caucus has not requested party financials as it is a well known fact that the financials which have been ratified by the accountant as of 31 May 2012 are now currently being audited by the auditor and audited financials will be ready as of 30 June 2012. These will be submitted to Parliament and will be incorporated into the annual report by at least August this year. These are public documents, which councillors, the media and interested people will have access to.

8. The two cheques that you refer to were returned due to a delay on the side of the two banks through which Parliamentary Funds are cleared and not due to a lack of funds as you have been misinformed.

9. Currently I am the Leader of the Minority Front. The other positions which I occupy are that of the National Chairperson, and National Treasurer as well as Head of the MF Women’s Association, but this was unavoidable due to the sudden death of our leader and the meeting that I have called for in July of this year will address the necessary changes that will have to be made.

10. The only family member that I currently have in an elected position is Mrs Shireen Bhoola, wife of Mr Bhoola, by way of family marriage. She has indicated to the caucus that she will not stand for elections in 2016, therefore in my opinion I will not be having any family in the MF.

It is quite clear that in the MF we do have full blown democracy but gross immaturity and inefficiency due to autocratic hypocrisy, fuelled by ruthless hidden agendas of a small clique. They neglect their elected duties by being regular party pimps to the press, while in our offices complaints pile up on a daily basis from their wards. In the final analysis the public can be the judge why councillors did not question the late Mr Rajbansi for the decisions he made. Now that he is not here to answer, a few grumpy males are looking at me as a soft target as a woman. I view this behaviour as cowardly and such individuals should never hold public office. – POST


‘Theft is driving up electricity costs’


eskom power cables

By LOUISE FLANAGAN

Joburg electricity bills are due to go up more than the standard rate because of theft and vandalism. And combating those huge losses of electricity is now City Power’s top priority.

“We need to start operating as an efficient business,” said City Power acting MD Sicelo Xulu.

“This is the strategy I am driving in the organisation.”

City Power loses nearly a fifth of the power it buys and that adds to the cost for those who pay, plus the utility now needs to spend money on equipment to stop the thefts.

In July electricity bills across the country will go up when municipalities charge 11.03 percent more, to cover the costs of paying the Eskom hike of 13.5 percent.

City Power has applied to the National Energy Regulator of SA (Nersa) for permission to increase tariffs by 11.93 percent. This will give the utility an overall revenue increase of 14 percent.

Nersa had previously indicated that this was a 14 percent tariff increase but Xulu said the increase requested was an average of 11.93 percent.

The application is still under consideration by Nersa.

Tariff increases range from 11 percent for poor customers to 15 percent for agriculture.

Xulu acknowledged that business and industry charges are high – they face 12-13 percent increases – and said the city wants to ease this burden in the long term. Cross-subsidisation of lifeline tariffs (for poorer customers) by business and industry is being reduced.

Xulu is asking for a slightly lower tariff than he needs, because he aims to save R229 million by improving efficiency over the next year.

He also hopes to halve the unpaid debt.

It’s Joburg’s fifth above-standard increase in tariffs in the past six increases.

The big expense is buying bulk electricity and Nersa estimates municipalities spend about 70 percent of their costs on this.

City Power buys about 93 percent of its power from Eskom and the rest from the privately owned Kelvin Power.

 

When the revised Eskom price was announced in March, the city estimated that bulk purchases of electricity would be about 67 percent of its costs.

But by the time City Power presented its application to Nersa last week, it had worked out the Kelvin costs and revised this to predict bulk purchases would take up 81 percent, said Xulu. This was calculated on planning for the utility to buy slightly more from Eskom and less from the more expensive Kelvin, which is hiking prices by 29 percent because of fluctuating coal costs which are passed on to City Power.

Assuming that City Power buys the same amount of power in 2012/13 as in 2011/12, the 13 707 gigawatts of power that cost R8.2 billion in 2011/12 will cost R9.4bn the next year, more than the City of Joburg has budgeted to spend.

As an independent power producer, Kelvin is not bound by Nersa’s pricing rules. Existing agreements mean Kelvin’s power is sold to City Power, not Eskom, but City Power may sell this on to Eskom.

Xulu said City Power bought Kelvin power even when it was not needed in Joburg, to pass on to Eskom to ease the strain on the national grid and avoid the load shedding of 2008.

He said City Power just covered costs in sales to Eskom.

“There’s no profit,” he said. “They (Eskom) are covering the cost because we’re putting it into the grid.”

Xulu wants to improve City Power’s finances so the repairs and maintenance and capital expenditure budgets can go up.

City Power’s 2012/13 budget doesn’t show much improvement, with repairs and maintenance still at 3 percent – 6 percent is ideal – and capital spending under 7 percent of the budget.

Xulu said it was a long-term plan; the priority is to get power losses under control.

City Power loses 19 percent of the electricity it buys, a cost of R1.217bn in 2010/11. Xulu wants to cut that to 12 percent by the end of June next year.

The losses are believed to be made up of 9 percent due to technical losses (losses from transmitting electricity over networks) and 10 percent due to problems of theft, vandalism, bypassing meters.

Xulu wants to know exactly how much the technical losses really are, so City Power is installing smart meters along the network to check this.

But the thieves and vandals are the main target.

“I want to squash that 10 percent down to a very minimal figure,” said Xulu.

Those who steal electricity or damage networks should expect to get caught.

Those who don’t pay their bills should expect cut offs.

Customers who repeatedly block access to their meters will be disconnected.

“We need to attack this thing,” said Xulu. “That’s where it starts.”

To help cut losses and boost efficiency, City Power is focusing on its 407 000 customers’ meters.

About 200 000 of these are for prepaid customers, usually the smaller users. These customers will start getting solar water heaters (most don’t have geysers but heat water on hotplates) and their meters will get steel tamper-proof boxes and remote access units to alert City Power to any tampering.

Xulu wants to finish that process in three years.

The bigger customers – residential and business – will get smart meters, which can be set to prepaid or post-paid charges, can help customers track and streamline their own spending, and will eventually be able to accommodate customers who generate their own power and sell this back to City Power.

The smart meters will be able to run time-of-use tariffs (cheaper power outside busy hours) for residential customers, which City Power hopes to start in another year.

“We just need to get the policies in place and the infrastructure,” said Xulu.

Tenders have been issued for much of the meter project.

City Power is setting up a back room – effectively a war room – to respond to the tampering alerts from the meters.

“We need to be at war over the theft of electricity,” said Xulu.

If you tamper with your meter, Xulu intends his team to be on your doorstep within hours.

Sorting out metering and theft will also reduce overall power use, in line with national needs, because once people have to pay for electricity, they often use less.

Xulu emphasises that it’s not just the poor who steal electricity.

He said officials struggled to gain access to 33 000 meters because properties were locked and they found such meters were often bypassed.

They’ve also found businesses which disconnected a fuse on one of their three-phase meters, effectively getting some of their power free.

The new meters are in the capital expenditure budget.

Eskom wants customers to keep power use to a minimum, the customers all want to keep their bills to the minimum, but City Power needs to put more money into capital expenditure. The only way to get that sum right is to cut the costs of power losses.

City Power has an ambitious plan to spend R26.8bn on capital programmes by 2028, most of it in the early years.

It’s already behind.

“There is a backlog,” said Xulu. “This is the challenge we face.”

He aims to build up City Power’s surplus this year so that this can go into capital spending next year.

There are other places that City Power wants to improve efficiency.

Unplanned maintenance must drop from the current 41 percent of all maintenance to less than 20 percent.

Efficiency is the key for Xulu, who emphasises the need to run a tight ship and streamline the system. “It’s like running a spaza shop but your till is not working,” he said.

 

City Power’s proposed tariff increases from July 1:

Lifeline: 11 percent increase

Domestic single- and three-phase: 13 percent

Prepaid: 13 percent

Agriculture: 15 percent

Traffic lights, streetlights and billboards: 14 percent

Business and industrial (prepaid, service charges and energy): Up to 13 percent

The Star


Family seeking answers after fatal bungle


Mosibudi Mangena

By KARABO SEANEGO

Related Stories

Mashaole Mangena, the 74-year-old brother of a former minister of science and technology, died after a seven-week to-ing and fro-ing to the Polokwane Hospital to get treatment for a blockage of the bile duct.

Now his family is seeking answers from health authorities as to why the seemingly preventable death occurred.

In an opinion piece written for The Star, Mosibudi Mangena lays bare the facts surrounding his brother’s death in an ambulance on the N1 heading towards George Mukhari Hospital in Ga-Rankuwa.

In it he describes the lengths he went to to get help, even trying to use his political connections to speak to the minister of health directly.

“As we leave the hospital, the minister of health returns my call, some 48 hours later. He had been snowed under. He is dismayed and saddened by the Mashaole story and frankly admits that it is not the only one,” Mangena writes.

 

Events leading to Mashaole’s death

* April 15 he develops jaundice and a doctor refers him to Polokwane Provincial Hospital.

* He undergoes ultrasound, urine and blood tests of various specifications, as well asX-rays.

* Early last month, doctors diagnose gall stones blocking the flow of bile.

* Doctor orders him to come back to hospital on June 4 –a date that is roughly four weeks away.

* Mashaole’s condition deteriorates.

* Private doctor expresses shock at the fact that Mashaole is not admitted to hospital.

* He prescribes medication to alleviate some of the symptoms, but says he needs urgent surgery.

* Private surgeon phones the provincial hospital to have what they call ERCP procedure done to remove the offending gall stones.

* The surgeon is told that the equipment to perform the procedure has been out of order since February. There is no such equipment in Limpopo.

* Procedure can be done in Pretoria but a referral letter is needed. It is Friday, May 25.

* On Monday morning May 28, an ambulance takes Mashaole to Polokwane Hospital.

* He is admitted at 10.30pm, by which time he can hardly move.

* On Wednesday, Mashaole is lying in a general ward, very weak. He should be in a surgical ward. Doctors agree that he requires urgent intervention.

Nothing is done by Thursday.

* Calls are made to the MEC for health in Limpopo and the minister of health.

* Friday morning, June 1. Several doctors huddle over Mashaole’s medical records at his bed. The hospital CEO indicates that the MEC has ordered that Mashaole be transferred to George Mukhari Hospital in Ga-Rankuwa.

* A few hours later, a paramedic takes the phone and explains that Mashaole has died on the N1.

The Star

‘Plus-minus 97 charges laid against the accused’


gavel_may 14

By Maryke Vermaak

A man facing as many as 33 charges of rape and 33 of attempted murder will appear in the Alberton Magistrate’s Court on Wednesday.

He is accused of raping 33 girls between the ages of 10 and 14. He also faces 33 counts of attempted murder.

Outside court, banners of the rights group Women and Men Against Child Abuse read: “Speed up justice for child victims” and “No bail for child abusers” were posted against walls.

Women and Men Against Child Abuse spokeswoman Tania Otto said a new magistrate, prosecutor and defence attorney had been assigned to the trial as the others were elsewhere engaged.

When the matter was initially placed on the court roll during the man’s last appearance in May, his DNA could be linked to 33 cases, prosecutor Joyce Xakaza told the court.

She said forensic evidence gathered since then connected him to dozens of other crimes.

Asked how many, she told the magistrate: “In a nutshell, in the high court there will be plus-minus 97 charges laid against the accused.”

At the moment, the accused had been linked by DNA to 40 other cases, but this number could rise.

“Other charges include attempted murder and other sexual offences,” Xakaza said.

The man cannot be named at this stage as he has not pleaded yet to the charges against him.

Xakaza said investigations would continue and the office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) asked for three months in order to draft the indictment.

“Give us enough time to investigate the matter… It’s a huge and big case that needs to be investigated properly,” she said.

“I must indicate that the matter is still under investigation, taking into consideration that we have more than 33 dockets to go through,” Xakaza said.

Earlier, the defence said it could not continue with the bail application unless it had details of the charges against the 40-year-old man.

“The defence can’t proceed with the bail application, and wishes to request a copy of the contents of the case docket or the indictment,” Legal Aid Board attorney Londiwe Shange told the court.

“The defence can’t be rushed into a bail application without knowing the complexity of the charges.”

The State objected, saying the indictment and contents of the docket could only be made available for the purposes of a plea or trial.

However, Saulse ruled that copies of the documents be made available to the defence.

“The applicant should be granted access to parts of the State’s documents… The court will order that the State has the right to deny access (only) to parts of the docket that will interfere with investigations or State witnesses,” said Saulse.

The man wore a red t-shirt and torn blue jeans at Wednesday’s appearance. He stood passively as court proceedings ran their course.

The man was arrested in Eden Park at the end of January after one of his alleged victims followed him home and alerted the police.

The girls, from Katlehong, Thokoza, and Vosloorus, on the East Rand, were apparently lured into the veld and raped between 2007

and 2011.

Xakaza confirmed that a bed was booked for the man at the Sterkfontein Psychiatric Hospital after the DPP asked that he be sent for observation. – Sapa

Post office strike ends


Post office workers protest outside the Communication Workers' Union offices in the Johannesburg CBD. Picture: Taurai Maduna/Eyewitness News

BY Jacob Moshokoa

JOHANNESBURG – The South African Post Office strike ended on Wednesday. 

Management from the service confirmed the end of the four-month long strike by casual employees who were demanding permanent employment.

The delivery of mail was severely affected in the Gauteng region.

Spokesperson for the mail service Janras Kotsi said negotiators accepted a proposed interim solution on Tuesday evening.

He said details of the negotiated solution could not be revealed until legal documents were signed.

Striking workers returned to work on Wednesday.

(Edited by Thato Motaung)

Mosimane to get R5m payout


The South African Football Association (Safa) will give former Bafana Bafana coach Pitso Mosimane a R5 million golden handshake, according to a report today.

Safa officially terminated Mosimane’s four-year contract worth a reported R1 million a month on Monday night.

Mosimane was left with two years on his contract worth a balance of about R24 million, but after a marathon meeting at Safa House to which he was not invited, the mother body’s management committee put the matter to rest and chief executive Robin Peterson was dispatched to the team’s camp in Rustenburg to inform Mosimane.

“He will not be paid the outstanding balance he would have received had he served the rest of his contract,” a source close to the developments revealed, The New Age website reported. 

“There is no obligation in terms of the contract signed with Safa to do so and Mosimane would be wasting his time if he even tried to argue that one.

“He will not get more than five months of salary.”

Interim Bafana Bafana coach Steve Komphela has asked for patience and support for the team as they resume their 2014 Fifa Soccer World Cup qualifying campaign.

Komphela, the Free State Stars mentor and former Bafana captain, will guide South Africa in their next two matches. 

–Sport24

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