Pistorius dominates headlines, social media


Pretoria – Headlines, jokes and opinions about paralympian Oscar Pistorius dominated newspapers and social media on Thursday morning, ahead of judgment in his murder trial.

Newspaper headlines ranged from, “Jail Oscar” (The Citizen), to “Time’s Up for Oscar” in The Sowetan. Afrikaans daily Beeld went with “Vas of vry? (Jailed or free?), running two opposing opinions from legal experts on its front page.

The Star described the day as “Oscar’s moment of truth”, while The Times reported on “Judge Masipa’s Oscar puzzle”.

The Witness newspaper said it was “Oscar’s D-Day”, with its own “experts weighing the evidence”.

‘It’s Oscar’s 9/11 Today’

Social networking site Twitter was abuzz with comments about Oscar, cartoons and another meme showing a picture of a staunch-looking Pistorius with the words: “It’s Oscar’s 9/11 Today”.

User @Tsholophy commented: “This guy and his date choices: February 14th and now September 11. Is this the end of it?”

Reporters tweeted pictures of the scene outside court and prosecutor Gerrie Nel arriving “early as always”.

Media houses and bloggers tweeted links to analysis and comments, while journalists offered their opinions on how long Judge Thokozile Masipa would take to hand down judgment, and more opinions on how boring or exciting the day was going to be.

Talk Radio 702 tweeted a quote by criminal lawyer Tyrone Maseko, saying: “I think it should be murder, but she could be kind to him and the defence would be very lucky if she finds culpable homicide”.

The Business Day newspaper was one of a few publications ignoring the hype, giving preference on its front page to stories about restructuring at AngloGold and the value of the rand.

SAPA

‘Gangsterism and killings of people provokes Govt’ says Molapisi


North West Community Safety and Transport Management MEC, Gaoage Molapisi warned the community that, gangstarism, killing of people and disruptions of schools is provoking government and he will not hesitate to remove those responsible from the community.

MEC was speaking during the broader meeting with the communities of Boikhutso in Lichtenburg following the meeting that was held with the stakeholders last week Friday.

More than two thousands community members gathered at the soccer field to engage government on their plight.

MEC’s intervention came after Boikhutso was terrorised by a group of few young people who barricade the roads, disrupted schools and threaten the lives of other community members including ward councillor.

Molapisi ordered police to search for the suspects because they are known in the community and they should be prosecuted.

“Community must work closely with the police and take advantage of forums like Community Policing Forums, and street committees that has the interest of the community at heart and should act like watchdogs.

Safety is everybody’s business, it cannot be left to the police and government alone, no one has the exclusive right to kill or take law in their hands,” reiterated Molapisi.

Since the deployment of the police who surrounded Boikhutso on Friday, the community felt secured and relieved since they freely roam the streets and classes resumed without any interruptions on Monday.

Community members were given the opportunity to raise their concerns, frustrations and others commended the government for providing houses, electricity, roads and others.

MEC Collin Maine, responsible for Human Settlement and Local Government concurred with MEC Molapisi that the community of Boikhutso cannot be held at ransom by few individuals who wants to advance their narrow personal interest at their expense. He said that as much as education is a right and cannot be negotiated, also safety is their right and that is none negotiable.

Maine has urged the community to peacefully and responsibly engage their councillors and municipality on service delivery issues, and if they don’t get any assistance his office is open. He rebuked those who use young people by giving them money and buying them liquor to terrorise people and councillors so that they can occupy high positions in municipality.

“Those people are dangerous, selfish and self-centred, they don’t care for the people but themselves only,” stressed Maine.

The Department of Social Development, Lichtenburg Service Point Office accompanied the MEC’s to offer their services to the bereaved families and to deal with socio issues and also indicated that they offer bursaries to young people who have completed matric and want to study social work.

The community managed to apprehend the two suspects who attended the meeting and handed them to the police. The suspects were immediately taken to police station for questioning.

The arrests brought relieve to the community and more arrests are imminent.

The community thanked both MEC Molapisi and Maine for taking bold decision to come to Boikhutso which was under siege and brought back stability.
-TDN
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Bafana Bafana draw hold defending champions


Cape Town – South Africa and Nigeria have played to an entertaining goalless draw in their Group A 2015 Africa Cup of Nations qualifier at the Cape Town Stadium on Wednesday night.

As it happened: Bafana Bafana v Nigeria

The result sees Bafana Bafana lying second in the group on four points behind Congo Republic, who defeated Sudan earlier in the day to move to six points, while Nigeria are third on one point.
 
Coach Shakes Mashaba made two changes to the starting line-up from the team that beat Sudan 3-0 on Friday evening, with Keagan Dolly and Tokelo Rantie making way for Sibusiso Vilakazi and Oupa Manyisa.
 
South Africa created the first clear chance of the game in the sixth minute. Mandla Masango’s cross from the right of the box was deflected into the path of Manyisa, who shot on target but saw his effort well blocked by Efe Ambrose.
 
The home team looked the more fluent of the two sides in attack, though lone striker Bongani Ndulula was often left a little isolated and struggled to have any influence on the game despite his admirable industry.
 
Nigeria created nothing more than half chances, the best of which fell to Nosa Igiebor in the 36th minute, only for the attacker to shoot off target under pressure from Bafana Bafana’s defence.
 
However, in Ahmed Musa and Emmanuel Emenike, the Super Eagles had arguably the two most dangerous players on the pitch. However, they weren’t receiving particularly good service from their midfield, mainly due to good work from the likes of Andile Jali and Dean Furman.
 
Bafana made a change at the start of the second half, with Tokelo Rantie replacing Ndulula up front in a straight swap. The English-based striker had to wait until just past the hour mark to have his first sight of goal, but then he only managed to hit the side netting from a tight angle.
 
Nigeria very nearly broke the deadlock with just 10 minutes to play when Musa’s cross from the right found substitute Christian Osagona. He headed on target, but Erick Mathoho positioned himself brilliantly to clear off the goal line.
 
Tokelo Rantie then had the best chance of the match, using his pace to sprint in behind the Super Eagles’ defence and find himself one-on-one with Austin Ejide, but the goalkeeper made a fine save to keep the score line blank.
 
Scores:

South Africa 0
Nigeria 0
 
Teams:

South Africa: Meyiwa, Ngcongca, Hlatshwayo, Mathoho, Matlaba, Jali, Furman, Masango (Zwane 82’), Vilakazi, Manyisa, Ndulula (Rantie 46’)
 
Nigeria: Ejide, Echiejile, Ambrose, Omeruo, Oboabona, Onazi, Mikel, Igiebor (Aluko 71’), Musa, Salami (Osagona 63’), Emenike

Backpagemedia

NWU queries dubious trust fund


North West University’s chief financial officer Prof IJ Rost has been placed on special leave following the controversial payment of R10m from the institution’s coffers to an apparently dubious trust fund.
For more http://www.thenewage.co.za

Child porn case sentencing due


Johannesburg- Sentencing of a Rustenburg man who solicited nude photographs from young daughters of divorced mothers is expected in the Rustenburg Regional Court on Monday.

Construction worker Anthony Louw pleaded guilty to possession of child pornography. The sexually enticing or explicit images were of young girls, some in early puberty.

One girl was reportedly 12. Using the names “Shivon”, “Chivonne” or “Chevonne”, he befriended divorced women and then their daughters on BBM and WhatsApp, police said.

He flattered them and the girls later sent him photos of themselves posing naked — some in front of the name signs of Rustenburg schools. He was arrested after a tip-off.

-Sapa

Child porn case sentencing due


Johannesburg- Sentencing of a Rustenburg man who solicited nude photographs from young daughters of divorced mothers is expected in the Rustenburg Regional Court on Monday.

Construction worker Anthony Louw pleaded guilty to possession of child pornography. The sexually enticing or explicit images were of young girls, some in early puberty.

One girl was reportedly 12. Using the names “Shivon”, “Chivonne” or “Chevonne”, he befriended divorced women and then their daughters on BBM and WhatsApp, police said.

He flattered them and the girls later sent him photos of themselves posing naked — some in front of the name signs of Rustenburg schools. He was arrested after a tip-off.

-Sapa

Mahikeng Catholic Church makes donation


Mahikeng- About 40 pupils from three schools in Mahikeng have been given new shoes by women members of St Henry’s Catholic Church.

The church is based in the Montshioa township and its leaders said they saw it necessary to better the lives of the needy and bring hope to the country’s future leaders.
For more http://www.thenewage.co.za

Pistorius victim Reeva Steenkamp remembered as ‘angel’


One of the last tweets sent by Reeva Steenkamp, the glamorous South African model shot dead by her lover Oscar Pistorius, was to express her excitement ahead of Valentine’s Day.

She hinted at having romantic plans, tweeting: “What do you have up your sleeve for your love tomorrow??? #getexcited #ValentinesDay”.
For more http://www.thenewage.co.za

New owner says Pistorius house’good buy’


Pretoria- Where others might see a house of horror, Louwtjie Louwrens — the man who bought Oscar Pistorius’s home — thinks he got the deal of a lifetime and a secure residence, even if his wife isn’t so sure.

Louwrens bought the Paralympic Gold medallist’s villa where Reeva Steenkamp was shot dead in the bathroom for a bargain $420,000 (4.5 million rand).

In 2011 Pistorius had tried to sell the house, tucked away in a prestigious gated community in the capital Pretoria, for nearly double that amount.

“I would say at the end of the day it will be a good buy,” Louwrens told AFP. “I’m sure the property value will increase going forward.”

Despite the bargain price, his idea to purchase the property met resistance from his family, who balked at the idea of living at the now world famous scene of Steenkamp’s alleged murder at the hands of Pistorius.

“For starters my wife wasn’t that happy,” Louwrens said.

Pistorius admits having shot and killed his girlfriend Steenkamp in the house on February 14, 2013, but says he mistook her for an intruder.

His trial on charges of premeditated murder began in March this year and will climax Thursday when Judge Thokozile Masipa begins her verdict.

The 27-year-old star sprinter, who is free on bail, has not lived in the house since the killing.

Louwrens, a mining consultant, said the house caught his attention when he was watching the Pistorius trial on his television.

“I saw a photo of this house on TV,” said the 57-year-old, “it was a nice looking house.”

Since then it has been cleaned and Louwrens said his wife was warming up to the move, which will take place in a couple of years when he retires.

“Now that they’ve started working, I could sense that she’s feeling a bit better about the place,” he said.

Ironically, Louwrens, a resident of Boksburg, a city an hour’s drive outside Johannesburg, said he bought the Pistorius house in the pursuit of safety.

South Africa is plagued by sky-high rates of crime, including hijackings and burglaries.

“I’ve been around there, you see the kids playing in the streets, some of the people mentioned to me that when they go out they don’t even lock,” he said, adding “you know my family is very important to me.”

Silver Woods Estate is “enclosed with a solid, electrified security wall” and regards safety as a “high priority,” according to the developers.

– Exceptional security –

“I remember the day that we came to look at stands (plots), I wanted to just come in here and look at the estate, they just flatly refused to let me in,” said Tracy, a 38-year-old woman who lives on Pistorius’s former street.

“I said ‘geez I just want to have a drive,’ they were friendly about it, but they refused,” said Tracy, who declined to give her last name.

Tracy said she bought her house in the estate because it offered such exceptional security services.

“They do patrols on foot, they do patrols in a vehicle,” she said, “there’s an electric fence, there’s a big wall.”

“Everyone has an opinion,” said Tracy, “but I don’t feel scared.”

Khalil Goga, a researcher at the Institute for Security Studies, an independent policy think tank in South Africa, said that South Africans continue to shield themselves behind walls and fences even as their safety improves.

“In terms of crime, we’ve seen a reduction over the years since the highs in the early 2000’s,” said Goga.

He added that gated communities like the one Pistorius lived in are the choice for people with the means.

“In South Africa gated communities are becoming more commonplace with security measures becoming more strict and more sophisticated,” he said.

Still, the situation is not ideal, said Goga.

“If your neighbour can see your yard and it’s well lit, and people are walking on the streets, it’s actually a safer neighbourhood than in one that you can’t see behind the walls.”

-AFP

Judgement day for ‘Blade Runner’ Pistorius


Pretoria- Blade Runner” Oscar Pistorius appears in court on Thursday to face judgement over the killing of his model girlfriend, ending a six-month trial that turned the amputee’s private life into a global spectacle.

The 27-year-old celebrity athlete faces life behind bars — and notoriety that would eclipse his athletic achievements — if found guilty of deliberately killing lover Reeva Steenkamp on Valentine’s Day 2013.

Judge Thokozile Masipa’s ruling, on charges of murder and three firearms offenses, will likely be laid out in two days of careful legal argument and then a final verdict, perhaps on Friday.

The high-drama, half-year trial has fed intense media interest worldwide, with live broadcasts veering into the realm of TV reality shows.

Nearly 40 witnesses testified, including Pistorius, who broke down, weeping and at times vomiting as he heard how the 29-year-old blonde’s head “exploded” like a watermelon under the impact of his hollow-point bullet.

Prosecutors described him as an egotistical liar obsessed with guns, fast cars and beautiful women, who was not prepared to take responsibility for his actions.

The court heard transcripts of phone messages in which the pair argued, Steenkamp texting: “I’m scared of you sometimes, of how you snap at me.”

Defence lawyers sought to explain there are “two Oscars” — a world-class athlete and a highly vulnerable individual with a serious disability who acted out of fear, not anger, when he fired the fatal shots.

All the while his supportive sister and the implacable mother of the woman he killed looked on from the packed public gallery.

At its heart, the trial is simple.

Pistorius killed the law graduate when he fired four shots through a locked toilet door in his upmarket Pretoria home.

The double-amputee athlete doesn’t deny this. The only question is why he did it.

He says he thought he was shooting at an intruder and that Steenkamp was safely in bed.

The prosecution says he killed her in a fit of rage after an argument.

The trial featured neighbours who testified to hearing female screams then gunshots, as well as defence experts who said this was impossible.

– The verdict –

Judge Masipa will begin proceedings by evaluating the evidence of each of the witnesses in turn, all the while careful to evoke strong case law and limit cause for appeal.

She will then turn to her judgement.

Unlike trial of US football hero OJ Simpson trial, who was controversially acquitted by a jury, Masipa is assisted only by two assessors.

She may decide that Pistorius is innocent, or that the state has not done enough to prove its case, resulting in an acquittal.

But if she decides Pistorius deliberately murdered Steenkamp, he could face a life sentence, which in South Africa means 25 years in jail.

Masipa could also decide that Pistorius did not kill her intentionally, but did act recklessly, opening the door to a lesser charge of culpable homicide, which could still carry a prison term.

Any guilty verdict is unlikely to be end of the matter.

There will be more courtroom arguments before a sentence is handed down and, most likely, an appeal to a higher court.

Whatever happens, his glittering sporting career is likely to be over.

Once a poster boy for disabled sport, Pistorius has been stripped of lucrative endorsement deals by global brands and has withdrawn from all competition.

-AFP