Official in court for water project fraud


justice-logo
Nelspruit – An Mpumalanga co-operative governance department official and his wife appeared in the Nelspruit Magistrate’s Court on Thursday on corruption charges, the Hawks said.

Former head of department Sam Ngubane, who is now the department’s chief director of development and planning, and his wife Angel, who also worked in the department, were arrested earlier in the day, said Captain Paul Ramaloko.

Ngubane allegedly received R2 million in kickbacks, through his wife’s account, for a tender awarded to Takitsi Trading in 2008 as part of the department’s Water For All project. The contract was cancelled after three months, because of over-expenditure, but the company allegedly continued to be paid.

The couple would appear again on Friday. They remained in custody.

“The arrest of two (Takitsi) company directors is imminent,” Ramaloko said.

The Democratic Alliance welcomed Ngubane’s arrest and hoped it would send a message to all those in public office who were considering involvement or were involved in tender corruption, said DA human settlements spokesman James Masango.

“(The Water For All project) served as a haven for mismanagement of funds and the total disregard of thousands of communities across the province who suffer because they have no access to clean water,” he said.

Sapa

Pair nabbed with R1.5m perlemoen


760458736
Johannesburg – Two foreigners were arrested in Booysens, Johannesburg, on Thursday for possession of dried perlemoen (abalone) worth about R1.5 million, the Hawks said on Thursday.

The men were arrested at a house in the Hill, near Booysens, after a tip-off, said spokesman Paul Ramaloko.

The arrests follow those of two Chinese men on October 14 in Pretoria. They were caught with dried perlemoen worth about R600,000.

Possession of perlemoen contravenes the Marine Living Resources Act. South Africa banned abalone fishing in 2008.

“They will appear in the Johannesburg Magistrate’s Court tomorrow 1/8Friday 3/8. They are charged with possession of abalone,” said Ramaloko.

Sapa

Hawks bust Krugersdorp mandrax lab


3113186912
Johannesburg – The Hawks believe they might have cracked the biggest drug syndicate on the West Rand following the arrests of two men in Krugersdorp.

“We arrested two men, aged 68 and 29, for producing Mandrax,” spokesman Captain Paul Ramaloko said on Thursday.

The Hawks found three kilogrammes of Mandrax tablets and chemicals and equipment to produce the drug at the house in Boltonia, Krugersdorp, where the men were arrested.

One of the men was thought to be a well-known drug dealer from Soweto.

Ramaloko said the men would appear in the Krugersdorp Magistrate’s Court on Friday.

Sapa

Mexican top cop fined $10 bn for drugs


2143350274
Washington – The US imprisoned a former Mexican state police chief for almost 13 years and fined him $10 billion Thursday for trafficking marijuana into the United States for the notorious Gulf Cartel.

The Department of Justice said Gilberto Lerma Plata, 50, was a former commander of the Mexican State Police in Tamaulipas state and at the same time was on the payroll of the Gulf Cartel based in Matamoros, on the border with Texas.
For more http://www.iol.co.za

Blackness is a matter of perspective


386812232
Johannesburg – I have always considered language an important medium of self-expression for all people. In fact, my personal experience has persuaded me to accept that our ability to reason and to argue logically and even our very ability to think, rests upon qualities that first evolved as part of our use of language.
For more http://www.iol.co.za

Tlakula off the hook – for now


45921efff4844a5f9a5305a5e66e708d
Cape Town – Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) chair Pansy Tlakula is off the hook for now, after technical mistakes by Public Protector Thuli Madonsela, an ad hoc Parliamentary committee decided on Thursday.

The committee was tasked with considering Madonsela’s report, which found Tlakula had played a “grossly irregular” role in procuring the Riverside Office Park building in Centurion, Pretoria.

A legal opinion tabled in the committee found Madonsela had made several procedural mistakes – a position accepted by all political parties represented on the committee.

Committee chair Luwellyn Landers said the opinion meant it would be illegal for the committee to take any action based on Madonsela’s report.

Both the public protector’s office and the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) are chapter nine institutions.

MPs said Parliament could not be seen to be impeding the independence of the bodies.

“We are going to draft a report that says it is not within our competency to take any action; that any remedial action proposed in her [Madonsela’s] report will be dealt with in our report,” Landers said.

“It will simply say something to the effect that Treasury, the IEC and home affairs need to tighten up any procurement processes in the IEC and that’s it.”

Parliament could not do anything more because of the constitutional principle of separation of powers.

Overstepped mandate

Landers and Democratic Alliance MP James Selfe were tasked by the committee to draft a report, which would more than likely be formally adopted by MPs next week.

Selfe said Madonsela had followed the wrong processes, creating the impression that she had overstepped her mandate.

“We think that it is illegal in terms of the way the Electoral Act is written, read with the relevant provisions of the Constitution…. It is impossible for Parliament to do what the public protector is asking it to do,” Selfe said.

The public protector made two requests when submitting her report to Parliament, Selfe said.

One was to ask the National Assembly Speaker to meet the electoral commission, with the exception of the chairperson, to look at Tlakula’s allegation that the report was in some way defective or biased.

The second, that the report be referred to the Electoral Court, was branded as bizarre by MPs in the committee because of the constitutional principle of separation of powers.

Selfe said Madonsela had dealt with matters the wrong way around.

“If it had been her [Madonsela’s] intention to refer the matter to the Electoral Court, she should have, on finding evidence of prima facie misconduct, referred the matter directly to the court,” Selfe said.

“If the Electoral Court, after investigation, found that to be the case, then the court would have produced a report for the National Assembly which would have set up an ad hoc committee to consider that report, and then, if it was found she had indeed committed misconduct, to recommend to the president that she be dismissed.”

– SAPA

KZN rapist jailed for life


CrimeTapeSmall
Johannesburg – A man convicted of several rapes was handed two life sentences and 25 years by the KwaZulu-Natal High Court in Pietermaritzburg on Thursday.

Sokhela Gida, 20, of Port Shepstone, pleaded guilty to three rapes and other crimes.

Judge Rishi Seegobin handed down two life sentences for raping a paralysed woman and her 15-year-old daughter in January 2011.

He was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment for breaking into their house, 10 years for raping a 22-year-old woman in August 2010, and five years for assaulting one of the women.

All the sentences would run concurrently with the life sentences.

Seegobin said Gida was well on the way to becoming a serial rapist and it was only a matter of time before he resorted to murder.

In passing sentence the judge said the actions of men who committed depraved sexual acts to satisfy their wanton lust would not be tolerated.

The raped mother and daughter still suffered severe psychological trauma and had to undergo preventive treatment for possible HIV infection.

The girl’s schoolwork suffered after her ordeal and she had emotional problems, such as being afraid of men, including members of her family.

– SAPA

W Cape fraudster abandons appeal


Court
Cape Town – A former Old Mutual team leader, who was jailed for four years on 62 counts of fraud, abandoned an application for leave to appeal against her sentence on Thursday.

Fairuz Terblanche, 49, of Mitchell’s Plain, appeared in the Bellville Specialised Commercial Crime Court in Cape Town before Magistrate Sabrina Sonnenberg.

On Monday, Sonnenberg jailed her for four years, under legislation empowering prison authorities to release her after eight months to serve the rest of the sentence under house arrest.

Under house arrest, she would be permitted to leave home in the day to earn a living, but would be required to perform community service in her spare time. This would be in the form of cleaning or maintenance, usually at a police station.

Terblanche was brought into the court room wearing leg-irons, which were removed by a prison official before her case was called.

Legal Aid attorney Hailey Lawrence, for Terblanche, told the court she no longer wished to appeal against her sentence.

Terblanche was the administrator of the Old Mutual Retirement Fund.

During the absence of subordinates, she used their user-codes to access Old Mutual’s computer system to capture, authorise and approve payments from unclaimed retirement funds.

In doing so, she used the names of beneficiaries of the retirement funds Evergreen, NBS, BOE and Progressor, but changed their banking details in order to channel the money into her personal bank account.

At times, she instructed subordinates to process false requests from beneficiaries for the urgent payment of funds.

The embezzlement, totalling R914 918 happened between May 2007 and March 2010.

– SAPA

Soldier jailed for double murder


2576831169
Bloemfontein – A South African soldier has been jailed for 15 years by the Bethlehem Circuit Court for double murder, Free State police said on Thursday.

Mpumelelo Hlubi was sentenced to 15 years for the murder of Lieutenant Thabiso Seithati, 28, and to 10 years for the murder of Gunner Zakhe Khumalo, 26, said Sergeant Majang Skalkie. The sentences would run concurrently.

In February, Hlubi shot Seithati and Khumalo while driving from the Fouriesburg military base to the Kromdraai temporary base, near the Lesotho border, in a military vehicle.

Hlubi dumped their bodies beside the Kromdraai farm gravel road.

An R4 rifle and a cellphone were taken from the men and were later found with Hlubi.

– SAPA

Cops fire rubber bullets at Bekkersdal protesters


1364631246
Johannesburg – Police shot rubber bullets at violent protesters in Bekkersdal on Thursday, said police spokesperson Lungelo Dlamini.

“There were sporadic incidents of violence in Bekkersdal, where the protesters were throwing stones at the police,” Dlamini said.

He said tension in the township was heightened following the shootings and that police were on high alert.

He said seven people were arrested after the community centre was burnt down in the afternoon. They would appear in court soon on charges of public violence.

Fire engines were deployed and police were stationed everywhere in the area after protesters set the building alight at 14:00.

A group of Bekkersdal residents marched to the nearby Simunye township earlier in the day.

Police said the group was peaceful.

– SAPA