PSL statement on the Khenyeza matter


Mabhuti-Khanyeza-130802-Urges-BPP-250
The Premier Soccer League (PSL) takes note of the fact that Mpumalanga Black Aces fielded Mabhuti Khenyeza against Kaizer Chiefs in the opening fixture of the 2013/14 Absa Premiership last night (Friday).

Khenyeza was suspended for twelve months on 12 June 2013 for spitting on a Match Official. He then lodged an appeal with SAFA which is still pending.

Mpumalanga Black Aces was advised in writing prior to the kick-off that Khenyeza was under suspension, and that, according to our understanding of the SAFA Disciplinary Code, the effect of lodging an appeal does not cause the disciplinary sanction to be suspended pending the appeal.

“Once we have received the necessary reports the League will consider further steps in accordance with our Constitution and Rules,” Brand De Villiers, CEO of the League said.
For more http://www.psl.co.za

Workplaces need policies for sexual misconduct


safe_sex_385x261
“The CGE calls on all places of employment to be vigilant by developing and creating policies that ensure that workplaces are safe for women and men of our country,” it said in a statement.

The commission was reacting to the recent allegation of rape against Cosatu general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi.
For more http://www.sowetanlive.co.za

Xingwana: Bill to tackle inequality


876bb444c84c493faccbcb98008f0c4a
Johannesburg – The adoption of a new bill, now before Cabinet, would help to fully emancipate South African women, Women’s Minister Lulu Xingwana said in Tshwane on Saturday.

“Within the 100 years, a lot has been achieved to attain the total emancipation of South African women of all races,” she said in a speech prepared for delivery at the launch of Women’s Month in Freedom Park, Tshwane.

“Challenges and gaps are still there and are being attended to.”

Xingwana paid tribute to women who fought for liberation, including Charlotte Maxeke, Albertina Sisulu and Winnie Madikizela-Mandela.

Women still faced injustices, however, including violence, poverty, unemployment, exploitation and human trafficking.

“The injustices of today require us women to form a united front to continue with the struggle for the total emancipation of women.”

The Women Empowerment and Gender Equality Bill would provide a number of legislative tools to help achieve gender equality.

“We believe that the bill will help us to monitor and evaluate and enforce all initiatives aimed at empowering women in South Africa,” she said.

The bill sought to empower the department of women, children and people with disabilities to monitor, review and oversee the integration of gender equality principles into government and private programmes.

Xingwana said it strongly called for women to enjoy equal representation in decision-making positions, in the private sector and in all spheres of government.

The proposed legislation would aim to eliminate all forms of discrimination against women and girls, including those with disabilities.

This included any practices that violated women’s rights to social, political, economic and cultural freedoms.

The bill would also provide for the monitoring of legislation to address discrimination and violence against women, as well as access to services and economic emancipation.

“Cabinet’s approval of the Women Empowerment and Gender Equality Bill will be an important milestone for the struggle for gender equality in our country,” Xingwana said.

“…It is our responsibility, as society united, to uphold the rights of women and it will take all of us together to achieve this.”

– SAPA

Zimbabwe election official resigns


??????????????????
Harare – A Zimbabwean election commissioner has resigned, citing doubts about the integrity of results showing a big win for President Robert Mugabe’s Zanu-PF party, which was dismissed as a fraud-riddled farce by his main challenger.

Mkhululi Nyathi said he quit the nine-member Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) over the way it managed the presidential and parliamentary vote held on Wednesday.

His resignation is likely to add to the dispute over the election both inside and outside Zimbabwe.

The vote, which looks certain to extend 89-year-old Mugabe’s 33-year rule in the southern African nation, passed off peacefully and received broad approval from African observers.

Africa’s oldest leader, Mugabe, has governed the former British colony, then known as Rhodesia, since independence in 1980.

Mugabe’s main rival, Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, has denounced the 31 July election as a “huge farce”, alleging massive rigging by Zanu-PF.

Zimbabwe’s largest domestic observer group has also called the elections “seriously compromised”.

“While throughout the whole process I retained some measure of hope that the integrity of the whole process could be salvaged along the way, this was not to be,” Nyathi said in a resignation letter seen by Reuters on Saturday.

Contacted by telephone, Nyathi declined to discuss his concerns in detail.

Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) said on Friday it would take to the streets to challenge Zanu-PF’s claim of a landslide victory, made less than 24 hours after the polls had closed on Wednesday.

Results for the parliamentary vote released so far by the ZEC show that Zanu-PF will have a two-thirds majority that would allow it to make constitutional changes.

Zimbabwe state media is also reporting Mugabe is poised for a resounding win.

The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission has until Monday to release the official results of the presidential vote.

Serious flaws alleged

Tsvangirai has called on the African Union and the Southern African Development Community (Sadc) to investigate the vote, calling it “null and void” and “not credible”.

But he faces an uphill struggle to convince the regional bodies, as their observers have already endorsed the election as free and peaceful, while acknowledging minor problems.

Western observers were kept out by Harare, and independent domestic monitors have described the vote as deeply flawed by registration problems that may have disenfranchised up to a million people.

This includes the lack of availability of an updated voters’ roll, as required by law.

SADC observers have urged Tsvangirai to accept the result. They expressed relief that the elections have so far avoided the kind of violence that marred a disputed vote in 2008. Then, 200 MDC supporters were killed by Zanu-PF supporters.

Western rejection of the regional African verdict on the election could stir tensions with the continent. But acceptance of Mugabe’s victory will be criticised in countries that say he is a despot guilty of rights abuses and ruining the economy.

Britain, a sharp critic of Mugabe in the past, said it was concerned that Zimbabwe had not enacted important electoral reforms before the vote.

The US government, which has imposed sanctions against Mugabe, said “a peaceful and orderly election day does not by itself guarantee a free and fair outcome”.

The European Union, which relaxed some sanctions earlier this year after a new Zimbabwe constitution was approved in a referendum, has said it is too early to assess the election’s fairness and that it is waiting for the definitive results.

Given the sanctions, the view from the West is key to the future of Zimbabwe’s economy, which is still struggling with the aftermath of a decade-long slump and hyperinflation that ended in 2009 when the worthless Zimbabwe dollar was scrapped.

– Reuters

Chabane checks N West Presidential Package progress


collins-chabane
The Inter Ministerial Committee (IMC) led by the Minister for Performance, Monitoring and Evaluation in the Presidency, Collins Chabane visited several areas in the Bojanala Platinum District municipality in the North West to check progress on the implementation of commitments regarding the Special Presidential Package.
For more http://www.sabc.co.za

Parents of drowned toddler still in custody


1550824704
The parents of three-year-old Olivia van Voeght will remain behind bars.

They were charged with child neglect and appeared briefly in the Wynberg Magistrate’s Court in Cape Town on Friday. The toddlers’ body was recovered near Lotus River after she went missing on Tuesday.
For more http://www.sabc.co.za

Kolisile’s funeral underway


nkosiphendule-kolisile3
Members of the Gauteng Legislature, SACP and ANC members have gathered at Majola village Sport fields in the Eastern Cape to bid farewell to Gauteng Economic Development MEC, Nkosiphendule Kolisile.
For more http://www.sabc.co.za

Langa was a fountain of hope : daughter


Langa-Daughter
The daughter of the late Chief Pius Langa, Phumzile has described her father as their fountain of hope and love after their mother passed away in 2009.

She has been speaking at the Special Official funeral of the late Chief Justice currently underway at the Durban City Hall.

Phumzile Langa says they are grateful to have had a father of Langa’s calibre.

His son, Sandile says as a teenager, his father held various odd jobs to finance his education in order to improve the lives of his family and his community.

He says his father, Langa pursued a career within the legal system in order to contribute towards the improvement of the lives of his people.

Langa’s lifelong friend Marumo Moerane has told the Langa family to be proud of sharing the late Chief Justice with South Africa.

74-year-old Langa died in Johannesburg last week after a long illness.

He served as the Chief Justice of the Constitutional Court from 2005-2009.

He’s been described as the person who laid the foundation of the law society and the legal profession. He was accorded an official state funeral by government.

President Jacob Zuma, his deputy Kgalema Motlanthe, current Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng and other cabinet Ministers and judicial officials are among the dignitaries in attendance.

Also attending the funeral is former President Thabo Mbeki and the chairperson of the UN Commission, Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma.
For more http://www.sabc.co.za

Langa funeral under way in Durban


langa
Durban – The funeral of former chief justice Pius Langa got under way in Durban on Saturday morning.

Hundreds of people gathered at the city hall to pay their last respects to Langa.

President Jacob Zuma was expected to deliver a eulogy at the funeral.

Former chief justice Sandile Ngcobo, speaker of the National Assembly Max Sisulu and Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng were also expected to deliver tributes.

Security was tight in and around the city hall, with scores of police keeping watch in the area.

Langa died last Wednesday at the age of 74. He had been in hospital for about a month due to a long illness.

He retired in 2009 and went on to chair the Press Freedom Commission, which looked into regulation of print media in South Africa.

– SAPA

Seriti laughs off allegations – report


3edee5f2fd1e43b895c1c04d1bb48cfe
Johannesburg – Arms deal commission chair Judge Willie Seriti has laughed off allegations that his management style is responsible for resignations from the commission, Beeld reported on Saturday.

“I guess everyone has their own management style and I have mine,” he was quoted as saying.

The newspaper reported that he laughed when asked about the allegations.

“The commission’s integrity is in no way affected by any resignation. Besides, the commission meetings are open to the public and anyone can assess the evidence for themselves.”

The presidency announced the resignation of Judge Francis Legodi from the commission on Thursday.

Legodi and Judge Hendrick Musi were appointed to help Seriti probe allegations of fraud and corruption relating to the strategic defence procurement package.

President Jacob Zuma announced the establishment of the commission in October 2011. Since then, it has been dogged by claims that its integrity may be compromised.

Norman Moabi, a senior commission investigator, quit in January. He alleged in a letter, leaked to Beeld newspaper, that the commission was not being transparent and was concealing an alternative or “second agenda”.

According to Moabi, Seriti ruled the commission with an iron fist and that facts were manipulated or withheld from commissioners.

The commission is scheduled to start on Monday.

– SAPA