Amcu demands could derail peace talks


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Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union (Amcu) President Joseph Mathunjwa on Thursday said if some of his union’s demands are not met, government’s neutrality will come into question.

He made the comments following Wednesday’s failed peace talks aimed at restoring stability to the troubled mining sector.

Mathunjwa refused to sign the agreement as he wanted to consult with members.

The deal was brokered by Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe and agreed upon by other major role players, including the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) and the Chamber of Mines.

Amcu’s main rival union, the NUM, is affiliated to the Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu), a member of the ruling tripartite alliance.

Mathunjwa said they were ready to bring up this issue if needed.

He says his members strongly believe unions shouldn’t get involved in the business of mining.

“There mustn’t be any union that has a business links where we are organising. There must not be any politicians that have a stake in any mining because we saw what happened in Marikana.”

Miningmx writer David McKay said the demands could possibly derail the process as the NUM had interests in the sector.
“I think it’s a dig at NUM and nothing else and it’s a potential deal-breaker for this agreement.”
For more http://www.ewn.co.za

Afriforum discloses Madibeng report


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Madibeng – A report on financial irregularities in Madibeng recommends that criminal cases be opened against its municipal manager, and the heads of corporate services and IT, AfriForum said on Thursday.

The document alleged that municipal manager Monde Juta, corporate services head Andrew Modise, and IT head Xola Magwala were at the centre of financial malpractice at the municipality, AfriForum North West organiser Ian Cameron said in a statement.

“We will have to act, because government is still refusing to take steps against the offenders,” he said.

“According to the report, they facilitate and create an environment for corruption to thrive.”

Cameron said AfriForum had decided to make public the report, which was compiled by a task team appointed by Co-operative Governance Minister Richard Baloyi.

This was because council speaker Buti Makhongela had withheld certain information in the report from the rest of the council.

He said AfriForum would ask the National Prosecuting Authority to prosecute Makhongela for manipulating the report.

The Madibeng municipality said on Thursday it was not aware that the report contained names and allegations against certain individuals.

“The minister’s report tabled to council on 14 June 2013

recommends that an investigation be concluded on all alleged acts of impropriety,” municipality spokeswoman Lebogang Tsogang said.

“Nowhere does it mention specific individuals and recommend sanctions.”

She said the support team appointed by Baloyi would conduct investigations in the case of implicated officials.

It would be improper for the task team to recommend that action be taken against individuals without giving them an opportunity to respond to the allegations, she said. – Sapa

ANC T-shirts burned in Tlokwe


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Members of the ANC burnt party T-shirts outside the Tlokwe local municipality offices in protest against the expulsion of 14 councillors, the party said on Thursday.

“This conduct by all involved vindicates the ANC and confirms the correctness of the decision to expel these ill-disciplined members by the provincial disciplinary committee (PDC),” provincial spokesperson Kenny Morolong said in a statement.

The ANC condemned the burning of T-shirts and maintained its position that it do not recognise the removal of Tlokwe mayor Maphetle Maphetle, Morolong said.

The ANC claimed that 16 of its councillors participated in an irregular council meeting where they voted for Maphetle’s unseating.

This was the second attempt to remove him.

In November, ANC factions in the municipality passed a motion of no confidence in Maphetle.

He was replaced by Annette Combrink – the first Democratic Alliance mayor in the province – when she defeated ANC candidate Lucky Tsagae by 20 votes to 19.

However, Maphetle was returned as mayor in February, when he won by 31 votes to Combrink’s 21.

In the latest attempt to oust him, DA North West leader Chris Hattingh said 29 councillors from all parties, including the ANC, had unanimously voted to return Combrink to the position of mayor.

The ANC said the actions of its members were contrary to the party’s code of conduct.

The 16 councillors were scheduled to face a disciplinary hearing on Wednesday, but only two of them attended the meeting.

The two, who pleaded guilty, were “reprimanded” by the PDC and it was decided that they would be provided with “guidance” by the party, and would not be expelled.

The other 14, who did not arrive for the meeting, were expelled.

– SAPA

23% of youth don’t plan to vote – survey


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Johannesburg – Almost one in four young South Africans do not plan to vote in the 2014 general elections, a survey by Pondering Panda has found.

“It is concerning that almost one in four young people might stay home and not cast their vote in 2014, but what is of even greater concern are their reasons for doing so,” said Pondering Panda spokesperson Shirley Wakefield.

“The vast majority of respondents with no plans to vote feel nothing will change no matter who wins, or that there is no one worth voting for.”

Disillusionment

She said this indicated a strong sense of disillusionment with both politicians and the political process.

“If competing parties want to tap into these disaffected voters, they need to field candidates who are better able to connect with young people, and demonstrate a commitment to meaningful change in South Africa, if elected.”

The survey found that 23% of young people did not intend voting, compared to 74% who planned to vote.

Wakefield said 3 725 people between the ages of 18 and 34 were interviewed across the country.

Young people in the Northern Cape and Gauteng were found to be “least likely to vote”.

Young people most likely to vote were in the North West, KwaZulu-Natal, and the Western Cape.

About 19% of people in each of these provinces said they did not plan to vote.

“There were no significant differences according to age, gender, or race,” the survey found.

The survey found that young black and coloured South Africans were most likely to think nothing would change regardless of the result of the elections.

New political parties

People were also asked whether the new political parties, Agang SA and Julius Malema’s proposed Economic Freedom Fighters, changed the way they felt about voting in 2014.

“Reaction to this question was almost evenly split, with 39% of respondents saying these new parties made it more important to go out and vote, and 40% saying that having Agang SA and the EFF on the ballot did not change the way they felt about voting,” it said.

All interviews were carried out on cellphones between 26 June and 1 July.

– SAPA

Mandela not in a ‘vegitative’ state – presidency


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Johannesburg – Doctors treating former president Nelson Mandela have denied that he is in a vegetative state, the presidency said on Thursday.

“We confirm our earlier statement released this afternoon [Thursday] after President Jacob Zuma visited Madiba in hospital that Madiba remains in a critical, but stable condition,” spokesperson Mac Maharaj said in a statement.

He said Mandela was under the care of a “multi-disciplinary” panel of medical experts drawn from the SA Military Health Services, the public and private sector, and universities.

“Under this panel, a team of doctors, nurses, paramedics and other health professionals attend to Madiba on a 24-hour basis.”

The statement from the presidency came after court documents surfaced stating that Mandela was in a “permanent vegetative state” and that his family had been advised to turn off his life support machine.

The certificate of urgency dated June 27 and submitted to the Eastern Cape High Court was widely reported by local and international media. A copy was obtained by Sapa.

In it, an advocate for the Mandela family said he had been advised by his instructing attorney that Mandela’s condition had “taken a turn for the worst (sic) and that the Mandela family have been advised by the medical practitioners that his life support machines should be switched off”.

“Rather than prolonging his suffering the Mandela family is exploring this option as a very real probability.”

The document was attributed to David Smith, an advocate representing 15 members of the Mandela family in a court case against Mandela’s grandson, Mandla Mandela.

Wording changed

In the document, Smith described Mandela’s health as perilous, and said he was in a permanent vegetative state and was being assisted in breathing by a life support machine.

“Affidavits will be provided, at the hearing of this application, from his treating physicians that he is in a permanent vegetative state and is assisted in breathing by a life support machine,” he said.

“The anticipation of his impending death is based on real and substantial grounds.”

A later version of the document filed in the court omitted the paragraphs referring to Mandela’s “vegetative state” and the advice by physicians to take Mandela off life support.

A lawyer for the Mandela family later said the original certificate of urgency was “merely a submission outside of court”.

“To the extent there is speculation, a certificate of urgency was filed in terms of the practise of our court,” said Wesley Hayes, who represented the family in the dispute with Mandla Mandela about the graves of his father and his grandfather’s other two children.

“The certificate is not evidence, but merely submissions on why a matter should be heard outside ordinary court sittings.”

Hayes said the ruling on the urgency of the matter had been made “in camera” and that this “would extend to the contents of the certificate of urgency”.

“Further than that we have no comment,” he said.

Remains reburied

On Wednesday, the Eastern Cape High Court ordered Mandla Mandela to return the remains of his grandfather’s three children to Qunu from Mvezo, where he moved them two years ago.

The remains were those of Mandela’s eldest son Madiba Thembekile, who died in a car accident in 1969; Mandla Mandela’s father Makgatho Mandela, who died in 2005; and Mandela’s first daughter Makaziwe Mandela, who died as an infant in 1948.

The bones were reburied at a ceremony at a gravesite at Nelson Mandela’s home in Qunu on Thursday afternoon.

– SAPA

Mandela’s chances of surviving ‘slim’


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Johannesburg – With reports that it will depend on his family how long Nelson Mandela will remain on life support, a specialist said on Thursday that it was almost impossible to wean an elderly person off a ventilator.

Mandela has been in the Medi-Clinic Heart Hospital since 8 June, when he was admitted with a recurring lung infection.

Court papers showed that Madiba is in a “permanent vegetative state” and that doctors suggested his life support should be turned off.

According to the chief executive of the Faculty of Consulting Physicians of South Africa, a younger person put on mechanical ventilation – life support – can be weaned off the machine and recover, but that it can be difficult or impossible for an older person.

The longer a person is on ventilation the less the chance of recovery, Dr Adri Kok, who has no connection to Mandela’s care, told AP.

“It indicates a very poor prognosis for recovery because it means that he’s either too weak or too sick to breathe on his own,” Kok said.

“Usually if a person does need that, any person, not keeping in mind his age at all, for any person it would be indicative of a grave illness.”

“When they [the family] say ‘perilous’ I think that would be a fair description,” she said.

Graves saga

In Mandela’s hometown, Qunu, on Thursday, the bodies of three of his children were returned to their original resting place following a court order.

Mandela is said to have indicated he wants to be buried in Qunu alongside his family.

Mlawu Tyatyeka, an expert on the Xhosa culture of Mandela’s family, said the court case over the graves was decided quickly because the family knows that Mandela will soon die.

“It’s not a case of wishing him to die. It’s a case of making sure that by the time he dies, his dying wish has been fulfilled,” he said. “We have a belief that should you ignore a dying wish, all bad will befall you.”

AP reported that Mandela’s wife said the former president is sometimes uncomfortable but seldom in pain while being treated in a hospital.

Graça Machel spoke about her husband’s condition at a fundraising drive for a children’s hospital on Thursday.

“Whatever is the outcome of his stay in hospital, that will remain the second time where he offered his nation an opportunity to be united under the banner of our flag, under the banner of our constitution,” she said.

Denis Goldberg, one of the men who was convicted with Mandela, told AFP after visiting him on Monday: “He is clearly a very ill man, but he was conscious and he tried to move his mouth and eyes when I talked to him.”

“He is definitely not unconscious,” he said adding that “he was aware of who I was.”

Goldberg said he was asked by Machel to pay him a visit “just to give him mental stimulation.”

According to a statement on Thursday by President Jacob Zuma’s office, Mandela “remains in critical but stable condition”.

Zuma visited Mandela on Thursday, said the statement.
For more http://www.news24.com

Bafana Bafana move one spot up in the FIFA rankings


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South Africa has climbed one place to 59th in the latest FIFA/Coca Cola World rankings released on Thursday (04 July 2013).

Bafana Bafana have also moved one position up on the continent, as they break into the top 10, one place ahead of 2012 African champions Zambia.

South Africa recently played two matches – both World Cup qualifiers – winning one (3-0 against CAR) and losing the other (Ethiopia, 1-2). Bafana Bafana also defeated Lesotho 3-0 in an international friendly ahead of the two 2014 World Cup qualifiers.

Meanwhile, Spain remain top of the world rankings ahead of Germany, Colombia, Argentina, and the Netherlands. Making up the rest of the top ten are Italy, Portugal, Croatia Brazil, and Belgium.

Top 10 in Africa:

1. Cote d’Ivoire

(13 world)

2. Ghana

(24)

3. Mali

(28)

4. Algeria

(34)

5. Nigeria

(35)

6. Burkina Faso

(42)

7. Tunisia

(47)

8. Cape Verde Islands

(49)

9. South Africa

(59)

10. Zambia

(60)

The next rankings will be released on Thursday, 8 August.
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By-elections to be held in Tlokwe


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By-elections will be held in Tlokwe, in the North West, after 14 ANC councillors who voted to unseat mayor Maphetle Maphetle were expelled, the party said on Thursday.

“By-elections will be held. The IEC (Independent Electoral Commission) will make a decision [on the date of the by-elections],” African National Congress spokesman Keith Khoza said.

The decision to expel the group was made in a provincial disciplinary committee (PDC) meeting held on Wednesday.

The councillors were found guilty of “acting contrary to the directives” of the party and violating the ANC constitution, the PDC said in a statement.

On Thursday, the North West Congress of SA Trade Unions (Cosatu) condemned the actions of the councillors.

“For us… this is the worst reactionary act that we have ever seen since the dawn of democracy — that comrades who are deployed by the revolutionary alliance connive with the opposition to oust a comrade deployed by the ANC,” it said.

“For us, as Cosatu, these councillors deserve the harshest punishment available in the rules of the ANC, as this is for the second time.”

It called on the ANC to investigate the cause of the councillors’ conduct, so that similar incidents could be prevented in future.

Maphetle was unseated for a second time on Tuesday.

Democratic Alliance councillor Annette Combrink was voted in as the new mayor.

DA North West leader Chris Hattingh said 29 councillors from all parties, including the ANC, had unanimously voted to return Combrink to the position of mayor.

In November, ANC factions in the municipality passed a motion of no confidence in Maphetle.

He was replaced by Combrink — the first DA mayor in the province — when she defeated ANC candidate Lucky Tsagae by 20 votes to 19.

However, Maphetle was returned as mayor in February, when he won by 31 votes to Combrink’s 21.

While the DA was in charge, it asked for a forensic investigation into irregularities at the municipality.

The probe found the council had irregularly bought Maphetle a R736,000 customised Mercedes-Benz. Maphetle was also found to have allegedly abused the municipality’s disaster management fund and poverty relief fund.

The report recommended that formal disciplinary action be taken against him and other officials.

In May, the DA laid criminal charges against Maphetle. In June Public Protector Thuli Madonsela said she would investigate the claims of corruption involving Maphetle.
SAPA

PTA woman held over killing


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A Pretoria woman has been arrested in connection with the murder of her husband, police said on Thursday.

Captain Doniah Mothutsane said the man was shot dead on Wednesday night at their home on Plot 17, Welbekend.

“Police were called to the home where they found an old man in his blue working suit lying on the floor and a .38 revolver with 43 live rounds on the bed,” said Mothutsane.

Police said the 39-year-old wife seemed dazed when they spoke to her, and neighbours said there had been numerous incidents of domestic violence at the house.

The woman was expected to appear in the Bronkhorstspruit Magistrate’s Court on Friday on a charge of murder.

-Sapa

One dead in North West fire


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One person died in a building fire in Boshoek in the North West on Thursday morning, paramedics said.

It was unclear whether it was a man or woman, said Netcare 911 spokeswoman Santi Steinmann.

“Another person sustained minor to moderate injuries and after receiving treatment on scene, the injured person was transported to a nearby medical facility for further medical care,” she said.

The cause of the fire was not immediately known.

-Sapa