Pissed off by Pistorius tweets


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The flood of comments on Twitter and other social media platforms around Oscar Pistorius highlight the extreme dangers of unmediated social media.
One of the most basic precepts of law is that a person is innocent until proven guilty. Allied with this is the concept of audi altarem partem – you have to listen to both sides of the story.  And those who are tweeting with such delight and thoughtless impunity should remember that they are probably guilty of publishing defamatory statements for which they can be sued. None of us knows, yet, what sparked the tragedy at the Pistorius home early this morning. All we know is that it cost the life of Reeva Steenkamp. Her family and loved ones must be devastated and all of our hearts go out to them in this moment of tragedy. 
For more details go to bizcommunity.com

Bafana assistant coach invited to CAF Coaching Licence review sessions


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BY Obakeng Maje

Bafana Bafana assistant coach Serame Letsoaka has been invited to Egypt to be part of a select group of experts to review the CAF Coaching Licensing System with the aim to make it more relevant to the African set-up.

Letsoaka, a CAF Coaching Instructor, is the former SAFA Technical Director and has conducted several high–profile coaching courses in and outside South Africa.

There will be three working sessions of four days each which will be held at the CAF Headquarters in Cairo, Egypt.

The First Session to take place from February 18-21 will review the C License; the second is scheduled for March 4-7 to review the B License while the Third Session to run from April 2-5 will review the A License.

Letsoaka will be in the company of Belhassen Malouche (Tunisia), Jean Michel Benezet (Consultant FIFA, France), Mohamed Basir (AFC, Singapore), Jean Pierre Morlans (TD France) and Mama Sow (Senegal). The following persons will also be in attendance:

General Coordinator: Captain Shatta – CAF Director Development Division Observer: Jean Marie Conz (Suisse) – FIFA Technical Director

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People’s patience wears thin – economist


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The patience of South Africa’s population is wearing thin and urgent action needs to be taken to address the big concerns, including economic growth and jobs, big deficits and social stability, according Old Mutual Investment Group South Africa senior economist Johann Els.

Speaking at the company’s Breaking the Economic Deadlock conference at Montecasino yesterday, Els said although the state was spending too much, with half of its expenditure going on wages and social grants, the lingering social challenges made for a discontented society as shown by the protracted labour strikes and the uncertainty of business about the political scenario.

“Politics matters a lot to business, politics is a huge constraint for business investing in their own business,” he said.

He said the backdrop to the increasing agitation was that 2012 was dominated by fear, with the euro zone falling apart, the fear of the world economy slumping to recession and policy that either did not work or led to more errors. But despite this, “none of the risks actually materialised”.

Part of the remedy lay in achieving sustainable growth over a long period to bring unemployment down.

He lauded the National Development Plan as fantastic but said the country “needs government to have the same sense of urgency that we need to do something now”.

On the excessive expenditure on wages and social grants, Els said there was a need for tax increases, which would cushion the state’s limited resources and at the same time help to achieve sustained job creation.

“Unfortunately there is no decent growth model, there is no single sector that can boost the economy,” he said.

Articulating the problems that needed to be addressed, Els pointed out the following:

l uncertainty about future policy direction; excessive government regulation and meddling in the economy; low employment absorption, which was a function of the labour laws, education, productivity and labour relations; corruption, which was a drag on infrastructure and tainted South Africa’s investor attraction;

l infrastructure backlogs, in which implementation crosswinds hampered plans;

l escalating costs in the economy, including wages, electricity, fuel, water and public service charges; and

l fiscal constraints, including the state’s wage bill and grant explosion, that threatened the infrastructure drive.

Making an assessment of South Africa’s ranking in the World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiveness Index of 144 countries, Els said the country lagged behind pathetically in labour/employer co-operation, where it was last. It was 143rd in maths and science education, the same in hiring and firing practices and 140th in quality of higher education and flexibility of wage setting.

“On the upside, say the fixes are made with vigour and speed, confidence recovers and growth and employment improves, but if the fixes are not made, investor confidence grinds lower, growth stagnates at 3 percent, social and financial pressures mount relentlessly and the end game is a crises,” he said.

Speaking at the same event, veteran journalist and author Max du Preez said the worst never happened in South Africa but sadly, neither did the best.

Oscar to be charged with premeditated murder


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Pretoria – The State intends charging paralympian Oscar Pistorius with premeditated murder after the death of his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp, the Pretoria Magistrate’s Court heard on Friday.

“Is the State’s argument premeditated murder?” asked Magistrate Desmond Nair asked.

“Yes,” said prosecutor advocate Gerrie Nel.

Pistorius was arrested on Thursday after Steenkamp was shot dead in his home, at the Silver Woods Country Estate in Pretoria, on Valentine’s Day. 

The magistrate has postponed Pistorius’s case to February 19 after a highly charged first appearance on Friday. – Sapa

‘Dangerous’ killer gets three life terms


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Pretoria – There are still more questions than answers about what happened on the night a Theresa Park woman and her two small children were murdered, but for now her killer has been sentenced to three life sentences and 28 years’ imprisonment.

Sipho Masiqa, 36, maintained to the end that he had nothing to do with the July 2010 murders of Thifhelimibilu (Pauline) Mashau and her two children – four-year-old Adivhao and eight-month-old Aveani.

Mashau’s half naked body, dressed only in a pink pyjama top, was found in bushes near Ga-Rankuwa two days after the bodies of her children were found in her home. She had been stabbed with a knife and strangled to death and was sexually assaulted.

The baby was discovered face down in the bath and her sister in a bedroom with a balaclava pulled over her face. Both children had been strangled and suffocated.

“You are a dangerous man who needs to be permanently removed from society,” Judge Bert Bam told Masiqa yesterday.

The murder of the woman was an act of savagery, he said. 

“Not only was she stabbed, but she was also strangled. She was overpowered while still in her pyjamas. The killing of her two children was also brutal and barbaric.”

The judge said the two children were defenceless.

“Why they were murdered remains a mystery. It seems so senseless to kill little children. They could pose no threat to anyone.”

The judge said the children were shown no mercy. “The killing of children is a reprehensible crime.”

Masiqa had told the court several versions. The first was that Mashau asked him for a firearm to kill herself, while the second was that she asked him to kill her. The third was that Mashau asked him to stage a robbery at her house for insurance purposes. 

Masiqa said he staged the robbery, but had nothing to do with the murders. According to him, she killed her own children and gave him R10 000 and her car for staging the robbery.

Masiqa admitted he was at her home on the night of the murder.

He claimed Mashau and a man named Peter fetched him from work and took him to the house.

The woman took the children to a bedroom, he said, and he never saw them again.

For more details go to www.iol.co.za

Oscar Pistorius cried hysterically


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BY Obakeng Maje

Pretoria-South African award-winning athlete Oscar Pistorius shed his tears when led away by Police into a court room this morning in Pretoria Magistrate Court.

Pistorius cried hysterically and the magistrate prevents photographers from entering the court room.Pistorius was arrested yesterday at his mansion after he allegedly shot dead his girlfriend, Steenkamp.

The gruesome event was reported by a concerned neighbour after hearing gunshots at the runner’s residential area.

He appears before Magistrate for charge of murder after he spent a night in a holding cell.

Oscar Pistorius,26 won many medals for South Africa in Olympics and according to information the NPA are very adamant to oppose the runner’s bail application.

So far no one knows what really led to the “shoot out” and the runner will be given that opportunity to state his facts.

The lawyers of Pistorius highlighted that the runner will apply for bail when he appears today.

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Government fights corruption: Zuma


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The government is trying its best to fight corruption, President Jacob Zuma told a The New Age breakfast on Friday.

 

“From my understanding we are trying our best to deal with corruption. If I look around in the world, I think there are very few countries that talk about corruption. It is not as if corruption is not there. We are reported more about because we are talking about it,” Zuma said.

 

“Yesterday (Thursday) I indicated the progress we have made [in fighting corruption]. We are even discussing the tender system, whether don’t we need to change it in order to restrict the possibilities of corruption?”

 

Zuma said there was also corruption in the private sector, which was not often talked about.

 

Zuma said South African society had been called to join the government in the fight against corruption. Of the cases that were reported, “many of them are being attended to”, he said.

 

-Sapa

Violence comes from apartheid – Zuma


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Cape Town – Violence in society originates from the apartheid system, President Jacob Zuma said on Friday.

“I don’t think as a nation we just became violent overnight. Violence is a direct consequence of apartheid. Apartheid was a very violent system. So violent that even if you peacefully demonstrated, they would shoot at you and kill you,” Zuma told a The New Age breakfast.

“That called the reaction from those who were oppressed to become very violent in fighting apartheid.”

Zuma said the African National Congress was a non-violent organisation. However, due to persistent violence from the apartheid government, the party had to take up arms.

“Those who are demonstrating for example, because they are from that kind of situation that if you protest you are going to be shot at, so they are already in a sense full of readiness to do violence,” Zuma said.

“If we have that background it means it is not a matter that we are going to deal with overnight. We are going to take time.”

However, Zuma condemned violent protests. He urged citizens to respect other people’s rights while exercising their right to strike.

 

– SAPA

Commission discusses NUM conduct


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Rustenburg – The conduct of miners believed to be affiliated to the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) took centre stage at the Farlam Commission of Inquiry on Thursday.

Lonmin miner Vusimuzi Mandla Mabuyakhulu, speaking through an interpreter, told the commission he feared for his life and was scared to go home after being told NUM members were looking for him.

On Thursday morning, Mabuyakhulu told the commission he had not been sleeping at his house.

Commission chairman judge Ian Farlam said no witness should be intimidated. If needed, Mabuyakhulu would be provided with witness protection.

Karel Tip, for the NUM, said it was opposed to any “sort of unlawful intimidation”.

“No event of this kind would have been sponsored by any structure of the NUM,” he said.

The commission heard that Mabuyakhulu was shot, assaulted and left to die by men associated with the NUM on August 11.

He is employed at Lonmin Platinum’s Karee mine, where rockdrill operators went on strike in demand of a R12,500 a month wage last year.

“We need the money. The work we do is extremely difficult,” he said.

The commission heard that in August, rockdrill operators decided  that no union could represent them when speaking to mine management  about wage increases.

He said one of their reasons was because “it had become clear that NUM indicated that it would not be able to discuss wages for rock drill operators”.

On August 10, five representatives went to speak to mine management, which informed them that the NUM had told the mine not to speak to striking workers.

The workers then agreed they would go to the NUM’s offices for clarity.

On the morning of August 11, a group of about 3000 striking workers gathered at the Wonderkop Stadium.

They were told people had been shot by NUM members, and that miners had been accosted at a bus station and forced, at gunpoint, to return to work.

He said that as the group walked to the offices it came across a  group of NUM members singing songs. They heard two gunshots and started running.

Mabuyakhulu was shot in the back.

Recalling the shooting, he said: “No one was prepared to help another man; it was difficult, because we were all running away….  NUM members were following from behind and found me lying on the road.”

When the men, dressed in NUM attire, asked him where he worked, Mabuyakhulu said he lied to save his life.

He told the commission one of the men accused him of lying, and of being a member of the Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union (Amcu).

“Then one man appeared from the side and said ‘let’s finish him up’,” he said.

Mabuyakhulu said a man on his left had a spear and repeatedly hit him with the handle, until it broke. Another man in white overalls and a NUM T-shirt stood in front of him with a butcher’s knife.

“I felt a blow on the back of my head and lost consciousness. After they left me, I came to and I tried to crawl away…”

The commission heard that Mabuyakhulu was unable to say which day he regained consciousness, and was not aware which hospital he was taken to for treatment.

“It’s with the help of the Almighty that I survived. Apparently my time had not come as yet,” he said.

A short video of a group of men walking with sticks, metal objects and pangas was shown to the commission.

“Those are the men that attacked me,” Mabuyakhulu said, pointing  to the television screen in front of him.

He told the commission that a statement made in his name on August 17 was not completely correct, and that the signature was not his.

He asked show the commission his injuries, explaining that although the mine had declared him fit to go underground, he felt he was unable to efficiently do his work.

He told the commission that Amcu could not negotiate wages, because it was not a “recognised union”.

The commission is probing the deaths of 44 people during an unprotected strike at Lonmin Platinum’s mine in Marikana.

On August 16, 34 striking mineworkers were shot dead and 78 were  injured when police opened fire while trying to disperse a group which had gathered on a hill near the mine.

Ten people, including two police officers and two security guards, were killed near the mine in the preceding week.

The commission resumes on Friday morning with the cross-examination of Mabuyakhulu. – Sapa

Pistorius in court for murder


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Johannesburg – On Wednesday night, Reeva Steenkamp tweeted excitedly about her upcoming romantic surprise. On Thursday, she was gunned down – shot at close range at least twice by a 9mm parabellum pistol.

 

On Thursday night, her boyfriend, world-famous Paralympic hero Oscar Pistorius, was in jail. He had spent Valentine’s Day in custody on suspicion of murdering her in a crime of passion. On Friday, he will appear in court, where he will apply for bail, and the NPA will oppose it.

 

Six months ago, Pistorius strode the world as an athletic hero, becoming the first Paralympian to compete in an Olympic final. On Thursday, he dominated the world’s media once again.

 

Police are now trying to piece together the events leading up to the shooting in the upmarket Silver Woods Country Estate in Pretoria.

 

According to police spokeswoman Brigadier Denise Beukes, witnesses heard shouts and screams coming from Pistorius’s residence at about 8pm.

 

It was not the first time that “issues of a domestic nature” had occurred at the house.

 

But at about 3am on Thursday, neighbours called the police when they heard gunshots coming from Pistorius’s house.

 

Paramedics found Steenkamp lying downstairs in the entrance hall of the R3.9-million house. She had been shot in the head and upper body.

 

According to a source, nothing could be done for her.

 

The 29-year-old former FHM model, who had been dating the 26-year-old for two months, was declared dead at the scene. A 9mm gun registered to Pistorius was recovered. There was no sign of a forced entry.

 

Pistorius was taken to a Pretoria clinic, where he is said to have undergone tests for alcohol use.

 

He was due to spend the night in the holding cells of the Boschkop police station before appearing in the Pretoria Magistrate’s Court this morning.

 

“The police are still busy with preliminary investigations. We are not sure of the details of the charges, because we still don’t have the docket in our possession. He will be kept in custody,” said Medupe Simasiku, the regional spokesman for the director of public prosecutions.

 

Police say that the couple were the only people in the home at the time. There was no sign of forced entry, and the claim Pistorius had thought his girlfriend was an intruder had not come from them, police said.

 

At about 10.15am, a convoy of 10 police vehicles, including a van, believed to be carrying Pistorius, drove out of the complex and headed to the police station.

 

Pistorius’s attorney, Kenny Oldwage, and the athlete’s sister, Aimee, were later seen leaving the station in separate vehicles.

 

At about 11.45am, Pistorius emerged, escorted by two plain-clothed police officers. Covering his head in a grey hooded jacket, Pistorius looked calm as he was led to a white VW Polo. He was taken to the Mamelodi Clinic, where he had his blood drawn. Speaking outside the police station last night, Oldwage said Pistorius was “emotional, but he is keeping up”.

 

News of the shooting was met with shock and disbelief around the world.

 

Pistorius’s friend, Justin Divaris, the chief executive of the Daytona Group, said he had had a very sad day.

 

He said he was very close to both Pistorius and Steenkamp. “I introduced them,” he said. “I am close friends with Oscar, and my girlfriend is the deceased’s best friend, so this has been very hard.”

 

Divaris said that Pistorius and Steenkamp had met at a race day at Kyalami. The connection was so strong that they attended the South African Sports Awards together that night.

 

At the time, the athlete was involved with Samantha Taylor, and after pictures emerged of Pistorius and Steenkamp together, Taylor said Pistorius was a player when it came to women.

 

Divaris said the couple were very much in love. “They were even talking about getting married and having kids,” he said. “There are terrible stories out there, but they aren’t true – they were in love.”

 

 

 

On Wednesday, Steenkamp asked on Twitter: “What do you have up your sleeve for your love tomorrow??? #getexcited #ValentinesDay”.

 

 

 

Pistorius’s father, Henke, said his son was “sad” and a “bit emotional”, adding: “I don’t know nothing. It will be extremely obnoxious and rude to speculate. I don’t know the facts. If anyone makes a statement, it will have to be Oscar.”

 

Oscar’s agent, Peet van Zyl, said he was “sure what’s happened has been a terrible mistake, but I really don’t have the details.”