A man nabbed with drugs worth R24 600


By Obakeng Maje
Britstown-The police are investigating two separate cases of possession of mandrax after three males were arrested.

“The police followed up on information and pounced on a suspect in Dahlia Street. A bag of the suspect was searched and a man known as Fieland Charlies(48) was found in possession of 246 mandrax tablets, 1 half tablet and 2 quarter tablets” lieutenant Sergio Kock said.

The mandrax has an approximate street value of R24 600.

“The suspect already appeared in the Britstown Magistrates’ Court and the case is remanded until Thursday for a formal bail application” Kock said.-TDN
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Majakaneng accused out on bail


By Obakeng Maje
Majakaneng-The five suspects arrested on Tuesday at Majakaneng village near Mooinooi for Arson, Malicious damage to property, Intimidation, Assault Common and Public Violence appeared on Wednesday at Brits Magistrates’ Court and only one accused Lazarus Mathe(24) who facing a charge of public violence was released on warning.

He will appear again in court on 13 May 2014.

“The four other accused, Pogisho Sediro (24), Abram Rakomane (26), Reuben Ramatshane (28), Vincent Soko (23) were granted R1000 bail each.

They will appear again on 15 May 2014.

“The accused were arrested after intensive investigation on cases that were registered during Majakaneng community protests on 27 and 28 February 2014” colonel Sabata Mokgwabone said.-TDN
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SA, Rwanda to resolve issues- Zuma


Johannesburg – Pretoria and Kigali have agreed to resolve a furious diplomatic row sparked by attacks on Rwandan dissidents exiled in Johannesburg, President Jacob Zuma said on Wednesday.
Speaking after meeting on Tuesday in the Angolan capital Luanda with his Rwandan counterpart Paul Kagame, Zuma told SABC that the two leaders had “agreed to share some detailed information and deal with the issues”.

The presence of many Rwandan dissidents in South Africa has long been a bone of contention between the two countries, but relations turned frosty after Kigali’s exiled former intelligence chief Patrick Karegeya was found strangled to death in a luxury Johannesburg hotel on New Year’s Day.

The full-blown row was sparked by a botched assassination attempt on 3 March against former Rwandan army chief Faustin Kayumba Nyamwasa, an opponent of Kagame, also in Johannesburg.

It was the third attempt on Nyamwasa’s life since he was granted asylum in South Africa in 2010.

On suspicion that three Rwandan diplomats were behind the attempts, South Africa declared them “persona non grata”, saying they had “violated their diplomatic privileges”, and expelled them on 7 March.

Rwanda immediately retaliated by expelling six South African diplomats from Kigali.

Kagame’s response to Pretoria’s allegations was both ambiguous and hawkish.

“Anyone who betrays our cause or wishes our people ill will fall victim,” he said at the time.

“Rwanda believes that they are undertaking some action, and we as South Africa have an international obligation that when people come to us for refugee status we’ve got to give it them,” Zuma said Wednesday.

His meeting with Kagame, which took place on the sidelines of a regional summit on the African Great Lakes region, had not been previously reported.

The diplomatic row was also discussed at the Luanda summit itself and “there was agreement that the two countries must discuss the issue and find a mutually agreeable solution”, Zuma’s office said in a statement.

Zuma said there “was an agreement that South Africa and Rwanda should meet and that has been accepted”, the statement added.

AFP

Composed Louca steps into the dock


Johannesburg – Dressed in blue jeans, a white shirt, and black jacket, murder accused George Louca stepped into the dock at the Kempton Park Magistrate’s Court on the East Rand on Wednesday.

He looked composed as he spoke to his lawyer Owen Blumberg.

Louca, a Cypriot national, appeared amid a high security presence with heavily armed members of the special task team present in court.

He is accused of killing Teazers boss Lolly Jackson. He faces additional charges of money laundering and possession of stolen goods.

Louca returned to South Africa several weeks ago after losing his final appeal in the Supreme Court of Cyprus, the last of several attempts to evade extradition.

He left South Africa after Jackson was shot dead at a house in Edenglen, east of Johannesburg, on 3 May 2010.

Louca reportedly phoned Gauteng crime intelligence boss Joey Mabasa and admitted to being present when Jackson was murdered.

Lieutenant General Solomon Makgale said at the time the Hawks were investigating a number of other cases to which Louca could possibly be linked.
SAPA

Facebook takes a dive into virtual reality


San Francisco – Facebook on Tuesday announced a $2bn deal to buy a start-up behind virtual reality headgear that promises to let people truly dive into their friends’ lives.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said that the acquisition of Oculus was a long-term bet that making the social network’s offerings more immersive would pay off.

“People will build a model of a place far away and you will just go see it; it is just like teleporting,” Zuckerberg said.

“I do think gaming is a start,” he said in a conference call, referring to the Oculus headset’s original design focus.

Zuckerberg billed the acquisition as part of a drive to build the “next major computing platform that will come after mobile”.

For now, Facebook will use its resources to make Oculus headgear affordable and ubiquitous, according to Zuckerberg.

Shopping experiences

The California-based social network does not intend to become a hardware company, but Zuckerberg said it is open to people using virtual reality devices for immersive shopping experiences at Facebook.

Facebook plans to build on Oculus technology for areas such as communications, education, and entertainment.

Oculus shareholders will receive $400m in cash and 23.1 million Facebook shares in the deal.

Facebook called Oculus, launched in 2012, the leader in immersive virtual reality technology with a strong following among developers.

The company has already garnered more than 75 000 orders for the $350 Oculus Rift headset development kits.

“While the applications for virtual reality technology beyond gaming are in their nascent stages, several industries are already experimenting with the technology,” Facebook said.

“Oculus has the chance to create the most social platform ever, and change the way we work, play and communicate.”

Oculus’s headset earned raves from reviewers at the annual global technology fair CES in Las Vegas in January.

‘Google envy’

Buying it puts Facebook, the social networking leader, in competition with Oculus rival Sony for development of advanced virtual reality headsets.

Japanese consumer electronic titan Sony last week unveiled “Project Morpheus”, development of a virtual reality headgear system for its new-generation PlayStation 4 video game consoles.

Facebook said Oculus will maintain its headquarters in Irvine, California, and continue developing the Rift platform.

Word of the deal stymied some analysts, who noted that the people hot to get hands on Oculus headsets have been hardcore video game players.

“It’s a cool technology,” said Silicon Valley analyst Rob Enderle of Enderle Group.

“I just don’t know why Facebook wants it, unless they are having incredible Google envy. It has nothing to do with social networking.”

It appeared to Forrester media analyst James McQuivey that Facebook made the big-ticket buy out of fear the social network might miss out on the next big thing in internet lifestyles.

He saw no good fit between Facebook and virtual reality, saying the technology does not promise to be an irresistible addition to social networking.

“Facebook is putting itself in a position to offer an experience we are not going to need that much, especially if it means strapping something to your head,” McQuivey said.

“If this is Facebook’s way of getting into a Google Glass type experience, that makes a little more sense but they could do that from scratch.” AFP

Boks back in Bloem- in 2016


Cape Town – Free State Rugby Union CEO Harold Verster says the union will next host a Test match in the 2016 season.

Verster wrote a column on the Volksblad
website
where he explained to fans the situation regarding the union’s hosting of Test matches.

Verster said the union gave up its right to host last year’s Rugby Championship Test between South Africa and Argentina.

This was done upon request of the South African government to have the game staged at FNB Stadium in Soweto as part of the Mandela Day celebrations.

Verster said he, along with Free State president Lindsay Mould, last month held a meeting with SARU CEO Jurie Roux and president Oregan Hoskins to get assurance that a Springbok Test would soon return to Bloemfontein.

SARU offered them the opportunity to host a match between the Barbarians and Springboks in June this year.

But Verster said they turned
it down as they felt it was not a proper Test match and would like to offer more to their fans.

He said SARU then offered them a Rugby Championship Test in 2015, which they again turned down, eventually opting for the assurance of getting either the All Blacks or Australia in 2016’s Rugby Championship.

Explaining the decision to turn down a Rugby Championship Test in 2015, Verster wrote:

“The problem with 2015 is that it is a World Cup year. There will be no incoming Tests of teams from the Northern Hemisphere during June and in a World Cup year the big Southern Hemisphere teams typically do not pick their best players for the tour to South Africa. That makes the three Tests a bit of an unattractive proposition for Free State Rugby.

“It is important that fans understand that there is an huge guarantee of about R8m which must be paid in order to host a Test.

“Due to the quality of the match it is felt that the stadium won’t be sold out which means that ticket prices would have to be adapted. It means ticket prices could be as much as R400-R500 per ticket to ensure that Free State Rugby meets the guarantee. Not only is Free State Rugby very serious about its financial situation (which looked very good in 2013), but also the financial affordability of big rugby matches for its supporters.

“Taking all this into consideration, and due to the quality of the match, the management of Free State Rugby put pressure on SARU to get a “big” Test in 2016. It will therefore be a Test between the Springboks and either the All Blacks or Wallabies.”

Verster believes it is the best option to keep their fans happy.

2014 Springbok fixtures:

Incoming Series:

June 7: Springboks v World XV (Newlands, Cape Town – TBC)
June 14: Springboks v Wales (Kings Park, Durban)
June 21: Springboks v Wales (Mbombela Stadium, Nelspruit)
June 28: Springboks v Scotland (Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium, Port Elizabeth)

Rugby Championship:

August 16: Springboks v Argentina (Loftus Versfeld, Pretoria)
August 23: Argentina v Springboks (Venue TBC)
September 6: Australia v Springboks (Patersons Stadium, Perth)
September 13: New Zealand v Springboks (Westpac Stadium, Wellington)
September 27: Springboks v Australia (Newlands, Cape Town)
October 4: Springboks v New Zealand (Ellis Park, Johannesburg)

Outgoing Tour:

November 8: Ireland v Springboks (AVIVA Stadium, Dublin)
November 15: England v Springboks (Twickenham, London)
November 22: Italy v Springboks (Venue TBC)
November 29: Wales v Springboks (Millennium Stadium, Cardiff)-Sport24

Mugabe to boycott summit if wife not invited


Harare – Zimbabwe’s government said on Wednesday it would boycott a summit between the European Union and African Union in Brussels next week, if President Robert Mugabe’s wife was not granted a visa to travel with him.

Mugabe and his wife Grace are under an EU travel ban imposed in 2002, after a government crackdown on the opposition and the eviction of white farmers from agricultural land.

The EU had waived the visa ban on Mugabe, who is the vice-chairperson of the AU, saying it was not bound by the ban when hosting large international conferences.

But his wife was denied a visa, Foreign Ministry permanent secretary Joey Bimha told dpa.

“We are expecting the Southern African Development Community and the AU to ensure that she gets a travel visa.

Otherwise, the summit has to be postponed,” he said.

In addition to vice-chairing the AU, Mugabe vice-chairs the SADC, making him “very crucial for issues of Africa,” Bimha said.

EU ambassador to Zimbabwe Aldo Dell’Ariccia said he would comment on the matter on Thursday.

The EU lifted most sanctions on Zimbabwe in February, but those against Mugabe remained in place.
SAPA

Marikana commanders not experienced- cop


Pretoria – Police commanders at the Marikana labour unrest in August 2012 were not experienced in crowd management and unrest scenarios, North West police air wing commander Lieutenant Colonel Salmon Vermaak said on Wednesday.
“Of the people that I know, it is [Lieutenant Colonel Joseph] Merafe… he was the most experienced person in the public order policing unit and Brigadier Adriaan Calitz,” Vermaak told the Farlam Commission of Inquiry in Pretoria.

“Other people from Pretoria that I met, I believe they had never been exposed to the experiences in the mines,” said Vermaak.

He was led in giving evidence at the commission by evidence leader Kameshni Pillay.

Vermaak was asked to explain whether his questioning of the police officers’ experience also extended to North West deputy provincial commissioner William Mpembe, who was overall operational commander during the unrest at Lonmin’s platinum mining operations at Marikana, near Rustenburg in North West.

He responded: “During my time as commander of the public order policing unit he was never involved at any time in any incident where we were dealing with unrest in mines.

“Whether he was involved in mines unrest after I left, I would not be able to respond to that.”

Vermaak said the commanders of the elite tactical response unit deployed at Marikana in the days leading up to the 16 August 2012, mass shooting were also inexperienced in public order policing which specialised in crowd management.

“The commanders are people who have never been involved in such violence,” he said.

Vermaak said it was peculiar that the special task force’s Lieutenant Colonel Duncan Scott was assigned to draw up the intervention plan, which inadvertently resulted in the 16 August shootings.

“It was strange to me that somebody from the task force was brought in to draw a plan for an incident that has public unrest,” he said.

‘Scott plan’

The police strategy implemented prior to the 16 August shootings was referred to by police officers as the “Scott plan”.

On Tuesday Vermaak told the inquiry the SA Police Service wanted him to take the blame for the deaths of the Marikana miners.

“In a consultation with the police legal team, it was mentioned to me that I am going to carry the responsibility for the people that were killed at koppie three,” he said.

“I realised that I should note everything down in my diary regarding meetings and discussions we were having [regarding Marikana incidents].”

Vermaak said he made it clear to the police legal team, national commissioner Riah Phiyega, and North West commissioner Zukiswa Mbombo that he would stick only to the facts.

Speaking in Afrikaans, Vermaak said he was disappointed by his superiors’ stance.

“I was disappointed that all of a sudden a finger was being pointed at me, with all my years of public order policing. I was being directly held responsible for the death of these people,” said Vermaak.

“Where do they base the allegations against me? It is not acceptable. Did they give me any other briefing about any other plan that was going to be implemented?”

He cited numerous flaws within the SAPS intervention methods to manage a lengthy wage-related protest at the Lonmin mine.

Shooting

On 16 August 2012, police shot dead 34, mostly protesting miners, at the mine.

At least 78 miners were also wounded when police fired on a group gathered at a hill near the mine while trying to disarm and disperse them.

In the preceding week, 10 people, including two policemen and two security guards, were killed in the strike-related violence.

The commission, chaired by retired Judge Ian Farlam, is probing the 44 deaths.

Unlike all other police officers who have testified at the inquiry, Vermaak is being led in giving his testimony by evidence leaders.

Other police officers have been led by SAPS lawyers at the commission. Vermaak will be cross-examined by the police lawyers.

SAPA

Girl,6, shot in a protest


Johannesburg – A 6-year-old girl was shot and wounded during a protest in Lorraine village near Ga-Sekororo, Limpopo police said on Wednesday.
The girl was grazed on the back of her head when police fired shots during the protest on Tuesday, said police spokesperson Hangwani Mulaudzi.

“Her mother claims that the child was shot by the police during the protest,” Mulaudzi said.

The Independent Police Investigative Directorate (IPID) would determine who was responsible for the girl’s injury.

The 6-year-old was admitted to the Sekororo Hospital for observation, said Limpopo health department spokesperson Adele van der Linde.

Van der Linde said she was not severely wounded but medical observation was necessary due to her age and because it was a head injury.

Service delivery in the area had been compromised due to the protest in the area.

“It is a tense situation as the protesters are blocking many of the roads,” said Mulaudzi.

“Police are doing everything in their means to control the situation,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Sekororo Hospital and the Lorraine Clinic were also disrupted due to the protest, said Van der Linde.

“Some of the staff were prohibited from entering the clinic, but the clinics are still open,” she said.

Mulaudzi said police were on the scene.

SAPA

Sixth Edition of SASOL League gets underway


Johannesburg-The South African Football Association (SAFA) together with partners SASOL today launched the 2014 Edition of the Sasol Women’s League.SASOL together with SAFA, have undertaken to plough huge resources into women football and in the process use the sport as a tool to empower and develop young women.

In the past years, the partnership between SASOL and SAFA has witnessed massive growth in women football which culminated in Banyana Banyana qualifying for the London Olympics. The Sasol sponsorship has also enabled the development of a competitive women’s football league around the country.

The Sasol League comprises of 16 teams participating in each of the nine provincial leagues.

One province kicked off their league programme this past week (22-23 March); three provinces will commence their league programme this coming weekend (29-30 March) with the remaining five kicking off their programme next weekend (5-6 April 2014).

In addition to the weekly fixtures taking place around the country over the next nine months, SASOL and SAFA representatives will visit provinces to host a one day women’s football promotional event, which include trial sessions for players and a coaches’ workshop.

The trials are open to all players in the SASOL League. This will allow Senior National Women’s Team technical staff to identify new talent for possible selection to SASOL Banyana Banyana squad.

“We are excited to witness yet another bumper start of the 6th Edition of the Sasol League and we look forward to providing all girls with an equal opportunity to be spotted for national team selection,” said Mr. Dumisani Mbokane, Sasol Sponsorship Specialist.

The Sasol League reaches the peak with the hosting of the National Championships to be held from 8-14 December 2014 in Port Elizabeth where the nine provincial winners compete to determine the 2014 Sasol League national champions.

“This is an exciting chapter in women’s football. With the arrival of new Banyana Banyana coach Vera Pauw, the launch of this year’s Sasol League, again offers an opportunity to identify new talent.

“Our aim is to qualify for the 2015 FIFA Women’s World Cup, the 2016 Rio Olympics and of course, dominate African women’s football,” said SAFA Chair of Competitions and Women’s Football committees, Ms. Nomsa Mahlangu.-TDN
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