Child murder case postponed


Johannesburg – A man accused of killing his one-year-old son appeared in the Galeshewe Magistrate’s Court in Kimberley on Friday, the National Prosecuting Authority said.

The case was postponed to 24 February for further investigation, said Northern Cape NPA spokesperson Mashudu Malabi.

Sylvester Modise, 27, was arrested on 12 January after the burnt remains of his son were found in a trench in Galeshewe.

Police suspected that Modise reported him missing the day after the murder in an attempt to mislead them.

The toddler’s mother raised questions after she told police she did not believe Modise’s story about the boy going missing, said spokesperson Olebogeng Tawana at the time.

Tawana said the burnt body had been found wrapped in a towel.

SAPA

Lack of sanitation a crime contributor


Cape Town – Better sanitation for informal settlement dwellers could reduce Khayelitsha’s crime problems, a local activist told the Khayelitsha commission of inquiry on Friday.

Social Justice Coalition (SJC) activist Phumeza Mlungwana was the last person to take the stand in week one of the commission’s hearings on claims of police inefficiency in the area, in Cape Town.

“People would be less vulnerable to crime… if sanitation is sorted and the relationship between sanitation and crime is addressed,” Mlungwana said.

Many people were robbed while walking to communal toilets or to the bushes at night to relieve themselves, she told the commissioners, retired Judge Kate O’Regan and Advocate Vusi Pikoli.

Mlungwana told the packed hall in Khayelitsha, where the hearings are being held, about her own experiences with crime.

“I’ve been robbed a couple of time going to school… to the Sanlam Centre,” she said.

Reporting the robberies was futile, as she did not expect the criminals to be arrested or her belongings to be recovered.

Earlier, the commission heard from the relatives of two men killed by vigilantes.

Nomakhuma Bontshi, the aunt of 30-year-old Andile Ntsholo, who was necklaced in May 2012, broke down and dabbed away tears with a blue handkerchief after telling commissioners her story. Necklacing involves placing a car tyre over someone’s head and setting it alight.

The night before her nephew was found dead in B-section, residents gathered at her sister’s house and told them they would be packing his bags and forcing him out of the area because he was accused of stealing cellphones from residents, Bontshi said. His charred body was found in Khayelitsha the next morning.

“The police arrived at our house the next morning and asked us who could have done this and we said we don’t know.”

She said it was the first and last time they heard from police.

“We never got around to find out everything from the police. All I know is God will reveal who did this.”

Interaction with police

Norman Arendse, for the police, asked her why she had not contacted the police when her nephew’s neighbours threatened to evict him.

“Because the residents were so angry…. We thought even the police wouldn’t be able to do anything about it,” she answered.

Harare resident Mzoxolo Tame was the next to take the stand. Tame’s cousin Xolisile was killed in January last year after allegedly being caught breaking into a house.

Tame told the commission of his encounter with the investigating officer, shortly before his cousin’s body was identified. He described the officer as rude, dismissive and disrespectful.

When asked what the detective told him, he quoted the officer.

“He said, I quote: ‘The laaitie [youth] was caught with his body halfway through the window of a house and he was moered [beaten up]’,” said Tame.

A woman, her son, and another man were arrested and later released on bail. Tame said he had yet to hear from Harare police how far the case had progressed.

He told O’Regan and Pikoli how he felt about the attitude of police officers in Harare in general.

“They don’t understand their fundamental responsibility… They think they are doing the community a favour,” Tame said.

“Their attitude is not that of public servants.”

The commission was set up to probe allegations of police inefficiency in Khayelitsha following several mob justice killings, allegedly as a result of residents’ frustrations with police inaction.

SAPA

18 Limpopo schools to get flush loos


Johannesburg – Eighteen flushing toilets will be installed at a primary school in Chebeng village, Polokwane, where a pupil died in a pit toilet this week.

Deputy Human Settlements Minister Zou Kota-Fredericks said on Friday four toilets had already been built and 16 temporary toilets were brought in for the 190 pupils at the school.

The rest of the toilets were expected to be completed in two weeks.

She was part of the inter-governmental team visiting the Mahlodumela Primary School and the family of six-year-old Michael Komape.

“There is a system in place [to ensure] that the same incident does not happen again. Michael’s death was a wake-up call for us,” she said.

Recovery process

The department had allocated R781m to improve sanitation at 868 schools across the country, she said and the government would also pay for Komape’s funeral.

“We cannot give back their child, but we can be part of their recovery process.”

The pupils and teachers would receive counselling, which the government would pay for.

The pit toilets had since been closed, said Kota-Fredericks.

Equal Education chairperson Yoliswa Dwane said on Thursday that the 2011 National Education Infrastructure Management System Report showed most schools across the country still had inadequate sanitation.

Sanitation

“Of the 24 793 public ordinary schools, 11 450 schools are still using pit latrine toilets and 2 402 schools have no water supply, while a further 2 611 schools have an unreliable water supply.”

Dwane said after more than three years of campaigning by Equal Education, the legally binding regulations for minimum norms and standards for school infrastructure were adopted by Basic Education Minister Angie Motshekga in November 2013.

“The regulations say all schools must have sanitation facilities that are easily accessible to all learners and must provide privacy and security, promote health and hygiene standards and be maintained in good working order.

Tthe SA Human Rights Commission said on Wednesday it would investigate sanitation in schools across Limpopo.

SAPA

2000 bikers gear up for e-toll protest


Johannesburg – About 2 000 motorcyclists will protest against e-tolls in Johannesburg on Saturday, said the city’s metro police.

The protest would start at 09:00 in Wemmer Pan Road, Rosettenville, said metro police spokesperson Wayne Minnaar.

It would proceed to Oak street, the N12 and then the N1. The N3 south and the N12 west would also be affected.

Minnaar warned motorists that traffic would be disrupted.

He said the protest would be monitored until midday.

SAPA

One dead, 1 injured in a car crash


Durban – A man died and one was injured when a truck and two cars collided on the N2 near the Tongaat toll plaza, in KwaZulu-Natal, on Friday evening, paramedics said.

A car collided with the truck, veered off the road and crashed into another car, said Netcare 911 spokesperson Chris Botha.

A man in his 40s was declared dead on the scene and another man suffered minor injuries. He was treated on the scene before taken to hospital.

Traffic on both the north and south bound carriageways was disrupted, said Botha. SAPA

Dept of Education bemoans death of pupils


Johannesburg –  The education department was saddened by the death of two primary school-going brothers, spokesperson Phumla Sekhonyane said on Friday.

The boys from the Nqubela Primary School in Thokoza were killed in a car accident in Ekurhuleni on Friday morning, Sekhonyane said.

Ekurhuleni emergency services spokesperson William Mohale-Ntladi said a car ploughed into the boys at an intersection between Palm Ridge and Eden Park.

Two other schoolboys were critically injured and four other people seriously injured in the accident.

The car allegedly failed to stop at the intersection and hit another car, which then knocked over four boys who were standing on the pavement waiting for their transport to school.

SAPA

Dept of Education bemoans death of pupils


Johannesburg –  The education department was saddened by the death of two primary school-going brothers, spokesperson Phumla Sekhonyane said on Friday.

The boys from the Nqubela Primary School in Thokoza were killed in a car accident in Ekurhuleni on Friday morning, Sekhonyane said.

Ekurhuleni emergency services spokesperson William Mohale-Ntladi said a car ploughed into the boys at an intersection between Palm Ridge and Eden Park.

Two other schoolboys were critically injured and four other people seriously injured in the accident.

The car allegedly failed to stop at the intersection and hit another car, which then knocked over four boys who were standing on the pavement waiting for their transport to school.

SAPA

E-tolls not affected by evacuation


Johannesburg – The SA National Roads Agency Limited (Sanral) system was not affected by the evacuation of its operations centre in Centurion on Friday, it said.

“Another incident has occurred at the Central Operations Centre this afternoon. It should be noted that the system is fully operational and that only the call centre services are affected,” Sanral said in a statement.

Electronic Toll Collection, whose staff occupy the building, would issue a statement later.

Gauteng police said two people had to be quarantined after another anthrax scare at the operations centre.

“The Sanral offices were evacuated after an anthrax scare and we have specialists on the scene to see if the white powder found was anthrax,” said police spokesperson Katlego Mogale.

“Two people have been quarantined and taken to hospital.”

Mogale said more details were not available.

On Tuesday, Sanral said the Gauteng highway tolling system was disrupted when Sanral’s operations centre in Pretoria had to be evacuated.

Spokesperson Vusi Mona could not say how the system was disrupted.

“Our priority is to ensure the safety of the people who work at the central operations centre,” he said at the time.

The Tshwane hazardous material unit was called to the centre on Monday afternoon after a “suspicious envelope containing a white substance” was found on the premises.

This resulted in the shutdown of electricity and the evacuation of the building.

Mona said Sanral took the matter seriously and condemned this type of action because it was “tantamount to sabotage and borders on a very serious crime”.

On Wednesday, Sanral said the substance found in the envelope was not dangerous.

Thirty-seven people were decontaminated and hospitalised as a precaution. All of them had been discharged by Wednesday morning.

At the time, CEO Nazir Alli said the evacuation did not compromise the toll collection process and that the toll gantries remained operational.

SAPA

E-tolls not affected by evacuation


Johannesburg – The SA National Roads Agency Limited (Sanral) system was not affected by the evacuation of its operations centre in Centurion on Friday, it said.

“Another incident has occurred at the Central Operations Centre this afternoon. It should be noted that the system is fully operational and that only the call centre services are affected,” Sanral said in a statement.

Electronic Toll Collection, whose staff occupy the building, would issue a statement later.

Gauteng police said two people had to be quarantined after another anthrax scare at the operations centre.

“The Sanral offices were evacuated after an anthrax scare and we have specialists on the scene to see if the white powder found was anthrax,” said police spokesperson Katlego Mogale.

“Two people have been quarantined and taken to hospital.”

Mogale said more details were not available.

On Tuesday, Sanral said the Gauteng highway tolling system was disrupted when Sanral’s operations centre in Pretoria had to be evacuated.

Spokesperson Vusi Mona could not say how the system was disrupted.

“Our priority is to ensure the safety of the people who work at the central operations centre,” he said at the time.

The Tshwane hazardous material unit was called to the centre on Monday afternoon after a “suspicious envelope containing a white substance” was found on the premises.

This resulted in the shutdown of electricity and the evacuation of the building.

Mona said Sanral took the matter seriously and condemned this type of action because it was “tantamount to sabotage and borders on a very serious crime”.

On Wednesday, Sanral said the substance found in the envelope was not dangerous.

Thirty-seven people were decontaminated and hospitalised as a precaution. All of them had been discharged by Wednesday morning.

At the time, CEO Nazir Alli said the evacuation did not compromise the toll collection process and that the toll gantries remained operational.

SAPA

Seabo High To Become Agricultural School


By Obakeng Maje
Kokomeng-The Department of Agriculture and Rural Development MEC mme Desbo Mohono handed over a food gardening to the school of Seabo high school in Kokomeng village, near Taung.

Seabo high school applied to become an Agricultural school and their approval is still under scrutiny.

The school still waiting for their approval from the relevant authority and MEC Mohono came to hand-over a food gardening and donated some tools to be used like water pipes, wheelbarrow and other items.

North West premier Thandi Modise was part of the celebration and the principal of the school said they are so grateful and crossing fingers for approval.

“We’re so grateful to see MEC Desbo Mohono and premier Modise visiting our school. This really shows that the provincially government cares and we hope our school will be turned into an Agricultural school. We were encouraged by rre Kgopodimetsi to turn our school into an agricultural school as he said we have potential to do so”. Jacqueline Moroke said.

“We are so grateful and as a grade 12 student, I hope this will benefit our school well and we will manage to produce good results. To us agriculture is our future, so this augurs well as we will produce good students in agriculture sector who will take our province forward” Keletso said.

The Head of Department in Agriculture rre Pontsho Mokaila said his department will monitor the school from now on.

“We have inspectors who will visit the school oftenly and we also elected five students and will be trained to make sure the school is in line with the departmnet’s policy” Mokaila said.

The councillor of ward 15 Mogoje Ditshakane also outlines that they are willing to extend the food gardening and will make sure it produces food.

“The garden will produce food and we will extend it so that more space can be used. We would like the community at large to take part and make sure they protect the legacy. This new garden is not only for the school, but each member of the community must take part and make sure the food gardening become successful” he said.

The premier also encouraged everyone to make sure the initiative is implemented wisely.

Modise said: “Taung is one of the best agricultural areas in the province. So let’s make sure we support those who are in charge as the food gardening will produce food not only for pupils in Seabo, but also within the community. I appeal to all business people in Taung to support education and make sure every kid in Taung attend school. With education, nothing can stop you from achieving, so to all parents please take a full responsibility of you child”.

The ceremony was graced by most dignitaries.-TDN
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