Tickets for Bafana Bafana vs Nigeria now on sale


Cape Town– Tickets for the upcoming 2015 Africa Cup of Nations qualifier between South Africa and Nigeria scheduled for September 10 in Cape Town are now on sale.

Tickets went on sale at Computicket, Shoprite and Checkers Shoprite outlets on Tuesday and they are going for R50, R100 and R150.

The match will be played at Cape Town Stadium on Wednesday, September 10 and kicks off at 20h00.
“Bafana Bafana will first travel to Sudan on September 3 for their opening 2015 Africa Cup of Nations qualifying match against Sudan on September 5. They fly back soon after the game and will arrive on 6 September before heading straight to Cape Town to continue preparations for the match against African champions, the Super Eagles” Bafana Bafana spokesperson Dominic Chimhavi.
-TDN
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Woman held after husband stabbed to death


Kuruman – A 25-year-old woman allegedly stabbed her husband to death at Magojaneng near Hotazel in Kuruman, Northern Cape police said on Friday.

“It is alleged that the woman stabbed the deceased in the neck with a knife,” said Lt Olebogeng Tawana.

He said the woman and her 49-year-old husband apparently had an argument on Thursday night.

“She grabbed a knife and stabbed him in the neck. The victim died while (being) admitted to the local hospital.”

He said the woman was arrested on Friday, when she visited the hospital.

She has been charged with murder and appeared in the Mothibistad Magistrate’s Court on Monday.

Sapa

Teacher suspended for porn video


Kimberley – A Nothern Cape teacher has been suspended after he allegedly sent a pornographic video, via his cellphone, of himself playing with his penis to several learners at a school where he teaches in Kuruman.
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Tied up, assaulted and left for dead


Kimberley – Police are investigating a case of attempted murder after an elderly man was found assaulted, tied up and left for dead at a Barkly West resort on Wednesday morning.
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Wrong patient gets heart op


Kimberley- An 83-year-old woman who was being treated for a respiratory infection at Mediclinic Kimberley underwent heart surgery when she was mistaken for another patient, Beeld reported on Wednesday.

Mediclinic spokeswoman Denise Coetzee told the newspaper a misunderstanding between two specialists led to Rita du Plessis being operated on, on July 25 this year.

She was in the same ward as another elderly woman and both were patients of the same physician.

“The physician requested the surgeon to take his patient to theatre for a procedure to remove excessive moisture around the heart,” she was quoted as saying.

“Unfortunately, he got confused with their surnames and he gave the wrong patient’s name to the surgeon over the phone.”

Coetzee told Beeld that Du Plessis was not able to give permission for the operation herself and the surgeon had to contact her husband.

During ward rounds, the physician realised his mistake when he saw that Du Plessis was not there and he was told she was in surgery.

Beeld reported that the physician contacted the family to apologise and after the surgery the surgeon called Du Plessis’s family to tell them the operation was a success.

According to the report, the hospital apologised for the confusion and the hospital, the surgeon, and the anaesthetist did not charge for the operation.

Sapa

Cops had ‘licence to kill’ -Mpofu


Johannesburg – Former mineral resources minister Susan Shabangu gave police a “licence to kill” at Marikana in August 2012, the Farlam Commission of Inquiry heard on Tuesday.

Dali Mpofu, for Lonmin miners wounded and arrested during the unrest at Lonmin’s platinum mining operations at Marikana, near Rustenburg in the North West, referred Shabangu to a statement she made in April 2008.

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Generations dispute ‘like apartheid’


Johannesburg – The dispute between the SABC, production company MMSV and the fired Generation soapie actors, is being handled in an apartheid manner, renowned actor and playwright John Kani said on Tuesday.

“It carries the residue of an apartheid-style master, servant relationship,” Kani said in Johannesburg.

The dispute between the SABC, production company MMSV and the fired Generation soapie actors, is being handled in an apartheid manner, renowned actor and playwright John Kani said.
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Zuma will face protest until he pays


Mbuyiseni Ndlozi says the EFF is demanding that President Jacob Zuma own up to his wrongs.

The protest action of the EFF last Thursday has received mixed reaction from the ruling party, which can be summarised as mere reflections of a basic intellectual bankruptcy. It is a weak understanding of democracy and how it should be protected when under threat.

ANC spokesman Zizi Kodwa and secretary general Gwede Mantashe have come out proposing two things over the weekend.

On the one hand, Mantashe is proposing that Parliament must move to Pretoria, something the EFF actually put forward for discussion to Parliament just a day before President Jacob Zuma was decisively told to #PayBackTheMoney.

The EFF did this due to the cost of running state institutions. Parliament being in Cape Town means you actually maintain three houses for Zuma – in Pretoria, Cape Town and Nkandla. Ministers and their deputies must also have houses in both cities. In addition, we have the flights between these cities of not just a minister, but their staff complements as well, weekly, sometimes even three to four times a week.

But Mantashe wants Parliament to move to Pretoria so that police can respond speedily to Members of Parliament who refuse to accept non-answers from the ANC president.

This is the worst manifestation of war hunger that has come from an ANC leader of his stature.

His sense is that those police should have ignored all the laws of the country and physically removed MPs.

Kodwa on the other hand, speaking to Drum magazine, was at pains trying to reconstruct parliamentary practice. Kodwa proposes that it must be possible to expel MPs. Kodwa wants to do to the EFF what he and ANC leadership did to Julius Malema – expel us for asking Zuma to pay back the money as instructed by the office of the public protector.

It looked like a public relations nightmare of catastrophic proportions. If indeed this is their response to the EFF protest, then the ANC is out of ideas. What is of significant interest is not so much the dictatorial turn inherent in their response.

Instead we must ask how the ANC got to this point.

Before answering this question, we must first underscore a few facts: The EFF did nothing unconstitutional on that day because protest is part of a constitutional right; the EFF chose this route because Zuma had so undermined the rule of law and evaded accountability that only protest, and not violence or war, could sharply raise the public demand of the truth; the public protector found that Zuma built a private clinic, a spaza shop, a swimming pool, chicken run and a cattle kraal – all of which have nothing to do with security – using public money. These items cost the people of South Africa hundreds of millions of rand.

Parliamentary procedure, rules and decorum failed to hold him accountable. Above all, Zuma did not even stick to the deadlines of the directives of the public protector’s report. Thuli Madonsela told him to simply repay the money, and an expected lawful response to such a directive is to say when will he be paying the money.

Citizens resort to protest when a person as powerful as the president has undermined all avenues of accountability and the law itself.

Zuma, as president, has a duty to comply and protect the constitution. The painful reality that day was that the ANC failed to provide leadership or direction. And its failure is not necessarily manifested by Baleka Mbete as the presiding officer, or even by the Sergeant of Arms from whom the EFF refused to take instructions, but by the culture of undermining the rule of law steeped in ANC officials in government.

The ANC has created itself as a group of people who cannot be held accountable, where they have turned the systems of accountability toothless against its key leaders.

This is why Zuma came to Parliament, the highest legislative gathering in South Africa, still carrying the same attitude. Unfortunately for him and the ANC, this time they found a different opposition.

Together with the office of the public protector, the EFF gave South Africa a wake-up call. The EFF said no one must think of themselves as beyond the scrutiny of the people.

 

Zuma will face protest from the EFF benches each time he comes and does not tell us when is he paying back the money. Zuma is not above the law.

* Mbuyiseni Ndlozi is the spokesperson for the Economic Freedom Fighters.

** The views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of Independent Newspapers.
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Report of SSA misleading – govt


Johannesburg – A weekend report on the State Security Agency employing the children of ministers and politically connected people is misleading, government said on Tuesday.

“It was quite misleading for the newspaper to report on few children, compared to the size of the enrolment at the [State Security] academy,” spokesperson Phumla Williams said in a statement.

“All citizens have the constitutional right to apply for any employment, as long as they meet the requirements – even if it is within the public service.”

She said the report by the Sunday Times was mischievous because it insinuated that the agency had become an employment agency for the children of ministers and other high-profile officials due to political nepotism.

“This report actually misleads the public and creates an impression that most of the students attending the academy are the children of politicians. In fact, this faceless report is far from the truth,” Williams said.

The newspaper reported that according to an intelligence document, the children of Minister in the Presidency Jeff Radebe, Defence Minister Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula and National Assembly Speaker Baleka Mbete were hand-picked for the intelligence academy.

An unnamed insider told the publication there was no recruitment process that allowed the agency to choose the best candidates.

The Sunday Times did not respond to a request for comment.

SAPA

Mpuma molester receives suspended sentence


Mbombela – An Mpumalanga man accused of raping his 5-year-old niece was handed a suspended sentence after his mother unintentionally contaminated evidence.

The man, 43, who cannot be named to protect the identity of the victim, was sentenced in the Nelspruit Regional Court on Tuesday.

He was arrested in 24 January 2011 after his brother’s child reported she was raped on 23 January.

He pleaded not guilty to rape, but was found guilty of sexual assault after Magistrate Erwin Sithole told the court the charge had changed to sexual assault.

He said the accused’s mother unintentionally tampered with evidence by using her fingers when examining the child’s private parts.

Sithole sentenced the man to four years’ imprisonment, which was suspended for five years.

He said the accused’s name would be placed in the register of sexual offenders.

SAPA