PREMIER MAHUMAPELO OFFICIALLY LAUNCHES SETSOKOTSANE PROGRAMME IN MAHIKENG  


Mahikeng- Bokone-Bophirima Premier Supra Mahumapelo will officially launch the versatile transformative programme called Setsokotsane at the Montshioa Stadium in Mahikeng on Friday, 17th October 2014.  

Led by the Premier and all Members of the Executive Council, Setsokotsane will pull all government resources together in a bid to speed up service delivery, eradicate poverty and create a responsive, caring and accountable Government in Bokone-Bophirima.

“Communities often raise concerns about the slow intervention by government, weak interactions with communities and poor monitoring of projects. Setsokotsane programme seeks to respond to such challenges which also include amongst others potholes, water, lights in our streets, housing and crime”, says Premier Mahumapelo. 

Setsokotsane Programme which will be launched in all four Districts of the Province and attended by Community Development Workers, Community Development Practitioners, Expanded Public Works Programme workers, Ward Councillors and Tribal Councils, will be addressed by the Premier.  

The Ngaka Modiri Molema District Launch is scheduled to be held as follows:

Venue: Montshioa Stadium, Mahikeng

Date: Friday 17th October 2014

Time: 09H00
-TDN
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Congo hold Bafana Bafana to a draw


Johannesburg- Bafana Bafana were held to a goalless draw by a revamped Congo Brazzaville side at a pouring Peter Mokaba Stadium on Wednesday night.

The result delayed Bafana Bafana’s celebrations for a place in the finals of the Africa Cup of Nations scheduled for Morocco next year. A win could have guaranteed Shakes Mashaba’s side a place at Africa’s biggest football showpiece and although they remain in the driving seat, those celebrations now remain temporarily on ice.

Bafana Bafana never rose to expectations as Congo man marked most of the key players including Thulani Serero and Tokelo Rantie. Both had to be substituted in the second half as persistent rains made structured play almost impossible.

It was Rantie who made the first foray in the 9th minute but his surge on the byline was cleared by the Congolese.

Congo seemed content trying to disturb Bafana Bafana’s rhythm in the opening minutes and having managed to do so, fashioned some really threatening moments late in the first half.

One such threatening opportunity came in the 35th minute when Congo won a corner and from the resultant kick, captain Senzo Meyiwa who is turning out to be the rock for the revived side, pushed the ball out of danger from the line.

With Congo really looking competitive, Bafana Bafana hardly created meaningful opportunities in the first half as Rantie was caught offside on a number of occasions.

In the second half, the rains which bucketed down Polokwane seemed to increase the tempo and both teams lost possession and in the process created few meaningful chances.

However, Mandla Masango and Kermit Erasmus fashioned some good opportunities but the match was always destined to end in a goalless draw.

Once again, Andile Jali and Dean Furman’s combination was a joy to watch and late in the second half created some great opportunities.

Bafana Bafana remain top of the Group on 8 points, one ahead of second placed Congo.

Their next game is a home fixture against Sudan.-TDN
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Banyana Banyana, Ghana share the spoils


Johannesburg- Banyana Banyana played to a 1-1 draw against Ghana in their second group B African Women’s Championship match in Windhoek, Namibia on Wednesday night.

Coach Vera Pauw made only one change to the team that narrowly lost to Cameroon in the first match on Sunday. Nompumelelo Nyandeni, who registered her 100th cap in national team colours started ahead of Refiloe Jane in the middle of the park.

Nyandeni put on an amazing performance and was voted the Player of the match.

Banyana Banyana started off determined knowing the importance of collecting maximum points. They looked dangerous with veteran striker Portia Modise and Shiwe Nogwanya occasionally threatening upfront.

Captain Janine Van Wyk marshalled the defence with authority, making great tackles and kicking the ball out of danger on more than one occasion in the opening 15 minutes of the match.

With Modise and Nogwanya not allowing the Black Stars of Ghana defenders to bully them, Banyana Banyana got the opening goal in the 18th minute. Nogwanya capitalised on the Ghanaian keeper’s mistake of spilling the ball in the box from Mamello Makhabane’s shot from a set-piece.

Nogwanya made no mistake as she popped up to put the hard running Banyana Banyana in the lead.

The South Africans showed great fighting spirit as they continued to push forward with urgency to get the second goal. Makhabane came close to doubling the lead in the 31st minute with a shot from just outside the box, but the Ghana keeper was alert and parried the ball out of danger.

Ghana levelled the score in optional time, after Elizabeth Cudjoe connected well with a cross from their captain Leticia Zikpi in the box, slotting one past Roxanne Barker.

The tempo in the second half seemed to have slowed down a bit as both teams pushed for the elusive winner.

South Africa face Algeria in their last match of group B this Saturday, 18 October 2014 at 17h00 in which anything less than victory will see them eliminated from a place in the World Cup.-TDN
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Samaritan’s purse to roll out pilot programme on love and care for children


Mahikeng- Operation Christmas Child (OCC) pilot project aimed at bringing back the consciousness of the church to love and care for children targeting 146 000 children countrywide is to be extended to the North West Province for roll out during November.

The first phase of the programme in the province targeting the training of 250 Sunday school teachers and those involved in children’s ministry in using the OCC material as an evangelistic tool, equipping and preparing children who are crying to be people of worth for discipleship. 
On graduation day, the 7500 children from around Mahikeng and Rusteburg  who would have completed the Greatest Journey Discipleship Course will receive books, bibles and christmas shoe gift boxes.

Local OCC team members nominated during recent vison casting briefing meetings held with Pastors are coordinating nomination of sunday school teachers to participate in  the one-day discipleship training supported by the Samarian Purse.

The nondenominational evangelical Christian organization has been providing spiritual and physical aid to hurting people around the world since 1970.-TDN
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Hunt for suspects after Cape Town cop’s mother killed


Johannesburg – Western Cape police were on Wednesday searching for people linked to the murder of a police officer’s mother in Manenburg, Cape Town.

“No arrest has been made as yet,” said Captain FC van Wyk.

The police constable’s 71-year-old mother was shot dead on Monday night and his 44-year-old brother was shot and wounded during the attack.

“Cases of murder and attempted murder are under investigation,” said Van Wyk.

Western Cape community safety MEC Dan Plato said in a statement on Wednesday the man and woman were family members of Constable Lutfie Eksteen, a member of the SA Police Service’s anti-gang and drug unit.

“My sincerest condolences to Constable Eksteen, the extended family, colleagues and friends for their loss and trauma experienced,” said Plato.

He urged the Manenburg community to work with police to arrest the people involved in the attack.

“We cannot allow such a brazen and heinous attack to deter the SAPS to act against unscrupulous criminals, murderers, gang bosses or drug lords,” said Plato.

The provincial community policing board on Wednesday condemned attacks on police officers and their families.

“Our members who under trying circumstances and challenges passionately pursue their duties in serving and protecting our communities,” chairperson Magdalene Moos said in a statement.

“Our men and women in blue are also human beings and an attempt on the lives of these officers is an act of treason and must be dealt with the severest of punishment.”

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Alberton pile-up no accident – MEC


Johannesburg – The deadly multi-vehicle pile-up that occurred on the N12 East near Alberton should not be described as an accident, Gauteng transport MEC Ismail Vadi said on Wednesday.

Vadi said labelling it as an accident was simply a euphemism.

“This is not an accident, it’s a crash,” he said.

Four people were killed when a truck smashed into almost 50 cars in early morning traffic.

At least 16 others were injured.

Describing the crash scene, Vadi said it looked like a bomb had exploded, overturning some cars.

He was speaking at the Charlotte Maxeke Academic Hospital in Johannesburg where three of the injured were being treated.

Two of them were critical while another was in a serious condition.

Trauma specialist Lizel Taylor who was on duty when the crash happened on Tuesday, said they expected a lengthy hospital stay for the injured people.

“Anything could happen from now,” she said.

Three operations

One of the injured people was on a ventilator after sustaining injuries to the chest, heart, and lungs.

Another patient was admitted with heavy bleeding on the head and suffered internal bleeding to the liver and chest.

He had undergone three operations since being admitted shortly after the crash.

The third patient suffered fractures to the arm. He was to undergo brain scans but was alert.

Vadi said exposing the victims to the media would put undue pressure on them.

“Two of them are heavily sedated. They are not in a condition to be seen by the public,” said Vadi, adding that they were in a state of shock.

The crash coincided with “transport month”.

Vadi said it had “put a damper on the campaign and weakened the spirit”.

The truck driver, who has since been arrested for the collision, claimed his brakes failed.

Vadi echoed the sentiments of Transport Minister Dipuo Peters who called for the truck’s owners to also be brought to book if this was found to be true.

“In my personal opinion, there should be dual accountability,” Vadi said.

This was perhaps one of the worst accidents the province had seen.

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Nel: How will house arrest deter other criminals?


Pretoria – A social worker struggled to explain to the North Gauteng High Court on Wednesday how house arrest for Oscar Pistorius would deter other criminals.

“What in this particular matter must the court, in its sentence, deter others from?” prosecutor Gerrie Nel asked Annette Vergeer, who is also a parole officer.

Nel was cross-examining her during sentencing proceedings for Pistorius, who was found guilty last month of the culpable homicide of Reeva Steenkamp, his girlfriend.

“The fact that he used a firearm and that people are negligent with the use of a firearm,” Vergeer replied.

“How can that be what you had in mind? The sentence should deter people from owning legal firearms?” Nel asked.

Correctional supervision

On Tuesday Vergeer presented her report on Pistorius, which the defence had paid her to compile, to the court. In it she recommended that the paralympic athlete get three years of correctional supervision and community service for killing Steenkamp.

She cited prison overcrowding, understaffing, and a lack of facilities for the disabled as the reasons for her recommendation.

“I’m not exactly sure what I should answer on,” Vergeer replied on Wednesday, looking confused.

At one point Nel stood, his chin propped on his hand, as Vergeer rattled off a list that had nothing to do with what he wanted to know. She spoke of an offender’s remorse, crime statistics, and the seriousness of the offence.

When she had finished, Nel said: “You haven’t answered my question.”

Nel finally asked her: “Should people be deterred from firing four shots through a locked door in the middle of the night?”

“In fact so, My Lady,” said Vergeer.

Judge Thokozile Masipa last month found Pistorius guilty of the culpable homicide of Steenkamp, but not guilty of her murder. Pistorius had claimed he thought there was a burglar in his toilet when he fired four shots through the locked door in the early hours of 14 February last year, killing Steenkamp. The State had argued he killed her during an argument.

Masipa found Pistorius guilty of discharging a firearm in public, when he shot from his friend Darren Fresco’s Glock pistol under a table at Tasha’s restaurant in Melrose Arch, Johannesburg, in January 2013.

Pistorius was found not guilty on two firearms-related charges — illegal possession of ammunition, and shooting through the open sunroof of a car with his 9mm pistol while driving with friends in Modderfontein on 30 September 2012.

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Vergeer relied on old Popcru speech


Pretoria – The social worker who testified in Oscar Pistorius’s sentencing proceedings has relied on a nine-year-old speech by a union official to back her claims of horrific prison conditions, the North Gauteng High Court has heard.

The speech was made by the then general secretary of the Police and Prisons Civil Rights Union, Abbey Witbooi, at a conference in February 2005, prosecutor Gerrie Nel told Annette Vergeer.

He was cross-examining her during sentencing proceedings in the North Gauteng High Court, for Pistorius, found guilty of the culpable homicide of his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp.

Recommendation

On Tuesday Vergeer presented her report on Pistorius, which the defence had paid her to compile, to the court. In it she recommended that the paralympic athlete get three years of correctional supervision and community service for killing Steenkamp.

She cited prison overcrowding, understaffing, and a lack of facilities for the disabled as the reasons for her recommendation.

Nel asked Vergeer what Witbooi’s main concern at that conference was.

“The unwillingness or inability of the department to appoint entry-level staff, as a union official would do,” he said, answering his own question.

Nel asked her if she had sent a written request to correctional services for information on prison conditions.

“I didn’t get a response to my written request. I was told they didn’t want to be exposed,” Vergeer replied.

She said she interviewed an official over the phone.

‘Irresponsible’

Earlier, Nel accused Vergeer of not knowing how prisons are run.

“What I find very interesting that you want to come to court and deal with conditions in prison and you don’t know how the prison is run. How can you do that?” Nel asked her.

“I find it so irresponsible that you would come to court and give an opinion but you don’t know anything about the correctional services department and you’re employed by another state department.”

Vergeer responded: “It is an opinion My Lady, from experience.”

Nel said it was “worrying” that Vergeer testified on conditions in prisons but did not verify information she obtained.

She told the court she called the social workers’ office in a prison and spoke to a person, who did not want to be named, on the conditions but did not verify the information.

Nel said Vergeer stated it as a fact in her report that prisons did not have facilities like baths for physical disabled people.

She conceded that she never specifically asked if there were baths.

Nel asked Vergeer if she was aware that prisoners could write and request a single cell and that medical staff could also write to authorities suggesting a single cell for a prisoner.

He said that there was a regulation that no medical devices, like prosthesis, be taken away from prisoners.

Vergeer said she did not know that.

“I’m just worried that you come to court as a probation officer in private business and complain about the conditions of prison, but you don’t know this,” said Nel.

“My lady I don’t know every single act,” Vergeer said.

She said she testified on her experience and what she had been told in interviews.

On 12 September Judge Thokozile Masipa found Pistorius guilty of the culpable homicide of his girlfriend, model and law graduate Steenkamp, but not guilty of her murder.

Pistorius had claimed he thought there was a burglar in his toilet when he fired four shots through the locked door in the early hours of 14 February last year, killing Steenkamp. The State had argued he killed her during an argument.

Masipa found Pistorius guilty of discharging a firearm in public, when he shot from his friend Darren Fresco’s Glock pistol under a table at Tasha’s restaurant in Melrose Arch, Johannesburg, in January 2013.

Pistorius was found not guilty on two firearms-related charges – illegal possession of ammunition, and shooting through the open sunroof of a car with his 9mm pistol while driving with friends in Modderfontein on 30 September 2012.

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Nel: Prisons can deal with disabled people


Pretoria – Prisons have the necessary facilities to deal with people who have similar disabilities to Oscar Pistorius, the North Gauteng High Court heard on Wednesday.

“Disability, we’ve checked, correctional services do have facilities. Psychological services, we’ve [also] checked,” prosecutor Gerrie Nel said.

Nel was cross-examining social worker and probation officer Annette Vergeer on a report she compiled that said the facilities in prisons were not adequately equipped for people with disabilities.

Vergeer said there were not enough psychologists in prisons.

However, Nel said that according to the law, prisoners were allowed to bring in their own psychologists.

Vergeer said because of factors including Pistorius’s disability and state of mind, there were limitations placed on him.

“There are limitations. There are many factors… other than his disability and state of mind like his personality, vulnerability and all other aspects,” she said.

Vergeer admitted that she did not have any statistics on people with disabilities in prison.
Nel said about 128 disabled people were incarcerated annually.

Vergeer presented her report on Tuesday, which the defence paid her to compile.

She said that prisons did not have facilities like baths for physically disabled people and that the prisons were overcrowded and prisoners had to share group cells.

On 12 September, Judge Thokozile Masipa convicted Pistorius of culpable homicide on for the Valentine’s Day 2013, shooting of his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp in his Pretoria townhouse.

He was found not guilty of murdering Steenkamp.

Pistorius shot Steenkamp through the locked door of the toilet, apparently thinking she was an intruder about to emerge and attack him. She was hit in the hip, arm, and head.

Pistorius was found guilty of firing a pistol under a table at Tasha’s restaurant in Johannesburg in January 2013 and not guilty of shooting through the open sunroof of a car in Modderfontein on 30 September 2012.

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Winnie to contest divorce – report


Johannesburg – ANC stalwart Winnie Madikizela-Mandela has claimed in papers filed in the Eastern Cape High Court in Mthatha that her divorce from former president Nelson Mandela was fraudulently obtained, the Daily Dispatch reported on Wednesday.

She claimed her marriage certificate was also a fraud and sought to have the divorce order rescinded.

“The certificate is clearly a fraudulent document and is quite obvious that [during] the divorce hearing the court was misled and the divorce order was obtained through fraud or misrepresentation,” she submitted in her affidavit, according to the newspaper.

She claimed she was not in the country when the divorce was finalised, and only saw the divorce order for the first time in August this year.

She pointed out inaccuracies in the marriage certificate, which the newspaper had seen a copy of. The certificate was issued by the then Republic of Transkei for the marriage in June 1958.

Madikizela-Mandela said the Transkei Republic did not exist in 1958 as “independence” was only granted in 1976. The signatures on the certificate did not belong to her or Mandela, she alleged.

“Our marriage officer was Reverend Gamndana and not GGK Madikiza,” as stated on the certificate.

The certificate stated they were married in Bizana, and that community of property was excluded.

Madikizela-Mandela contended that the court never ordered the forfeiture of the Qunu property as they never engaged in any settlement negotiations on their properties.

In her application, Madikizela-Mandela challenged Mandela’s estate, seeking the rights to his home in Qunu, Eastern Cape.

The 78-year-old who was Mandela’s second wife for 38 years, was left out of Mandela’s will. Mandela died in December last year.

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