Friday, July 2, 2010

SA to use WCup experience to improve housing delivery





Thursday, 01 July 2010 15:06

JOHANNESBURG - The department of human settlements will use the experience gained during construction of World Cup stadiums to improve the delivery of houses by 2030, Housing Minister Tokyo Sexwale said on Thursday.

“I have declared that by 2030 children who are born this year should be able to access houses and flats,” Sexwale said at press conference at Soccer City outside Johannesburg.

Instead of building stadiums and airports, his department would intensify its delivery of houses.

Sexwale said his businesses had benefited from the construction of the Moses Mabhida Stadium in Durban. In return, the businesses would build more than 50,000 houses as a social investment.

“We are changing our stadiums to houses, we take advantage of Fifa project management skills and use it for our people.”

Sexwale, who is also on Fifa’s committee against racism, said South Africa was one of the best examples of the fight against racism in soccer as the country had defeated discrimination.

He applauded the fact that there had been no reported racism related incidents during the World Cup.

“Although there have been no incidents, this campaign reminds us that we shouldn’t discriminate against each other because of the different shapes of nose, hair and shades of skin,” Sexwale said.

“This country was expelled from Fifa for racism and now we are making this declaration against racism while the country is hosting the Fifa World Cup.”

Federico Addiecho, the head of corporate social responsibility for Fifa, said team captains would read messages against racism before the start of all quarterfinal matches.

“The captains will be reading the message out of the rainbow nation to the world,” he said.

Fifa spokesman Nicolas Maingot said it had not taken any disciplinary steps against Nigeria and France for political interference in football.

He said it was too early to make any announcements about the two teams situations.

Fifa received a letter from the Nigerian government on Wednesday night saying that the national team would be suspended from participating in football competitions for two years.

“We only received formal notification from Nigeria last night, we are still not sure about the French situation,” Maingot said.

Nigeria President Goodluck Jonathan ordered the team on Wednesday to sit out international competition for two years as punishment for its poor showing.

On Wednesday, French lawmakers summoned coach Raymond Domenech and football federation president Jean-Pierre Escalettes to answer questions on how the country’s World Cup campaign went wrong.

France, winner of the 1998 World Cup and runner-up in 2006, failed to qualify for the second round of the tournament and suffered a humiliating 2-1 defeat to South Africa in the opening round.

- Sapa

The Citizen

Comments by Sonny

The ANC could not succeed in 16 years, what makes them different because of the World Cup?

They live in a dream land based on the Alice in Wonderlands forest!

Which country gives people houses for free?

They must earn and pay for them!

Hands in plastic bag: Cops' grisly mystery



Hands in plastic bag: Cops' grisly mystery

July 02 2010 at 11:04AM

By Poloko Tau

A dog running through the streets of Doornkop with a human hand clutched in its jaws - this was the first of three gruesome discoveries on Thursday that has Soweto detectives baffled.

By the afternoon, a handless male body and a pair of mutilated hands had been found in different parts of Doornkop, leaving the community shocked and children traumatised.

Children had spotted the dog in Doornkop's Block 2, dragging a strange object, just before 9am.

Residents said they were called by the children after they saw the dog drop the hand in the street.

Police were called and another hand was soon found among garbage in a nearby field bordering Obed Mosiane Primary School. The community uses the area as an illegal dump.

Police were called and another hand was soon found among garbage in a nearby field bordering Obed Mosiane Primary School. The community uses the area as an illegal dump.

"One hand looked like it had been chopped across the palm while the other one had been cut from the wrist. The wounds both looked fairly fresh," a witness said.

"They both looked like adult hands, and now the question is: whose hands could they be? We're scared and shocked by this grisly find in our neighbourhood."

With the pair of hands in a plastic bag, police now had a mystery to solve - who did they belong too?

There was also the possibility that the person whose hands had been chopped off could still be alive.

The mystery was partially solved when a group of boys playing soccer in Block 5, 2km away, stumbled on yet another grisly find.

"It looks like one of the boys kicked the ball into the mealie fields and ran to fetch it. Then he fell and landed on the naked body of a man," said police spokesperson Warrant Officer Kay Makhubela.

Makhubela confirmed that the body, which was found at about 2pm, had no hands. The mutilated body had several wounds to the head which had disfigured the face.

There were also wounds around the neck and in the shoulder area, which police said appeared to have been caused by a sharp object.

Makhubela said the body and the wounds looked recent, but he would not comment on what police thought of the circumstances around the killing. They would also not say whether the deceased was killed elsewhere and the body dumped.

With the victim still unidentified, police have urged people with missing male family members in their 30s to check with them at the Dobsonville police station.

They said they were investigating a case of murder.

No arrests had been made by on Thursday night.

This article was originally published on page 1 of The Star on July 02, 2010

IOL News

Comments by Sonny

Was the man caught stealing or did the perpetrators want to sell the body parts?

These murderers must be brought to book, soon.

Opposition give NPA thumbs up





2010-07-02 18:15


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NPA: Selebi ruling a reflection of justice
Selebi 'contradicted himself'


Johannesburg - Opposition political parties, the Democratic Alliance, Freedom Front Plus, Independent Democrats and the African Christian Democratic Party, on Friday commended the successful prosecution of former police chief Jackie Selebi.

Selebi was found guilty of corruption and acquitted on a charge of defeating the ends of justice by the High Court in Johannesburg on Friday afternoon.

The DA said justice was served with the verdict.

"[His] successful prosecution speaks highly of a healthy criminal justice system that is impartial and fair and that our democracy is certainly safe," said DA spokesperson Dianne Kohler-Barnard in a statement.

She said Selebi had become the first Interpol president to be found guilty of corruption, which was an "extreme embarrassment to our country".

The verdict also highlighted the problem of corruption at the very highest levels of South Africa's government where cadre deployment had long placed dishonest individuals in positions of power and authority.

"It is particularly unacceptable in the police service, as the police are the very people charged with enforcing the law and if the person heading that institution is corrupt, then the example set is most dangerous."

For South Africa's top cop to be found guilty of corruption was an enormous indictment on those who put him there, Barnard said.

The FF Plus said the Selebi case had seriously damaged South Africa and its reputation abroad.

The party's leader Pieter Mulder said the FF Plus had in 2006 requested then president Thabo Mbeki to appoint a judicial commission to investigate the allegations of Selebi's involvement with organised crime.

"If Mbeki had acted earlier, the state could have saved millions of rands and the case could already have been concluded."

The guilty finding sent a strong message to people in the government service involved in corruption that that sort of activity would not be tolerated by the legal system.

'Strong message'

His sentiments were echoed by ID leader Patricia de Lille who said: "This sends out a very strong message to all the corrupt leaders in our country that no one is above the law".

She said the court had proven again that where there was corruption on the part of leaders, and those cases made it into the courts, justice would be delivered.

"The fact that the judge made it very clear that [former NPA boss] Vusi Pikoli’s evidence was impeccable means that once again Pikoli has been vindicated and he has been shown to be a man of integrity."

The ACDP agreed that the judgment vindicated Pikoli, whose decision to go ahead with Selebi's case eventually led to his sacking as NPA head.

Steve Swart, ACDP spokesperson, commended the NPA for acting independently, free from political interference and "without fear, favour or prejudice" in the case.

"It is regrettable that the level of corruption in our nation reached right up to the level of national police commissioner.

"This is a severe embarrassment to our nation at a time when the eyes of the world are on South Africa during the Fifa World Cup, particularly because Selebi was not only our police chief, but also president of Interpol."

- SAPA

News24.Com.



Comments by Sonny

Selebi, you could fool a lot of people a lot of the time, but you could not fool all the people all of the time!

You deserve to be behind bars for a long, long time!

Pity Mbeki and the others are not going to join you there!

Rasool to take up US post






2010-07-02 17:06


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Johannesburg - Former Western Cape premier Ebrahim Rasool has been appointed ambassador designate in the United States, the US embassy said on Friday.

"We look forward to his arrival in Washington DC," the US embassy statement said.

"Contrary to published reports... the United States' acceptance of the nomination of an ambassador-designate has concluded between the United States and South Africa."

This came as allegations of improper dealings between Rasool and a former Cape Argus reporter surfaced this week.

The Argus reported on Wednesday that its former political reporter, Ashley Smith, had confessed in an affidavit to the National Prosecuting Authority that he had worked for a public relations company which received government work while Rasool was the province's premier and that he received payment to spin stories to favour Rasool.

- SAPA

News24.Com

Comments by Sonny

What has happened to the appointment of Mac Maharaj's appointment as SA Ambassador to the US?

Has he been left out in the cold by the ANC?

Rasool is certainly not the right man for the job!

Oh yes, Mac Maharaj appointed 'special envoy' - Times LIVE

DA @ Work 30 June 2010








Call to Action:

Helen Zille has a busy and exciting programme over the course of the World Cup. Follow her tweets on www.twitter.com/HelenZille or her posts on Facebook at www.facebook.com/helenzille.





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Quote of the Week

"Our constitutional negotiators in the mid 1990s considered the concept of "openness" so important that they include it in the first clause of the first chapter of our Constitution. It is a sign of the progress we have made that many South Africans today exercise the rights and freedoms of the "open society" without thinking about them. They speak their minds, make their own decisions, and express themselves boldly even if their views run counter to popular opinion. They reserve the right to change their opinions, if new information arises. This culture is the bedrock of democracy, sustainable development and technological progress. It creates opportunities for growing numbers of people, and encourages them to take responsibility for improving their lives."

Helen Zille in her recent SA Today newsletter, 'The "Thugocrats" that threaten our future’


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Last Week's Highlights


Top Story: DA calls for Narcotics Bureau to be reinstated

As South Africa took note of national Drug Awareness Week, the Democratic Alliance (DA) called on the reinstatement of the Narcotics Unit in the South African Police Services.

Mike Waters MP, Shadow Minister of Health said that the disbanding of this specialised unit by the national ANC government had been a serious blow to our ability to tackle the drug trade effectively.

Waters stated that it was important that the National Departments of Health and Social Development to learn to work together, to provide a multi-front approach to dealing with the social effects of drug and substance abuse.

A recent study conducted by the Medical Research Council (MRC) in 2005 revealed that one in three respondents reported using either crack cocaine, cocaine hydrochloride, methamphetamine (tik), or methcathinone (CAT) as their primary or secondary stimulant, said Waters.

Since 2009, the DA-led administration in the Western Cape had prioritised the fight against drug abuse by implementing a two-pronged programme which aimed to both prevent more individuals falling into the trap of addiction and abuse and assisting those who are already in the cycle of drug-abuse by providing treatment.

Waters said that some of the DA’s key prevention interventions in the Western Cape included, drug testing in schools under our new cabinet approved Provincial education legislation and increasing the use of social workers by 400% (from 49 to 200) to serve our schools in the Province.

In terms of treatment, Waters indicated that the Western Cape administration was undertaking to set up more youth intervention and treatment centres and establish new community-based ‘drop-in centres’ to provide information to the public, screening, assessment and referral services, as well as evidence-based out-patient and aftercare services.

Waters said that the reestablishment of the Narcotics Bureau, was an important first step in tackling the national drug crisis. He added that he would be requesting a meeting with the Minister of Health, Dr Aaron Motsoaledi, and the Minister of Social Development, Mrs Edna Molewa, to table the DA’s proposals and ensure that South Africa as a whole had a targeted and effective anti-drug policy.

Read more here and here

Corruption rewarded…Minister must explain

The Democratic Alliance (DA) will call on the Minister of Agriculture to appear before the Portfolio Committee to explain why the former acting chief-executive of the Land Bank, Phil Mohlahlane, who was dismissed over a corruption scandal, had been appointed to another senior position in the department.

Dr Lourie Bosman MP, Shadow Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries stated that the Minister must explain why Mr. Mohlahlane's shameful past conduct had been entirely ignored and why he was now being trusted with any sort of responsibility where public funds are involved.

Recent reports in the media revealed that Mr. Mohlahlane had been recently appointed to the position of CEO of the Limpopo Agricultural Development Corporation which will oversee the allocation of millions of rands worth of project grants in the province, said Bosman.

Mr. Mohlahlane was dismissed from his former position at the Bank after a forensic audit revealed severe irregularities in the management of the Agri-BEE fund under his control. Bosman said that Mr. Mohlahlane personally enriched himself from the fund and investigations revealed that some of the money was channelled to support the extravagant lifestyles of several politically well-connected individuals.

Bosman criticised the ANC government stating that the reshuffling of corrupt officials was business as usual and that Mr. Mohlahlane was only one of a number of officials with corruption allegations against them to be quietly appointed to new positions where in fact, any action had been taken against them at all.

Bosman said that the DA would be asking the Minister whether she shared the same view and, if so, how the Department could explain itself.

Read more here >>>

Back to top >>




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IN OTHER NEWS

DA welcomes announcement of SAFA development plan

Donald Lee MP, Shadow Minister of Sport and Recreation welcomed the announcement by the South African Football Association (SAFA) that it intended to inject new life into school-level soccer development.

Lee said that identifying and nurturing young sporting talent was absolutely critical if South Africa was to build on the recent successes of the 2010 World Cup and make an even bigger impact on the international stage at the next World Cup in 2014.

Lee stated that the success of youth football development depended on three factors:

• A long term plan to identify and nurture talented young footballers, from grassroots development programmes in the form of well-organised leagues and quality school coaching to the promotion of young professionals, was needed.

• Sufficient resources is to be allocated to sports development with the bulk of the R2 billion SAFA received from 2010 ticket sales, together with the appropriate Lotto funds, to be allocated to youth sports projects.

• A national centre of sporting excellence, in the form of a South African Sports Academy, needs to be established, to provide talented young sportsmen and women with the best possible coaching and facilities.

Lee said that the DA would be writing to the president of SAFA, Kirsten Nematandani, to request details of the turnaround strategy and submit to him the DA's proposals for a South African Sports Academy.

Read more here >>>

DA welcomes ICD investigation into Malema

The Democratic Alliance (DA) welcomed the recent announcement from Moses Dlamini, spokesperson for the Independent Complaints Directorate (ICD) that the ICD will conduct an investigation into what appears to be blatant police misconduct at an ANC Youth League Provincial Congress in Limpopo.

Dianne Kohler Barnard MP, Shadow Minister of Police said that the DA laid a formal complaint with the ICD after video footage posted by the Times showed that members of the SAPS VIP Protection Unit appeared to act on orders which were given to them by Julius Malema, to remove rival delegates from the venue.

Kohler Barnard said that due to DA action, the ICD would be investigating the matter. She added that the impartiality and integrity of the police must be maintained at all costs. We cannot permit a situation where SAPS members follow orders given to them by civilians, and for party-political reasons, said Kohler Barnard.

Read more here >>>

Miss Deaf SA to compete in Miss Deaf World 2010

Denise Robinson MP, Shadow Minister for Women, Children and Persons with Disabilities, recently hosted a fundraiser to enable the local winner of Miss Deaf South Africa 2008, Portia Oliver, to compete internationally for the coveted title of Miss Deaf World 2010.

Robinson said that this year’s competition would be held in Georgia, Russia and all funds raised at the event contributed towards covering Portia’s expenses.

Robinson stated that Portia was unable to compete in the 2009 international competition due to lack of funds, but remained involved with the competition by being a part of the judging panel for Miss Deaf Seychelles.

Miss Deaf South Africa was started in 2001, created to raise awareness about the deaf society, the talents and ambition of these people, to nurture their self confidence and to offer a platform of integration within society, said Robinson.

‘Organisations such as Miss Deaf South Africa need our help to encourage inclusivity and to assist all people to grasp opportunities that come their way. There is no place for exclusion or discrimination in South Africa today,’ concluded Robinson.


DA Public Relations Dept.

Facebook launches 'permissions' for apps




BARBARA ORTUTAY 01 July 2010 at 05h36


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New York - Facebook is rolling out a new feature that requires outside applications and websites to tell users exactly what parts of their profiles have to be shared for the apps to work.

Applications already had to ask users for permission to access anything in their profiles that wasn't public. But these services didn't have to specify what information they were using. Such information can include your photos, your friends' birthdays or your e-mail address.

Under the new policy, the services will say which aspects of a profile they will mine, but the user still won't be able to pick out which pieces they want to grant access to. They have to either grant permission or disallow the app from working at all.

The world's largest online social network announced the change in April. It's part of Facebook's cooperation with Canada' privacy commissioner, who has been among the sharpest critics of the company's privacy policies.

Facebook has come under fire for the way it treats the information its nearly 500 million users post on the site. Most recently, privacy advocates and lawmakers have complained about Facebook's "instant personalisation" feature, which draws information from users' profiles to customise a handful of other sites, including review site Yelp and the music service Pandora.

Partly because of criticism and partly because of the site's growth from a small network for college students, Facebook's privacy settings became complicated and often confusing over the years.

In response, Facebook simplified its privacy settings in changes unveiled last month - though some critics still say these changes don't go far enough. - Sapa-AP

SUBMIT YOUR COMMENT!
Showing page 1 of 1 comment pages, 1 total comments
20 Hours ago Facebook user wrote :
Facebook will end up losing a lot of members, they are not interested in the public, they have made billions out of us....Time to perhaps make a change.

IOL News

Comments by Sonny

Has the time come to seek alternative friendship and social sites?

Face Book brought lots of friends and like thinking people together!

Super sleuth Byleveld: It's time to move on








1 July 2010, 20:00

One of South Africa's best known and respected police detectives, Piet Byleveld worked into the final minutes of his illustrious 38-year career, he said on Thursday.

"There was no send-off party for me yesterday as I was still working on cases that I couldn't just leave, it's a different career this," he told Sapa.

Byleveld, 60, retired from the SA Police Services on Wednesday, as his age didn't allow him to work any longer.

"It's time to move on, I have reached that age where it doesn't allow me to work anymore. But I won't be able to sit still," he said, adding that there were many offers from several companies who wanted his expertise.

"I am attached to this kind of work, I can't just immediately give it a rest... but for now, there will be no cellphones, lots of bush camping, and I plan to travel to England at the end of the year."

The super sleuth said an autobiography detailing the most notable cases he worked on would be launched this month.

"It's nearly finished, I will know by Tuesday on when the actual date of the launch will be. I am using this first month of retirement to sort out everything that needs to be."

Although he entered retirement with nothing else but rest on his mind, the question of who helped Donovan Moodley conceal the body of Leigh Matthews would trouble him for a long time to come.

"It's definitely still troubling me, I used to have sleepless nights about it, but there are now other people who will carry on with the job... I will still be in the background though."

Moodley was found guilty of murdering Matthews, then aged 21, after he kidnapped her from the Bond University campus in Sandton, Johannesburg, in July 2004.

He held her for several hours before taking R50,000 ransom money from her father, and shot her.

On August 4, 2005 he was sentenced to life in prison for the murder, 15 years for the kidnapping and 10 years for extortion by Judge Joop Labuschagne.

Moodley accused Byleveld of manipulating the case, in order to conclude it as speedily as possible. He claimed that during the investigation, Byleveld was under financial pressure and had his eyes on a bonus for arresting somebody for the murder.

Moodley had no legal options left after losing a bid to appeal his sentence at the Supreme Court of Appeal earlier this year. He approached the court last year, claiming his sentence was "shockingly inappropriate". - Sapa

The Star

Judgment day is here for Selebi

1 July 2010, 22:53

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By Jenni O'Grady and Miranda Andrew

After a four-and-a-half year investigation, and two-and-a-half years since charges were first laid, former police commissioner Jackie Selebi will have one more sleep to find out whether his reputation is saved, or in tatters.

Reading from a thick lever arch file, Judge Meyer Joffe spent Thursday recapping the vast amount of evidence presented to him by the defence and the prosecution in the Johannesburg High Court. It included an application for his own recusal and an application to have the matter struck off the roll.

It began with newspaper reports that Selebi may face charges of corruption and defeating and obstructing the administration of justice for allegedly receiving money from convicted drug trafficker Glenn Agliotti, from the account of slain mining boss Brett Kebble, in exchange for favours.

The former Interpol boss allegedly shared secret information with Agliotti, which included a British intelligence report on Agliotti, who was also a police informer. Selebi was allegedly also supposed to intervene in the planned prosecution of Hyundai boss Billy Rautenbach.

Selebi has denied all the charges against him, claiming they were "cooked up". He claims the Directorate of Special Operations, or the Scorpions, plotted against him because he wanted them dissolved and a new investigative unit formed in the police instead, in line with a call by the ruling ANC at the time.

The Scorpions had since been dissolved and a new unit called the Hawks established.

Joffe injected his trademark dry humour by quipping that Selebi also denied wearing a Springbok rugby jersey at an account of a meeting presented during the evidence.

He said the court would have to determine whether the relationship between the Selebi and Agliotti was "generally corrupt" and would have to determine who was telling the truth, given the contradictions in evidence.

"That's why the impression of witnesses is important and the court had to apply its mind to... the credibility of witnesses, the reliability and the probability," said Joffe.

If the court found the accused's version reasonably true, that was grounds for an acquittal, said Joffe as Selebi leaned forward to take in the summary, with his family and friends sitting in the row behind him.

When asked on arrival at the court how he felt, Selebi merely shrugged and said "just okay".

Sitting by himself at the far end of the passage on a battered chair usually used by security officials, was lead prosecutor Gerrie Nel.

He graciously asked that he not be quoted on how he felt ahead of one of the key judgments of his career. At the height of the investigation he was briefly arrested by police as bitterness between the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) and police grew.

The court also heard how the NPA had battled to get documents from Selebi's colleagues during the investigation. The decision to go ahead with the case eventually led to the sacking of NPA head Vusi Pikoli, and created tension with then president Thabo Mbeki who had been concerned about a backlash by Selebi's colleagues.

Pausing occasionally to take a sip of water for his dry throat, Joffe spoke about gifts given to Selebi by Agliotti as he painted a picture of the relationship between the two to determine who was telling the truth.

Agliotti had testified that he and the accused, who he sometimes called "Jax", would go shopping in Sandton, Johannesburg, and meet for coffee.

Agliotti testified he bought two pairs of shoes for Selebi, items from London as well as clothing for his family.

He said Agliotti claimed to have bought a Gucci bag for Selebi's wife Anne, and that he had provided receipts of purchases he had made from a Sandton shopping centre.

Agliotti said he had bought Selebi's sons items from clothing company Fubu. Selebi's version was that he did not wear Fubu and neither did his children.

The two stories were completely different. Joffe noted the defence had limited its attack to the credibility of only Agliotti and his former fiance Dianne Muller, which he felt was "not good".

Joffe read evidence that Agliotti denied asking Selebi for protection, and did not even ask for help with traffic offences, and that he never bribed the accused.

If he did, he said he would have got a bulletproof vest, continued Joffe.

The evidence included tales of a cigarette and drug smuggling network, furtive meetings in shopping centre parking lots, wads of cash being handed around, a plot to smear Mbeki in favour of Jacob Zuma, allegedly funded by German businessman Jurgen Kogl, cellphones mysteriously inactive on the day Kebble was murdered and bombs planted at a Microsoft office to get a security contract.

In closing arguments the state said Selebi had also failed to explain how he had accessed cash, mainly US dollars.

Joffe adjourned proceedings until 9.30am on Friday. - Sapa

The Star

Comments by Sonny

Ironic

Byleveld has his fair well (send-off/birthday) party on Saturday 3 July 2010 and Selebi, the man who promoted him, has his judgement!

Their paths are about to part here!

Who will end up the "victor!"

Political rhetoric is a sad thing!

Happy birthday Piet Byleveld!

Jaap Marais would have been very proud of YOU.

Both will end up with their own legacy and autobiography.