Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Sexwale dissolves ‘dysfunctional’ Estate Agency Affairs Board



Sexwale dissolves ‘dysfunctional’ Estate Agency Affairs Board
Human Settlements Minister Tokyo Sexwale asks Special Investigating Unit to probe regulatory body of an industry that makes up 15% of South Africa’s gross domestic product
STAFF REPORTER
Published: 2012/07/31 10:16:59 AM

THE embattled Estate Agency Affairs Board (EAAB) has been placed under administration, Human Settlements Minister Tokyo Sexwale said on Tuesday.

"I am compelled in the interests of bringing certainty and order to place [the board] under administration," Mr Sexwale said in Johannesburg.

In May, the regulatory body for the real estate industry was moved from the Department of Trade and Industry to the Department of Human Settlements, which now constitutes its executive authority.

Mr Sexwale’s move to address the EAAB is seen as positive for the real estate industry, which contributes about 15% of South Africa’s gross domestic product and is seen as important to the economy.

He also called for the Special Investigating Unit to probe the EAAB.

"I’ve also decided the Special Investigating Unit must step in. They must bring in a very strong broom to clean up this mess."

The EAAB has had difficulty ensuring estate agents operating in South Africa’s property market comply with the legislation governing their profession.

The body has come under the spotlight for its poor service levels and because of numerous complaints from the property industry, including reports of estate agents operating without the mandatory fidelity fund certificates, the board not investigating complaints and failing to guide the sector.
This comes at a time when the industry has needed guidance from the board, as there have been many legislative changes in the industry, including in education, financial intelligence, compliance and company law as well as the new Property Charter, and the transformation code for the property sector.

This month alone, the board’s recently appointed chairwoman, Ina Wilken, resigned after succeeding Thami Bolani, and former acting CEO Bryan Chaplog was removed by the board. The EAAB said Ms Wilken’s departure was part of a rotation of the office of the acting CEO. Mr Chaplog, who was acting CEO for a few months, resumed the position of chief financial officer and was replaced by Clive Ashpol, the executive manager for education and training.

Mr Sexwale dissolved the board, saying it was dysfunctional.


"To date when a board is supposed to be having 15 members, they are left with three."


Mr Sexwale will hold a summit with estate agents in September.


With Thabang Mokopanele and Sapa

‘Our education system is a wreck’


July 31 2012 at 10:42am Comment on this story AP Nobel literature prize winner Nadine Gordimer poured scorn on South Africa's education system as a wreck over the failure to deliver textbooks to thousands of public schools. Nobel literature prize winner Nadine Gordimer poured scorn on South Africa's education system on Tuesday as “a wreck” over the failure to deliver textbooks to thousands of public schools. The scandal has caused a national furore after leaving more than 5 000 rural schools without textbooks for more than six months of the academic year in a damning measure of South Africa's schooling 18 years into democracy. “Our education system is a wreck. It's a shambles. I can't believe that three-quarters of the year have gone by and so many of our schools, especially in the rural areas, have been without textbooks,” said Gordimer, 88, on SAFM public radio news. “It is the (education) minister's responsibility to see that the books are ordered in time and delivered. How can you teach people to read if there are no books to read from?” President Jacob Zuma is facing increasing calls to fire Education Minister Angie Motshekga. On Monday, he said he was waiting for a final report from a team he appointed to investigate the debacle. The education department was found to have violated students' rights to education after being taken to court and was ordered to remedy the situation. But a probe revealed that 22 percent of schools in the northern Limpopo region were still without learning materials earlier this month despite a scramble by authorities to get the missing books to schools. The criticism by Gordimer, who had several works banned by the apartheid regime, comes after peace laureate Desmond Tutu said democratic icon Nelson Mandela would be reduced to tears if he knew the poor state of public schools. Education is South Africa's single biggest budget item, but schools are hobbled by poor management and low standards. AFP Comments by Sonny Yes Nadine, where have you been hiding all this time...... The 'Old Die Hard Liberals' are getting their 'Rude Awakening!" Pay us or else, Limpopo circuit managers threaten July 31 2012 at 09:00am Comment on this story MOLOKO MOLOTO moloko.moloto@inl.co.za CIRCUIT managers in Limpopo are threatening to take the Basic Education Department to court over what they say are outstanding travel payments for circuit officials. The province’s 134 circuit managers are alleged to be owed thousands of rand in unpaid travel claims. Allegedly, some of the claims date back to May. “We are not even sure that they will pay us for July. Yet we are still expected to visit schools regularly,” said a circuit manager in the Mopani district. There are now fears that both circuit managers and curriculum advisers intend to stop travelling to schools until they get paid. If this happens, there is likely to be no supervision of curriculum implementation, according to circuit managers. “Every circuit manager will contribute R1 000, which will make it R134 000. We will then take the Basic Education Department to court,” said the Mopani district manager. “The provincial department is no longer in charge,” a manager from Waterberg added. The provincial education department was placed under national administration in December for alleged poor governance and financial mismanagement. Basic Education Department spokesman Panyaza Lesufi yesterday referred queries to Pat Kgomo, his provincial counterpart. However, Kgomo could not be reached and he did not return calls and text messages. The Star spoke to eight circuit managers in all the five districts – Mopani, Waterberg, Vhembe, Sekhukhune and Capricorn, and they all expressed similar frustrations. All requested to remain anonymous for fear of possible victimisation. “If curriculum advisers don’t moderate year marks, this will have an impact on the final examinations even for matric pupils,” said a circuit manager in Waterberg. He said curriculum advisers were responsible for monitoring the continuous assessments policy, which relates to the pupils’ scores at schools throughout the year. Circuit managers claimed they had had a meeting with the new administrator, Mzwandile Matthews, in May to explain their frustrations about the non-payment of travel claims. But some of their claims had still not been paid, they said. “After our meeting with him, some of us were paid for February until April, but nothing for May and June,” a manager from Waterberg said. “Some of us are going to have our cars repossessed by financial institutions because we can’t keep up with monthly repayments,” he added. “We spend 60 percent of our time visiting and supervising schools in our job,” said another manager from Vhembe. Currently, managers used their own money to travel to schools, but this was not sustainable, they said. “We are South Africans, we can’t just give up. But the day we decide not to visit schools, it will be because we can’t afford to,” he said. The managers also complained about the department’s decision to reduce their payment rates, allegedly without consulting them first. “Some of us were expecting R11 500 for the February to April payments, but I was paid R7 500 instead,” said a manager from Sekhukhune. A colleague from Vhembe said: “They now limit us to travel 1 750km a month instead of the initial 2 500km. This means if you exceed the new limit, you are on your own,” adding that this made it difficult to visit all the schools in his district. IOL Comments by Sonny If President does not fire the Education Minister and Blade Nzimande now, then, he is a Pussy!! Oh, sorry, he is waiting for his "Task Force Report!" The Government is eating cake, while, the Schools are burning....! Confucius say, child with no book, must look after cattle!

Monday, July 30, 2012

‘Bank robber behind BEE deal’

‘Bank robber behind BEE deal’ Jul 23 2012 6:10AM ‘Bank robber behind BEE deal’ DEAL MAKER? Gayton McKenzie. Picture: GALLO IMAGES 36 22 PrintMailShareRate this Article | Barry Sergeant For nearly two years, Nick Holland, the CEO of Gold Fields, has resolutely refused to be interviewed on a multibillion–rand “black economic empowerment” (BEE) deal that went down at Gold Fields during the 2010 World Cup. The 2010 Gold Fields annual report would show that the BEE deal cost Gold Fields, on its numbers, R2.1bn ($298m). The deal was seen by specialist analysts and sophisticated investors as exceptional, in that shares and assets involved in the BEE deal appeared to be simply donated by Gold Fields. There have been few mining BEE deals in South Africa where the BEE party is simply gifted, and none when the gift is worth billions of rands. By far the main outcome of the 2010 Gold Fields BEE deal was the award of new order mining rights for South Deep, the gold mine situated west of Johannesburg. In Gold Fields’s first big BEE deal, signed in 2004, Mvelaphanda Resources agreed to pay, and did indeed pay, R4.1bn for 15% of Gold Fields’s domestic assets. In the South Deep BEE deal, billions of rands worth of Gold Fields assets and shares were simply given away. TIGHT-LIPPED: Gold Fields CEO Nick Holland. Picture: GALLO IMAGES Gold Fields ranks as a global Tier I gold producer, and one of the world’s top five gold producers by output. During 2011, Gold Fields paid its top executives R135.7m in aggregate; of this, R32.7m was paid to Holland. When Holland took over the CEO’s office at Gold Fields on May 1, 2008, Gold Fields was trading around $15 a share on the New York Stock Exchange. Today it trades around $12 a share; as such it is not clear why Holland and his fellow executives are being paid such extreme amounts of remuneration. Compared to other Tier I global gold stocks such as Barrick, Goldcorp and AngloGold Ashanti, Gold Fields has underperformed, raising further questions over the quantum of bounty paid to Gold Fields’s top brass. While Holland has refused to be interviewed over the 2010 BEE deal, which hinged mainly around South Deep, he permitted two of his internal spinmeisters, Sven Lunsche and Willie Jacobsz, to speak to the press. The two conceded that the 2010 Gold Fields BEE deal had, in effect, been marketed by Gayton McKenzie, a convicted bank robber. According to Lunsche and Jacobsz, “advocate Jerome Brauns and Gayton McKenzie were requested by the Gold Fields executive to prepare proposals for a consortium of groups of individuals that could be included” in the BEE deal. Lunsche and Jacobsz also referred to “Gayton McKenzie (Pty) Ltd”, apparently ignorant of the fact that a convict may not own a company. Lunsche and Jacobsz also conceded that Kenny Kunene, a convicted fraudster, was “an associate” of McKenzie, and that Kunene “amongst others, accompanied” Brauns and/or McKenzie to certain meetings. It was quickly added that “Kunene was never employed by Gold Fields in any capacity”. Another unusual aspect of the South Deep BEE deal was that it overtly involved certain politicians, such as Baleka Mbete, who has served as speaker of the national assembly and also as deputy president of South Africa, and certain other prominent names, such as Ashwin Willemse, who once played rugby for South Africa. When Lunsche and Jacobsz were asked about certain other names thought to be secretly embedded in the South Deep BEE deal, they replied, elliptically, that “there is no regulation or other requirement that these names be disclosed to anyone but our shareholders and the individuals were happy with this disclosure. Further disclosure would require their consent. “However, the Gold Fields board was fully appraised of who these individuals are, were satisfied that they met the requirements for participation as determined by the board, and approved their participation. “Furthermore, Gold Fields’s shareholders had every opportunity to inspect the names prior to the special general meeting” that was called to approve the South Deep BEE deal. One sophisticated investor asked of the South Deep BEE deal: “Why the secrecy? Why should all the benefits not go to the poor of SA, the people for whom the ANC have struggled?” Lunsche and Jacobsz conceded that the South Deep BEE deal was celebrated at a dinner held at Johannesburg’s ZAR Club, which had prominently featured McKenzie and particularly Kunene in various adventures. In one article, the New York Times reported that “Kunene, a former gangster turned businessman, gave what he called ‘the mother of all parties’. “As the revellers got tipsy on his liquor, he says he treated the most important among them – including Zizi Kodwa, President Jacob Zuma’s stylish spokesperson, and Julius Malema, the rabble-rousing leader of the governing party’s youth wing – to $1300 bottles of Dom Pérignon. Like the American rappers he emulates, Kunene him self swigged a bottle of Armand de Brignac champagne that goes for more than $1500 at his posh nightclub, ZAR, perched on the roof of a five-star hotel.” Another highly unusual feature of the South Deep BEE deal was that it started generating cash for the BEE structure at a very early stage. According to Gold Fields’s 2010 financial statements, 0.6 million Gold Fields shares were issued by Gold Fields “to broad-based BEE partners on December 23, 2010”. The shares were immediately sold and generated R73m in net cash, released as a dividend into the BEE structure. Within months of striking the South Deep BEE deal, certain BEE shareholders were in the cash. “Normal” shareholders in South Deep would have waited more than 20 years to receive their first dividend. Mine building at the South Deep site started in 1995. According to Gold Fields, the mine is now set to reach full production during 2015, two decades after the mine build commenced. However, the upfront dividend deal for certain BEE shareholders does not stand alone. The “normal” dividend component of the South Deep BEE deal is a cumulative preferential dividend of R20m a year for the first 10 years, R13.3m a year for the next five years, and R6.7m for the next five years, paid from the profits of South Deep. Lunsche and Jacobsz have also refused to elaborate on the role of Gerald “Brinkley” Holden, who appears to be some kind of a foreign consultant who jets into South Africa from time to time. Holden was “not directly” involved in the South Deep BEE transaction, according to Lunsche and Jacobsz, and “is not a beneficiary of the transaction”. This correspondent has confirmed with at least one CEO of a listed South African mining company that he was approached by Holden, with the promise that Holden would “solve” any permitting problems. A London-based mining analyst recalls that “the whole (South Deep BEE) thing is very strange”. Gold Fields reported a significant BEE deal but at the quarterly results presentation back in 2010, it was hardly mentioned; “if you have any interest in the deal”, we were told (by Nick Holland), “please join our financial director in the room next door after the presentation”. Even among professional audiences, Holland has been loath to discuss the South Deep BEE deal. The London-based analyst noted that while the South Deep BEE deal “was billed as 2% dilution only, but that is clearly not the whole story. “In a document sent out later, the company admitted that the South Deep stake is probably being sold at a 60% discount”. In other words, Gold Fields’s calculation that the deal had cost Gold Fields R2.1bn was likely understated by at least R1bn. The London-based analyst was highly critical of the South Deep BEE deal: “The BEE parties in this equation carry zero risk – all the other shareholders in Gold Fields carry the risk. Whichever way you look at it, Gold Fields gives away a chunk of the company and pays people on an annual basis to have these stakes. Gold Fields gets nothing.” One sophisticated, long–term, shareholder in Gold Fields slammed the South Deep BEE deal, arguing that there was “no respect for the value of capital. There are huge implicit donations; shares are being gifted – Gold Fields receives no capital.” McKenzie and Kunene first rose to prominence in the gold mining sector at Johannesburg- and London-listed Central Rand Gold (CRG). Between 2006 and the end of 2011, CRG raised $230m in cash from investors; its latest annual financial statements reflected cash of just $5m. CRG has been a disaster, with a wake behind it of shattered promises. CRG’s 2007 annual report shows that McKenzie was granted 250000 stock options, far more than any other employee (excluding directors); next highest were grants of 50000 options. The options were awarded at a penny a share, when CRG was trading up around £1.40 a share. The stock has since lost 99% of its value, and currently trades at less than a penny a share. The award of options indicated that CRG, which set out promising that it would be producing 1 million ounces of gold a year, regarded a one-time bank robber as by far its most valuable manager. Kunene was awarded a more modest 30000 options, and later, another 20000, suggesting that as in the case of Gold Fields, he played second fiddle to McKenzie. In astonishing, possibly record-breaking, time, On September 17, 2008, CRG was awarded a package of coveted “new order” mining rights. CRG’s audited financial statements show that in the past six years, nearly $100m has been spent on non-mining expenditure: tens of millions of dollars went on pay and bonuses for directors; further tens of millions of dollars went on other expenses, mainly “accommodation” and “travel”, and yet further tens of millions of dollars on unnamed consultants. The New Age Comments by Sonny No wonder the SA Prisons are almost empty. Between the ANC and BEE aal the Bank Robbers & other Thugs have been recruited into the mining sector. Now we only need Malema to Nationalise all the MINES.

Selebi case like a crime novel


By Karen Allan BBC News, Johannesburg Continue reading the main story Related Stories Former SA police chief convicted Ex-Interpol man denies corruption SA abolishes crime-fighting unit The trial of Jackie Selebi - South Africa's first black police chief - has gripped the nation. Sharing the stage in what reads like a John Le Carre novel was a mafia drugs boss, a mining magnate and multi-millionaire Zimbabwean businessman. A witness wept on the stand, there were allegations of money being handed over in brown paper bags and spy games. Intrigue, obfuscation and patronage have characterised the case. In the end though - despite his political links, Selebi has been left crestfallen: Guilty of corruption on an obscene scale. Continue reading the main story JACKIE SELEBI 1987: Head of ANC Youth League 1991: In charge of repatriating ANC exiles 1994: Elected MP 1995: South Africa's ambassador to UN 2000: Appointed police chief 2004: Elected Interpol president 2008: Charged with corruption, resigns as Interpol head, suspended as SA police chief 2009: Denies charges at start of trial 2010: Found guilty of corruption SA's controversial ex-police chief At the end of the case, Judge Meyer Joffe said: "Every day society in general relies on the honesty and truthfulness of policemen and women… It is not an example that must be emulated by members of the Saps [South African Police Service]." As he points out, this case speaks of so much more than Selebi, a man who helped shape the geopolitics of the new South Africa, being seduced by cash, fine dining and gifts of the latest designer suits. It is about cronyism and the politicisation of South Africa's intelligence services as it confronts the fight against crime. When charges were laid against Selebi, it came at one of the most turbulent times in South African politics. It was 2007 and the power struggle between then-President Thabo Mbeki and Jacob Zuma, who was to succeed him, was reaching fever pitch. 'Hung out to dry' Selebi enjoyed a close relationship with Mr Mbeki and had thought himself immune from prosecution when questions started emerging about his dubious friendship with Glenn Agliotti - a convicted drug baron. Continue reading the main story “ Start Quote Throughout that period we as journalists could mark when our intelligence services began to be politicised and when crime fighting began to be politicised” Journalist Ferial Haffajee But according to Ferial Haffajee, who was the editor of the Mail and Guardian newspaper at the time, Selebi was "hung out to dry". The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA), which resisted pressure to back down and endured politically inspired changes of personnel at the top, was against the odds finally able to bring the case to court. Selebi, as head of the police, was among those behind the dismantling of the elite investigation unit known as the Scorpions, which under the stewardship of the NPA, was charged with investigating some of the country's biggest crimes. In 2008 when president, Thabo Mbeki suspended Mr Selebi as police chief He claimed that having an elite body separate from the police would undermine the fight against crime and that its officers colluded with Western intelligence agencies bent on undermining South Africa's sovereignty. And in the long competition between the Scorpions and the police, it was the police who won. The Scorpions have now been disbanded and replaced by what many consider a less robust crime fighting team - the Hawks. But Selebi always maintained that he was a victim of "malicious prosecution" because of this rivalry between the two forces. 'No free lunch' "Throughout that period we as journalists could mark when our intelligence services began to be politicised and when crime fighting began to be politicised," says Ms Haffajee. It was then that the "turf war between Scorpions and cops became very damaging", she says. Continue reading the main story “ Start Quote We need to ask ourselves as South Africans whether the police have the capability to fight crime and fight corruption in the police” Adriaan Basson, author Although Mr Mbeki is no longer president, there are some serious questions for the current administration. For example on the appointment of political figures to senior positions within the civil service and in particular the police. Adriaan Basson who is writing a book about the Selebi case, has warned President Zuma to take note. "A lot of the people who were protective and loyal to Jackie Selebi are still in the police," warns Mr Basson. "They are also very senior in the intelligence services, and so we need to ask ourselves as South Africans whether the police have the capability to fight crime and fight corruption in the police." Every legal tool was used to try to stall the trial but in the end it proved futile. Judge Joffe concluded there was no evidence of an agreement that Agliotti benefited from his friendship with Selebi - in other words there was no signed contract between them. But Selebi must have known that there is no such thing as a "free lunch", he said. It is a lesson that many are hoping the new South Africa remembers well. More on This Story Related Stories Former SA police chief convicted 02 JULY 2010, AFRICA Ex-Interpol man denies corruption 05 OCTOBER 2009, AFRICA SA abolishes crime-fighting unit 23 OCTOBER 2008, AFRICA SA extends police chief contract 26 JUNE 2008, AFRICA Country profile: South Africa 21 JUNE 2011, COUNTRY PROFILES Related Internet links Mail & Guardian South African Police Service NPA BBC Jackie Selebi and his ANC cronies have now turned the SAPS into a "FOOLS PARADE!" 'Brigadier' draai polisie 'n rat voor die oë 2012-07-29 13:01 Verwante skakels Polisie moet eie kantore skoonmaak Meer as 10 000 polisiebeamptes depressief SAPD waarsku teen fop-polisie in Vrystaat Johannesburg – 'n Bedrieër wat deur die departement van binnelandse sake dood verklaar is, het die polisie laat glo dat hy 'n brigadier van die Valke is, berig die Sunday Independent. Die man is in hegtenis geneem vir verskeie misdade voor hy hom voorgedoen het as 'n polisieman. Hy is selfs toegelaat om polisiemotors en ander hulpbronne te gebruik terwyl hy ander misdadigers ondersoek het. McIntosh Polela, woordvoerder van die Valke, het aan die koerant gesê 'n man wat homself brig. Musa Khumalo noem, word ondersoek. "Hy het 'n uniform in sy besit. In so 'n geval sal juniorbeamptes weinig 'n persoon vra om sy rang te bewys." 'n Lasbrief vir die man se inhegtenisneming is intussen uitgereik. Khumalo beweer hy is deur lt.genl. Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi, waarnemende polisiehoof, na KwaZulu-Natal gestuur. Volgens die koerant het hy gehelp met die inhegtenisneming van Sibusiso Gcabashe, wat hom voorgedoen het as die ontslape musikant Sibusiso Gcabashe. SAPA SINCE BEING RELEASED FROM PRISON JACKIE SELEBI HAS STOPPED ALL TREATMENT OF HIS TERMINAL SICKNESS........ Selebi daag nie op vir behandeling 2012-07-30 08:46 Verwante skakels Selebi ‘nié voorgetrek’ Selebi het lang lys paroolvoorwaardes Selebi-besluit binne perke van die wet Johannesburg – Jackie Selebi, voormalige polisiekommissaris, het ‘n week lank nie vir dialise-behandeling by die Steve Biko- akademiese hospitaal aangemeld nie, lui ‘n berig. The New Age berig Selebi, wat elke tweede dag dialise moet ondergaan, is ‘n week gelede laas behandel. Die koerant het nie sy bronne bekendgemaak nie. Die koerant het die oud-polisiehoof se huis geskakel en ‘n ongeïdentifiseerde vrou het gesê Selebi sterk by die huis aan. Sy het nie gesê of Selebi ‘n ander mediese fasiliteit vir sy behandeling gekry het nie. Selebi is twee weke gelede mediese parool toegestaan en is nou onder huisarres. Hy is in 2010 op aanklag van korrupsie skuldig bevind en later tot 15 jaar tronkstraf gevonnis. James Selfe, woordvoerder vir die DA, sê dis onwaarskynlik dat Selebi ‘n dialise-masjien by sy huis kan aanhou, aangesien hy die staat R17 miljoen se regsfooie skuld. “Ek dink nie dis moontlik vir hom om die behandeling by die huis te kry nie, aangesien die dialise-masjiene wat hulle gebruik, baie duur is.” Luidens die berig is dit moontlik dat Selebi sy polisie- mediese fonds gebruik om dialise by ‘n ander gesondheidsfasiliteit te kry. SAPA Comments by Sonny HOW LONG CAN THE ANC LAST BEFORE IT IMPLODES?

EENDRAGT MAAKT MAGT


Never in the history of independent nations, have a people's leader and his cronies betrayed and thrown away their nation's independence so utterly, completely and totally, to be wiped out of existence. Never in the history of mankind, has a nation's military and civilian establishment so willy-nilly agreed to sell out everything, but everything it owned and built up over more than 300 years, to its enemies, to be run down and destroyed. Never in the history of free peoples, has a strong people so needlessly given away its strength and the strongest defence force on the the whole of a dark and brutal continent, so its defenceless men, women and children can be killed, shot, beaten, raped, assaulted and driven off their land with impunity and abandon. Never in the six or so millenia of our recorded human past, has such a betrayal and sell-out as was engineered by FW de Klerk and the Broederbond in South Africa in 1994 happened without any credible threat, without losing a war, without a real emergency. Purely on the absolute selfishness, amoral greed, venal arrogance and unbelievable stupidity of the ruling clique, to whom its people had given their trust and all, and often life and limb. It's now history. It happened, there's nothing we can do to make it undone. Those who try, end up betrayed all over again, thrown in prison, found guilty of high treason, and incarcerated for the rest of their lives. And we, the defenceless people, facing the creeping genocide all around us, are basically just waiting our turn to be 'serviced' by the ruling regime and its rampant, armed henchmen. Those, that is, who have not been run out of the country altogether,like so many of our children. Or who are lying six feet underground. Which is, come to think of it, not a bad place to be in, under the so-called New South Africa we were dumped in by the threacherous Latter-Day Nats and the conniving Broederbond gespuis. At least the company is better... Sela. Willem Ratte - Seconded Billy Cox Comments by Sonny WE CAN TURN BACK A PAGE - WE WILL NEVER TURN BACK HISTORY!!

Sunday, July 29, 2012

World Record Gold For Cameron





Cameron van der Burgh © Action Images


Van der Burgh bags gold medal

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

29 July 2012, 21:18


Cameron van der Burgh smashed the world record to become the first South African men's swimming Olympic champion in winning the 100m breaststroke gold medal on Sunday.

Click here to visit our Olympics site.

Van der Burgh burnt off a crack field, including two-time defending Olympic champion Kosuke Kitajima, to shatter the world record in 58.46sec.

Van der Burgh improved the previous record of 58.58 set by Australian Brenton Rickard on July 27, 2009 at the world championships in Rome.

Australian Christian Sprenger took silver and American Brendan Hansen claimed bronze.

The South African couldn't wipe the smile off his face as he sprawled out on the lane rope taking in what was the swim of his career.

"It's a feeling I can't describe right now, it has been a lot of work in the making. Everything has paid off tonight," he said.

"If there is such a thing as the perfect race, I think I swam it at the right time tonight.

"I don't really care about the world record, once you have become an Olympic champion that can never be taken away from you.

"I can tell my kids when they are watching one day that I did that."

Van der Burgh paid tribute to Norwegian world champion swimmer Alexander Dale Oen, who died of heart failure last April while at a training camp in Flagstaff, Arizona, ahead of the London Olympics.

"I just have to pay tribute to Alexander Oen tonight, I know he has been with me this year, I think he helped me finish the race in such a strong manner," van der Burgh said.

"Alexander pushed me in training, it made me realise I had to go faster to win the gold medal, that is what we trained for and that is what we have achieved."

Kitajima finished fifth, failing in his bid to become the first male swimmer to win the same event at three successive Games.

"I wanted to defend the title, but it was really tough and I enjoyed trying to do it," Kitajima said.

"It was a really tough race and I needed the world record to win, I didn't have the ability to be honest. I will do my best in the 200m."

Veteran American Hansen, 30, a world champion in the event five years ago, was thrilled to snare the bronze medal.

"That was as fast as I can go, I was pleased with the outcome. I couldn't go any faster," the Texan said.

© Sapa

Auditors intimidated, instructed to cover up corruption: report


Sapa | 29 July, 2012 10:56 Cash. File photo. Image by: Reuben Goldberg Auditors examining municipalities have been intimidated and instructed to cover up evidence of corruption, the Internal Audit Association of SA said. "In some cases, auditors are given instructions that 'you will sweep this under the carpet,'" Claudelle von Eck, the association's CEO, was quoted as saying in the Sunday Independent. "It becomes worrying because internal auditors are meant to be the whistle-blowers." She said some members had reported intimidation, but the association had no power to intervene. Auditor General Terence Nombembe revealed on Monday that only 5% of municipalities obtained clean audit reports in the 2011/2012 financial year. Nombembe said he was excited that six new municipalities had joined the clean audit category, taking the number to 13. The municipalities with clean audits were in KwaZulu-Natal, Limpopo, Mpumalanga, and the Western Cape. None of the municipalities in the Eastern Cape, Free State, Gauteng, Northern Cape and North West received clean audit reports. Nombembe said almost half (45%) obtained unqualified audit reports, but with concerns. These municipalities received unqualified reports after corrections during the audit process. Among the issues identified as a challenge were procurement, service delivery, and errors in financial information. None of the country's metros received clean audits while 13% of municipalities did not submit financial statements in time for auditing. There are currently 343 municipalities in the country. Nomembe commended municipalities which were putting in an effort to obtain clean audit statements. "They are moving forward towards the clean audit space by consistently committing to take ownership of municipal performance practices, insisting on adequately qualified staff and effective performance management practices," said Nombembe. Times Live Political killings not about dominance, but about the dough: SAIRR Sapa | 29 July, 2012 14:08 Political killings in South Africa are not about political dominance but about getting to the trough first. "Some of these guys literally come out of severe poverty and if they get kicked out they will be back there." said deputy CEO of the SA Institute of Race Relations Frans Cronje. "The stakes are high... it's about money." The number of politicians murdered the past five years has escalated, especially between 2010 and 2012. KwaZulu-Natal and Mpumalanga seem to be the worst affected -- with 41 and five killed respectively. Around the country, at least 46 officials from various political parties have been gunned down around the country. Cronje said: "Yes South Africa is a democracy... but I can't think of another country that has this problem. "We [the institute] have been hard pressed to find a single person killed over an idea. It all depends on tenders and corruption." He said the issue had been swept under the carpet for far too long and was something that would become very controversial in the next five years. Historically, KwaZulu-Natal has been a test-bed since the late 80s, and to this day it is still seen as a political killing ground. ANC KwaZulu-Natal secretary Sihle Zikalala said the party had quite a few officials killed in the last two years, but was difficult to pinpoint motives. "We have called for serious interventions to crack all these cases. It's destabilising the party." Zikalala said the ANC did not want to accuse another political party, especially not before a full investigation was conducted. IFP MP Albert Mncwango said political tension in KwaZulu-Natal was because of the IFP breakaway group the National Freedom Party. Mncwango said quite a number of councillors in his party had been killed the past five years. "A rough figure, which is subject to verification, is around 10. We believe it was always politically motivated," he said. "They took place especially around the Natal Midlands and these murders escalated when there were internal ructions which gave rise to the NFP." Former IFP chairwoman Zanele Magwaza-Msibi and her backers launched the new opposition to the IFP in January 2011. The NFP has said 22 of its members have been murdered since its launch. Many of these murders had been blamed on the IFP. Mncwango said this was unfortunate. "In all their murders, that they say are politically motivated, I can't think of any IFP member who has been apprehended." NFP general secretary Nhlanhla Khubisa said the party had never blamed other political parties for the spate of murders. "We say it’s politically motivated because it started immediately when the party was formed and of course in some cases there was some kind of political intolerance." Khubisa did however say that it was not NFP members killing other NFP members. "We a threat to somebody, somewhere." So is political intolerance in South Africa too high? According to Zikalala it is. "It is a problem and the problem of political assassinations is a serious one," he said. Mncwango said there was a new brand of political intolerance in the country. It was no longer about parties defending their political strongholds. "We have a new kind of political intolerance which has to do with tenderpreneurship," he said. "This is becoming a huge influence in politics and a source of internal ructions in parties." Because the IFP was not running government it did not hand out tenders and so it had minimal infighting, said Mncwango. Zikalala said the problem surrounding tenders could not be ruled out but that would form part of the ANC's investigation into the reason for political murders. Khubisa said there needed to be a change of mind set amongst members of political parties across the political landscape. "At some point some kind of political education is needed across all parties," he said. Five politicians have also been murdered in Mpumalanga since 2007. There have been allegations of a hit list circulating in the province which had the names of provincial politicians on it. The list apparently targeted people who stood in the way of access to 2010 Soccer World Cup tenders. It was said to be compiled, funded and executed by ANC members. Two people, Jimmy Mohlala and Sammy Mpatlanyane, whose names were on the alleged hit list, had been murdered in 2009 and 2010. Cronje concluded that ANC policy was killing off parts of the party. "Look at the ANC... money has brought it to where it is." Material gain, said Cronje, went hand in hand with politics. This was especially true in a country such as South Africa where the previously poor were now in power. "The fight for tenders is desperate," Cronje said. Times Live Ghost members haunt ANC MAYIBONGWE MAQHINA and AMUKELANI CHAUKE | 18 July, 2012 00:06 An ANC flag A membership verification process in the Eastern Cape ANC has revealed "ghost members" in the party's branches. SAVE & SHARE EMAILPRINT The party has now ordered branches to reconvene their annual general meetings. Provincial and national party bosses said yesterday that dead people were signed up as new members to create branches that existed only on paper. This emerged as the appeals committee, led by national executive committee members Fikile Xasa and Mnyamezeli Booi, met to consider appeals from branch members about annual general meetings. Provincial spokesman Mlibo Qoboshiyane said the committee was expected to finalise the complaints yesterday so that pre-registration for conferences could start on Monday and the conferences the next weekend. "It is clear there are people who signed for others though those people had died," he said, adding that some members swore affidavits to regarding "ghost" members. While Eastern Cape battles with ghosts membership, other provinces have party list problems. In North West, provincial leaders are said to be behind the launch of parallel branches. A provincial executive council member, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said: "I think there are more than 15 [parallel branches] in the province. "They are even going to the extent of launching a parallel structure with a membership form of a person who died, so you can see how serious these people are. "Someone died and they took a membership form of that person and launched a branch," the concerned member said. He said that when the ANC's national working committee met in the party's Dr Kenneth Kaunda region on Sunday and Monday, senior leaders slammed provincial officials who are alleged to be behind the launching of parallel structures, which he said was tantamount to "dirty lobbying". "During the visit of the committee, it was said, even the deputy president [Kgalema Motlanthe] said it was a concern that provincial general council members are launching parallel structures, and that provincial leaders are campaigning regional structures. "He said it when he was making closing remarks that leaders of the ANC are the ones who are to blame for parallel structures. "I got a report yesterday that a regional secretary launched a branch at a tavern with eight people. And [to start an] ANC branch you need 100 people, and eight people were called over to sign a register. It can't be correct," the concerned member said. Makonde Mathivha, spokesman for the ANC in Limpopo, said that though there were no current reports of members launching parallel or "ghost" branches now, but had experienced problems leading up to the provincial conference in December. "In the main, we had major problems in the Waterberg region. We had so many branches that had parallel structures and in certain but limited instances in Vhembe," he said. Dumisa Ntuli, a spokesman for the ANC in Gauteng, said the province did not have the same problems as experienced in the Eastern Cape as they checked their data base regularly. "We are very much aware of what people are up to, that is why we clean up our membership data system now and again. "We don't want to have 'ghost' members taking part in our meetings," he said. Abe Bekeer, the ANC's deputy chairman in Western Cape, said an auditing team from Luthuli House, the ANC head office in Johannesburg, had not yet started work in the province. Times Live Motshekga gets an 'F' after textbook saga Sibusiso Ngalwa, Gearge Matlala and Sibongakonke Shoba | 29 July, 2012 08:46 UNDER FIRE: Angie Motshekga The ANC has turned against Basic Education Minister Angie Motshekga, with members of its powerful national executive committee slamming her poor handling of the Limpopo textbooks saga and some calling for her sacking. RELATED NEWS Angie's woes mount Motshekga knew textbooks were insufficient: report Yesterday, senior members of the NEC, meeting behind closed doors in Irene, near Pretoria, tore into her failure to deal with the crisis. This came as the party's national working committee (NWC) suggested she was incapable of resolving the crisis. ANC secretary-general Gwede Mantashe set the tone on the first day of the party's four-day NEC lekgotla when he called for a frank discussion about the nondelivery of textbooks - warning that the party could not afford "to be found wanting in dealing with crisis points in society". The Limpopo crisis dominated the meeting, with the general mood being that Motshekga had failed in an area identified as the number one priority for President Jacob Zuma's government. This places Zuma in a difficult position as he may feel compelled to act against a potential ally - who is also the president of the influential ANC Women's League - just months before the ANC's Mangaung national conference where the president hopes to be re-elected. In his opening remarks at the meeting, Zuma is said to have been lenient with Motshekga, saying the crisis could not be blamed on an individual and that the party needed a holistic response to it. But this did not stop NEC members from calling for her sacking, with Gauteng provincial secretary David Makhura telling an NEC commission on governance that the textbook crisis exposed a "complete failure" of leadership in the Department of Basic Education. Motshekga came under more fire in commissions at the lekgotla and theNWC suggested that she was incapable of resolving the crisis. Delivering an NWC report at the start of the NEC meeting, Mantashe warned that the textbooks saga was affecting the ANC government's image. "The NEC is expected to debate and resolve the Limpopo books debacle. The crisis in Limpopo raises serious questions about the capacity and orientation of the national department's intervention in other spheres of government. On the same matter of national intervention in provinces, it is vital that the NEC discusses progress or lack thereof in the intervention in the Eastern Cape education crisis," he said. "We cannot be found wanting in dealing with crisis points in society," said Mantashe. Motshekga, who was one of only two ministers asked to present progress reports to the meeting, attempted to shift the blame to companies contracted to deliver books. She is, however, said to have admitted that it had been a mistake to hire a company which did not have the capacity to deliver the books. Participants of the meeting said that Motshekga's progress report painted an even more dire picture of the crisis in public education. The minister also rubbished a damning report by University of the Witwatersrand Professor Mary Metcalfe, saying it was "inaccurate". Metcalfe led one of three government-initiated task teams to investigate the non-delivery of school books in Limpopo. Although she appointed Metcalfe, Motshekga was clearly not happy with her final report, which found that the department had misled the nation when it claimed that 98% of books had been delivered to schools by the end of June. One NEC member told the Sunday Times: "She said Metcalfe's conclusions were not correct ... because schools had been closed in Limpopo and she doesn't understand how Metcalfe came to that conclusion. She said the sample used by Metcalfe was not a fair reflection of the situation." The NEC member predicted that Zuma would have to move Motshekga to another department in a reshuffle necessitated by the recent election of Home Affairs Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma as African Union Commission chairwoman. "It's clear that she must go ... but I don't think JZ will drop her from the cabinet because she is the women's league president. After she spoke, there was consensus among comrades that she had failed. "Makhura was frank in one of the commissions. He said Angie is just making excuses ... the textbook debacle shows a complete failure of leadership in dealing with the issue," said the NEC member. Another NEC member who attended the meeting said: "The reports were clear ... she must go. Everybody here feels that she must leave. Even Zuma supporters are finding it very difficult to defend her." Among those who openly laid into Motshekga were ANC Youth League acting secretary-general Kenetswe Mosenogi, who told one commission yesterday that the minister must resign. Apparently Mosenogi said Motshekga was undermining the ANC government's commitment to education. "She said the minister must do a noble thing and resign [as] she did not hold anyone accountable and did not take responsibility for the crisis. She said Angie must apologise to the nation," according to another ANC leader. The lekgotla ends today. Times Live Local governments spend nearly R250m on consultants: report Sapa | 29 July, 2012 11:59 Rand notes. Image by: Russell Roberts / Financial Mail South African municipalities spent nearly R250 million on consultants to help them prepare financial statements last year. The Sunday Independent reported that in 90% of the municipalities, there were no vacancies in the finance department, but consultants were hired anyway, the Auditor General noted in a recent report. KwaZulu-Natal spent R79.8 million on consultants, with an average of R1.9 million per municipality. In the Free State, 24 of the 27 municipalities spent R32m on consultants, a 6% increase on the previous year. Limpopo's 22 municipalities spent R23 million on consultants. Municipalities relied heavily on consultants who did not have the skills required to assist them, the newspaper reported. In other instances, consultants were hired at the last minute and supplied with incorrect data. Times Live Comments by Sonny Are these ghost members being accused of ANC crime and corruption or were these members perhaps recruited in our prisons and given remissions for future deployments? Third Force or Hidden Agenda's? Love your Country but fear the agents of your Government.