Saturday, May 28, 2011

Bombings by the ANC

Video very graphic how innocent people were killed by bombs Nelson Mandela instructed.

The ANC placed Bombs in several places in South Africa during apartheid. Many people were killed by these bombs, bombs don't discriminate, black and white were killed. 

The interesting part is the arms strugle was started by Nelson Mandela and he refused to stop the arms struggle, the government of that time said they would release him immediately if he would stop the arms struggle. 

Oliver Tambo instructed the Church Street bomb in South Africa this was done by Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK) the ANC armed wing that was Started By Hero Nelson Mandela and by definition is nothing more than a terrorist. 

Nelson Mandela even sang their struggle song 'Kill the boer' after being released from prison.


 So much for democracy?

Zuma Charms Farmers

May 12, 2011


Zuma was responding to concerns raised by the Greytown farming community over Malema's assertion that land earmarked for redistribution could be taken away without payment if the farmers did not accept the money offered for it. 


"What Malema said is neither the ANC's nor the government's policy," Zuma said yesterday while on the election campaign trail in impoverished Msinga, in the Greytown area of the KwaZulu-Natal Midlands. 


PARTY TIME: President Jacob Zuma dances during yesterday's election rally in Pamaroy near Msinga in the Greytown area of the KwaZulu-Natal Midlands


"Policies are not for individuals but are discussed. The ANCYL cannot determine policies. People can have ideas and those ideas discussed in the ANC. There were many Malemas before, but issues were discussed within the organisation and policies formulated," Zuma said.
"You will be surprised that one day Malema will be stopping others from raising what he had raised before.
"Malema is on a learning curve and the farming community must not be shaken by his comments. What he says are simply his views." 


Zuma went on to say that the ANC was older than its outspoken youth leader. 


"There was a similar concern when the ANCYL had an idea about the nationalisation of mines. We allowed that to be discussed and debated in the ANC because it had been previously debated many decades before when Nelson Mandela came out of prison. The nationalisation of mines was also discussed and we came [up] with a mixed economy policy. The ANC does not take policy [decisions] emotionally." 


Earlier, Michael Yeadon, a community leader who represents farmers in the Greytown area, told Zuma that Malema was a "very scary man" within the community. 


"As a faming community, we also want clean water, roads and schools so that we will be able to feed the community of Greytown and be able create job opportunities.
"Also, we want the ANC to be more accessible to us so that we can work together and be able to deliver to the community. We want the assurance from the president that we will be protected [from Malema]." 


After assuring farmers that their land would not be taken from them, Zuma urged farmers, the business community and local traditional leaders to vote for the ANC in next Wednesday's local government elections. 


"It is the only party that has the clear understanding of the needs of the people," Zuma said. 


Greytown and Msinga - the focus of Zuma's visit yesterday - have been IFP-controlled since the first local government elections in 1996. Development in the area has been almost nonexistent.
There is very little infrastructure in the area, which has massive unemployment, and tens of thousands of people are forced to live with no access to proper housing, running water, tarred roads or electricity. 


Zuma was confronted by scores of dissatisfied residents who made it clear that they now want to try their luck with the ruling party to see whether it can deliver their basic needs. 


However, the IFP mayor of Msinga Local Municipality, Joshua Sikakhane, has rubbished their claims, saying poor service delivery in the area stemmed from the fact that their annual budget was a mere R72-million - "very little" in his view. This was in addition to a R61-million annual grant from the national government for the provision of services. 


According to the 2001 national census more than 168000 people live in Msinga.
Msinga falls under the IFP-led Umzinyathi municipality, and many locals claim councillors have failed them for two terms. 




A Grade 11 pupil at Madudula High School, Sifiso Ndlovu, said residents were pinning their hopes on an ANC victory in the area. "We have no water, no toilets and few access roads. The critical thing that we want to see is provision of proper service delivery like other areas," he said. 


Although a few clans in the area have access to water, roads, sanitation and electricity, residents claim that not a single low-cost house has been built in the area. 


Sikakhane said: "With the little we get, we have been able to appoint a contractor to start building 500 low-cost houses. These will be the first batch of houses for the local people. The building of these houses was the brainchild of my municipality, responding to the complaints of the community. We have seen many communities benefiting from the Department of Human Settlements building houses, but uMsinga was often left out."
Sikakhane said the IFP-led municipality had sunk boreholes to give residents access to clean running water. 


No Finality on Shaik

May 12, 2011

Two-and-a-half months after convicted fraudster Schabir Shaik allegedly assaulted a journalist on a golf course, police have still not finalised their investigation. 

KwaZulu-Natal police spokesman Brigadier Phindile Radebe said yesterday the docket, which was sent back to the police by acting director of public prosecutions Simphiwe Mlotshwa last month, was still incomplete.

"We are still investigating. I cannot say when the investigation will be complete. At this stage, I am unable to say what needs to be completed because it is a sensitive matter and may jeopardise the case," Radebe said. 


But Institute for Security Studies crime and justice expert Dr Johan Burger said yesterday the average turnaround time for a simple common assault case was no more than two weeks.
"Instead in this case it is taking more than two months. It appears that the police are stalling and there is an unnecessary delay. The police need to come out and say what is keeping them from finalising this matter," he said. 


Journalist Amanda Khoza laid a complaint against Shaik in March, saying he slapped and throttled her on the Papwa Sewgolum Golf Course in Durban on February 26 after a tip-off that Shaik - granted medical parole on the grounds of terminal illness - was teeing off. 


Burger said a completed docket for a common assault case would contain statements from the accused, complainant, witnesses and a G88 form to show the complainant had been examined by a doctor. "In this case, we know who the accused and the complainant are. By now, police would have established the identities of the witnesses. That would have taken no more than two weeks. 


"If there is a key witness, who may be overseas or unavailable to make a statement, police need to come out and say this. This is not a murder or high-level corruption case where there is sensitive information that needs to be hidden," said Burger.


While the delay was not explained it could be assumed that Shaik's being a high-profile person was "for some reason impacting negatively on the police's ability to finalise this matter".
Shaik was rearrested soon after Khoza's complaint when a new assault claim against him surfaced. He spent 48 hours behind bars after the Department of Correctional Services said it could not ignore the allegation he punched Mohamed Ismail at the Masjid al Hilal mosque in Overport. 


After a two-day investigation, the department released Shaik on the grounds that he had not violated parole conditions and there was no proof of the assault as Ismail could not be located.
Shaik, friend and former financial adviser of President Jacob Zuma, served 28 months of his 15-year jail sentence for fraud and corruption - mostly in hospitals. 




Cops Hit Back at Brutality Claims

May 27 2011 

Police management have slammed some of South Africa’s leading criminologists, saying comments made at a police brutality workshop will do nothing but intensify criminal attacks on police. 

Thursday’s scathing attack from National Police Commissioner General Bheki Cele’s office came a day after criminologists and the Independent Complaints Directorate (ICD) said the country was facing a police brutality crisis.
Criminologists David Bruce and Andrew Faull, who addressed the media at an Institute of Security Studies (ISS) workshop on policing and the use of force, laid the blame on police management negligence, criminal elements in the SAPS ranks, poor training and blatant disregard for internal disciplinary procedures. 

The SAPS failed to attend the workshop, with Cele and Gauteng Commissioner Lieutenant-General Mzwandile Petros saying they were in meetings for three days. It is not known why they did not send representatives to the workshop. 


 Lieutenant-General Mzwandile Petros


In an e-mail sent out to the country’s media houses, national police spokesman, Colonel Vish Naidoo, reacted to the “deliberate and scathing attack on the SAPS”, saying: “The SAPS has read with absolute discomfort the suggestions made by key figures of institutions and organisations that police are generally ‘brutal’ in their approach. 


 Colonel Vish Naidoo


“While SAPS top management concedes (there have been) isolated cases where police have acted outside the boundaries of the law, in terms of which the police officials involved are being dealt with both criminally and departmentally, we feel such comments and suggestions do not help our cause to minimise criminal attacks on police. 

“It is a well-known fact that the environment that police work in and the type of people police are confronted by are generally of a violent nature. 

“The actions of police are normally relative to the situations they are faced with, notwithstanding the fact that police management neither promotes nor condones police officers who may deliberately disregard the constitutional rights of our citizens.” 

Naidoo said verification of this was the number of police officers arrested by their colleagues for a variety of crimes. 

“We also co-operate wholeheartedly with organisations like the ICD and the secretariat in the Ministry of Police that are in place to oversee objectively the running of the police within the confines of the law.” 

At the workshop, however, ICD spokesman Moses Dlamini said: “Co-operation is one of the biggest challenges the ICD faces when it comes to investigations into the police as there is no legislation compelling the SAPS to report any incident to the ICD.” 

Naidoo said what was alarming “is that this deliberate scathing attack on the SAPS comes at a time when there seems to be a deliberate killing and maiming of our police officers throughout the country”. 

“Surely such comments … could be interpreted by criminals as a show of support (for them) them, thus inciting them to continue with the killing of our officers.” 

Commenting, Bruce said: 

“The incidents where police members misuse force are not isolated, but (show) the SAPS’s own approach to dealing with the use of force is inadequate. These inadequacies also contribute to the problem of killings of police and undermine their image.
“The arguments the SAPS is putting forward are the very reason why the use of force requires far more attention at a management level.”

http://www.iol.co.za/news/crime-courts/cops-hit-back-at-brutality-claims-1.1074961 

Train Crash Pay-Off

May 28 2011 








It seemed like a generous gesture: The Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa offering R10 000 to each passenger injured in last week's Soweto train crash. 

But lawyers have labelled it a cynical ploy to head off a class action that could cost the rail operator R1 billion. 

Prasa has put together a war chest of R20-million as its officials approach 1 057 commuters injured in two different train collisions – in Pretoria last month and Soweto last week – offering them up to R10 000 for serious injuries in a once off payment, providing they sign a waiver preventing them from suing Prasa in court. 

On Friday, the President of the South African Association of Personal Injury Lawyers and former head of the South African Law Society Ronald Bobroff accused Prasa of a cynical public relations ploy in a bid to avoid paying out up to R1-million per claim. 

“The bottom line is that the law stipulates that any person injured in this country in the hands of another person has the right to claim what is conducive to them. Setting up kiosks near train stations and misleading uninformed people to giving up their rights is unacceptable,” Bobroff said. 






The SA Rail Commuter Corporation had to pay R320 000 in damages to a Sebokeng resident who suffered serious injuries when he fell out of a moving train. Mzondeni July Nhlapo, had claimed R484 000, but the rail company settled before the case went to court. 

Nhlapo was on the train on May 23, 2007, when he fell through an open door and landed between the train and the platform. 

The train was at Houtkop station and on its way to Vereeniging. Nhlapo injured his right knee and shoulder, chest, ankle and foot. 

Bobroff said the train commuters equally had the right to claim more than what Metrorail or Prasa offered. 

“If 50 percent of the commuters each claimed anything between R500 000 or a R1m, this would far outweigh Prasa’s money. So you can’t put an amount of R7 000 or R10 000 on a person’s life or livelihood.” 

Bobroff urged commuters not to accept the money or be coerced into thinking they were getting a wonderful gift. 

Prasa’s proposed compensation has also angered Lindeni Shange whose husband, Samuel Shange, is still recuperating at the Charlotte Maxeke Academic Hospital.
“Is my husband’s life really worth R10 000 or R1 000 000?”
Shange said she was unhappy about the attitude of Metrorail and Prasa. 

“You would never hear of such incidents in the olden days. What frustrates us further is the little money the victims are offered. 

“What is R10 000 going to do especially if your husband is a bread winner who has to feed almost 10 mouths?” 

Shange said young and inexperienced drivers were hired by the rail entities.
“Their attitudes and the desire to speed these trains shows that they have no respect for commuters.” 

Joburg personal claims attorney Michael de Broglio said his firm had already been approached by some of the injured victims. 

De Broglio said it was unwise of Prasa to think that a head injury or a leg amputation could be worth R10 000. 

“It won’t cover the pain and suffering, the loss of income and not to mention the cost of future medical treatment.” 

Prasa has revealed that between 1 800 to 2 000 passengers were on board train 9432 on May 19 when it collided with the Soweto Business Express train carrying 42 passengers. 

The trains collided between the Mzimhlophe and Phomolong train stations and 857 people were injured. 

Train driver Musa Phakathi was fired this week for speeding – and he was already on a warning for going too fast. 

On Friday Phakathi was still too distressed to comment. 

The SA Transport and Allied Workers Union, which is angry at how Prasa handled Phakathi’s dismissal, said they would help him appeal against the dismissal. 

The Soweto train crash occurred a month after train driver Anna Maseko died and 200 people were injured when two Metrorail trains hit into each other in Pretoria due to signal failure. 

Prasa spokesman Nana Zenani said the injured were not forced to accept the payout. 

“We have given them two options. One is to make claims or consult their lawyers.” 

Zenani said it was important for commuters to know that once they had accepted the claim, they would not be compensated further. 

Meanwhile, the Railway Safety Regulator launched its far-reaching, SA Bureau of Standards-developed national guidelines on railway safety yesterday. 

http://www.iol.co.za/news/south-africa/gauteng/crash-pay-off-outcry-1.1075190

Refugee Centres Along Borders

May 27, 2011

Plans are underway to establish asylum reception centres on the country's borders amid complaints that those close to business areas are a nuisance and irritating, home affairs said on Friday. 

This would also ensure that fewer foreigners entered the country, said home affairs director-general Mkuseli Apleni. 

The department was recently ordered to relocate a reception centre in Crown Mines, Johannesburg, after the business community went to court claiming the large presence of refugees rendered conditions intolerable for business. 


They claimed that refugees misbehaved, littered, defecated in public and created a traffic hazard. 


Mkuseli Apleni said this refugee centre, which accommodated 700 people, would close on June 1 and its operations would be temporarily transferred to a refugee reception centre at the Pretoria Showgrounds. 

"This won't cause any [of the] problems faced in the previous location because our ultimate goal is to move," he said. 

The department's aim this financial year would be to identify a suitable area on the border, he said. "We operate on budget but in the next financial year, we will be able to open it." 

The closure of the Crown Mines facility would leave only two reception areas in Gauteng. 

There were other centres in Port Elizabeth, Cape Town, Durban and Musina. 

Meanwhile, Apleni said 11 home affairs officials had been arrested in the past two weeks for allegedly facilitating illegal entry of foreigners into the country. 

He said some of them had been granted bail of R5000 each, but that others remained behind bars. 

Three immigration officers had been arrested at OR Tambo International Airport for facilitating the illegal entry and permanent stay of foreigners. 

A fourth person was accused of taking a R100,000 bribe from a foreigner who wanted to enter the country without the necessary yellow fever certificate. 

In Durban, five officials and a local priest had been arrested, while an official had been arrested in Grahamstown for allegedly registering hundreds of fraudulent marriages involving foreigners and South Africans. 

Apleni said the Hawks and the department's anti-corruption unit were analysing all the marriages registered by these officials to determine the actual number of fraudulent marriages. 

"The arrested of these officials... sends a positive message that the government will leave no stone unturned to ensure those involved in such criminal activities face the full might of the law," said Apleni. 

R200m Spent on 'dodgy' Municipal Tenders

2011-05-27 

The Gauteng government has identified five "questionable" tenders in municipalities in the province worth around R200 million, the DA said on Friday.

This information was provided in response to an oral question submitted to Premier Nomvula Mokonyane in the legislature by the party, DA member of the provincial legislature and housing spokesperson Janet Semple said.

 





Janet Semple said the DA had asked whether any municipality in the province was mentioned in an auditor general report on municipalities DA leader Helen Zille wanted made public before the recent local government elections.

 



Semple said they were told that "irregular expenditure" in 



Tshwane metro municipality was R165 414 911

Kungweni local municipality R25 969 162

Ekurhuleni metro municipality R2 285 366 

West Rand district municipality R3 106 515

Emfuleni municipality R21 250.

"This is a mammoth total of R196 797 204.00 of taxpayers's money that was spent on questionable tenders and contracts. 

Reasons given by government for this wasteful expenditure are not clear," Semple said in a statement.

She later said, "The premier made no commitment to follow up on irregularities, but we will be pushing for it to be followed up."




Africa Boso, spokesperson for Auditor General Terence Nombembe, said the AG was finalising the report and it would be tabled in Parliament in mid June or the end of June.

Comment from the premier's office and further details of the tenders were not immediately available.


http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/Politics/R200m-spent-on-dodgy-municipal-tenders-20110527

Why whites don't want to apologise for Apartheid

Apartheid from a White Prospective

Friday, May 27, 2011

A Positive Image Of AFRICA?

2011-05-26 

Bela Bela - Limpopo Premier Cassel Mathale has warned leaders of African countries to protect themselves from Western politicians “who view the continent as a tool to perpetuate imperialist agendas”.

Mathale, who was addressing delegates during the Africa Day celebrations held in Bela Bela on Wednesday, applauded Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe and Libyan President Muammar Gaddafi as leaders who fought against Western oppression.

"From time immemorial, Africa has been viewed as a storehouse of raw material for the first world countries, in particular the Western forces," said Mathale.

"Offers to invest in the economy of the continent have been, in all respect, attached to heavy political strings, which are meant to further the current trends of the continent depending on the former colonial principals."

Celebrating African leaders

Mathale said the continent had good reason to celebrate its own great leaders, whom he said had left a legacy that deserved permanent recognition.

“It is on this note that we should dedicate this Africa Day celebration to all leaders of the African continent who fought against the colonisation of Africa against all odds.

"In this regard, we salute Patrice Lumumba, Samora Machel, Agostinho Neto, Eduardo Mondlane, Ahmed Ben Bella, Modibo KeitaRobert MugabeJoshua Nkomo Seretse Khama, Kenneth Kaunda, Albert Lutuli, Oliver Tambo, Nelson MandelaGovan MbekiJomo Kenyatta , Kwame Nkrumah, Ahmed Sekou Toure, Julius Nyerere, Amilcar CabralMuammar Gaddafi and Kgotsikgolo Moshoeshoe, among others," he said.

Patrice Lumumba
Samora Machel
 
 Agostinho Neto


Eduardo Mondlane
 
Ahmed Ben Bella



Modibo Keita
 
 Robert Mugabe

 Joshua Nkomo




Seretse Khama






Kenneth Kaunda
 
 
Albert Lutuli



Oliver Tambo



Nelson Mandela
 

 Govan Mbeki
 

Jomo Kenyatta
 
Kwame Nkrumah
 
Ahmed Sekou Toure
 
Julius Nyerere
 
Amilcar Cabral
 
Muammar Gaddafi
 
Mathale said it was unfortunate that some of these leaders were assassinated by Western-sponsored forces.

“We must appreciate the fact that our continent has [gone] through many dark chapters. So it is proper not to celebrate this Africa Day in isolation.

“We must use our history of oppression, struggle, and economic exclusion to define the present and shape the future,” he said.

Mathale accused the West of planning, funding and sustaining some of the civil wars that have ravaged Africa for many years.

He said the "colonisers" were still persistent, refusing to afford Africa full independence and respect for the "sovereign rights" of each African country.

"In order to claim cheap political mileage, they stood up in numerous platforms praising themselves for building the continent and handing it back to indigenous people while they knew exactly what they were doing,” he said.

Self-liberation

The premier also encouraged Africans to appreciate one another and reject all forms of xenophobia.

“First and foremost, as Africans we must be united before we can invite others to join in the unity. The sooner we accept that we must liberate ourselves from the situation we are presently in, some of which are not of our own making, the better,” Mathale said.

Africa Day is celebrated annually on May 25 to commemorate the 1963 founding of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU).

On this day, leaders of 30 of the 32 independent African states signed a founding charter of the OAU in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. The objective of Africa Day was to build a positive image of Africa.  

http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/Politics/Premier-praises-Mugabe-Gaddafi-20110526