Accused convicted for defrauding the employer

FREE STATE – The accused Pieter Hendrik Myburg (36) appeared before the Bloemfontein Regional Court on Tuesday, 14 June 2022 where he was convicted and sentenced for fraud and defeating the administration of justice.

On 26 January 2018, the complainant was informed by Myburg regarding the theft of cameras at the premises of Afriforum Bloemfontein. At the time of the incident, the accused was employed at Afriforum Free State as Regional Co-ordinator responsible for managing the Afriforum offices in Bloemfontein.

A preliminary investigation was then conducted by the complainant after he received information that Myburg may be involved in the alleged theft. The outcome of the internal investigation revealed that Myburg was involved in fraudulent activities where he submitted various fraudulent quotations to Afriforum Head Office for payments of purchasing the cameras which were never bought. Some of these cameras that he submitted quotations for, were not reported as stolen. The payment from Afriforum Head Office was used for his personal gain.

The incident took place during the period of January 2016 until January 2018. As a result of the fraudulent activities Afriforum was prejudiced and suffered a total loss of more than R1 million. The matter was reported to the Hawks’ Serious Commercial Crime Investigation team based in Bloemfontein for further investigation.

Myburg was served with summons on 25 January 2022. He appeared in court on several occasions culminating in his recent conviction.

Source: South African Police Service

EC residents called to observe water restrictions

The Department of Water and Sanitation in the Eastern Cape has called on residents to adhere to water restrictions imposed by local municipalities to ensure water security.

The call comes as dam levels in Nelson Mandela Bay Metro continue to decline on a weekly basis.

The department said the metro, which has been hit by drought since 2015, is seeing most of its dams lowering at concerning percentages, with 12.1% dam levels recorded this week from last week’s 12.3%.

“I want to emphasise to residents that as things stand, the best way out of this situation is for all of us to reduce our water usage immediately and substantially. Overall, water use must be reduced by 50 million litres per day from the current level of 280 million litres per day down to 230 million litres per day,” Department’s spokesperson, Sputnik Ratau said.

According to a weekly report on the status of dam levels issued by the department early this week, Kouga Dam is at 12.8% from last week’s 13.1%, with Impofu Dam on the Krom River also decreased to 10.1%.

The dam level at Groendal Dam has decreased from last week’s 22.0% to 21.1% recorded this week, while Loerie Dam stands slightly below average at 43.6% from 43.0%.

“One of the reasons we can attribute the low dam levels to is that there have only been six months of rainfall above the average monthly rainfall since 2018.

“Weather experts are predicting that the marginal rainfall received will persist for the remainder of the year, whereas, what is needed is rainfall of 50mm in 24 hours to get run-off to the dams,” Ratau said.

Ratau said the department has since recommended to the metro that severe restrictions of 40% should be implemented in order to maintain the supply of water to affected communities.

“What we then did to assist the metro was to fast-tract the completion of the Nooitgedacht water scheme, which supplies water from the Orange-Fish River system and currently supplies 210ML/day to the metro,” Ratau said.

He said the scheme intends to supply water to the eastern side of Nelson Mandela Bay Metro, but through collaborative efforts aimed at ensuring that the western side of the metro does not dry out. Currently, 90ML/day is being pumped through to the western side, with the aim of increasing to 120ML/day.

Ratau expressed optimism as the Amathole and Butterworth Water Supply Systems remain at above average percentages at 75.8% and 99.0%, respectively.

“We acknowledge that the situation is quite dire on the western side of the province and urge everyone - business, civil society and institutions - to play their role. We need to use water sparingly and with the outmost care,” he said.

The department reiterated its call to community members to refrain from vandalising water infrastructure, warning that this has adverse impact on reliable water supply.

Source: South African Government News Agency

Little progress in municipal fiscus performance, says AG Maluleke

The financial year 2020/21 saw little improvement in the performance of the country’s local government sphere, says Auditor-General (AG) Tsakani Maluleke.

The year saw only 41 of the 257 municipalities receive clean audits. Maluleke on Wednesday presented the consolidated general report on local government audit outcomes for the financial year.

Addressing reporters, the AG decried the lack of improvement in the status of transparency, accountability, performance and integrity of local government.

She said: “Throughout the tenure of the fourth administration of local government, we've not seen an improvement. If you compare from five years ago, there were 33 clean audits. This time, it's around 41 -- so not much movement in the right direction.”

The AG said it was important to note that among the 41 were predominantly district municipalities, one metro, very few local municipalities, a handful of municipal entities, and small number of intermediate cities.

Municipalities and entities with the largest budgets were not adequately represented in the 41, she said.

In the financial year under review, Maluleke said her office has observed a worrying trend of municipalities not submitting financials and late submissions, which is a violation of relevant laws.

“Five years ago, 90% of municipalities would submit their financials on time for audit. Now we're sitting at 82% that do so on time. There is a number of provinces where this is a struggle, specifically the Free State, North West and Northern Cape,” she said.

She said the AGSA is putting measures in place to curb the emerging phenomenon.

Audits

A breakdown of the audit finding reveals that 25 audits with disclaimer opinions- were issued by the AG in the financial year. This is a slight improvement from the previous year’s 33.

The office, Maluleke said, issued four adverse opinions and 78 qualified audit opinions.

A total of 100 municipalities received unqualified opinions,.

"But within the 100, those municipalities still struggle with financial management practices. They struggle with compliance issues, particularly insofar as procurement is concerned. They largely ignore performance information, which is a problem because that often results in poor service delivery on an ongoing basis.

The AG said years of ignoring audit findings and weakening accountability have had the result of weakening institutions.

Provinces

A provincial breakdown of the audit outocomes paints a grim picture, with no clean audits recorded in the North West and Free State.

While only two Gauteng municipalities received clean audits, the Eastern Cape recorded only four.

At 22, the Western Cape had the highest number of municipalities with clean audits.

Northern Cape, Mpumalanga, KwaZulu-Natal and Limpopo, respectively, achieved clean audits in five, four, three and one municipality.

Material irregularities (MIs)

Following the expansion of its audit mandate in 2020, Maluleke said the AGSA recorded a number of notable successes.

“We issued MIs on matters relating to actual or potential financial loss, as well as those causing substantial harm to institutions and their entities, and those causing substantial harm to communities. For 81% of these matters, municipalities had not taken any action until we issued the MI notifications to them,” she said.

During the financial year, the AG issued MIs against repeatedly disclaimed municipalities.

“These MIs were causing substantial harm to the institutions. Since then, our impact has been felt, with firm actions having been taken. We noted that investigations have been performed or were underway to determine the root causes for the lack of records, registers and reconciliations.

"Accounting officers have now developed action plans – or are in the process of doing so – to address the root causes, and financial recovery plans are receiving attention from municipalities, national government and provincial government,” she said.

Source: South African Government News Agency

Man in court for murder of e-hailing driver

DURBAN – Yesterday at 19:00, police officers from KwaMashu SAPS were conducting crime prevention duties along Malandela road when they responded to a report of a hijacked silver vehicle. Police spotted the vehicle traveling at high speed and pulled over the vehicle at a taxi rank.

Three men exited the vehicle and fled on foot, however police apprehend one suspect who was carrying a bag. Upon searching the bag, police found a .38 revolver as well as 31 rounds of ammunition. Preliminary investigations revealed that the vehicle had been hijacked after the suspect had shot and killed a 38-year-old e-hailing driver on Grundel Road in Umbilo.

The 38-year-old suspect is expected to appear at the Ntuzuma Magistrate’s Court today for unlawful possession of a firearm and ammunition. He will appear at the Durban Magistrate’s Court on Monday for murder and carjacking.

Source: South African Police Service

FAO Desert Locust campaign: East Africa upsurge suppressed, Kenya free from Desert Locust

- What is the Desert Locust situation in East Africa/Kenya right now?

Cyril Ferrand:

The locust situation is currently very quiet. We have declared the upsurge is over in the entire region for two main reasons: first, we had a massive and aggressive locust campaign in close cooperation with the governments. Second, the region is facing a severe drought situation, which means that conditions are no longer favourable for the Desert Locust to breed. It does not mean that there are no Desert Locusts in the region; FAO is still monitoring their presence. We are back to what we call the recession of Desert Locust, which means they are still present but they are under control and do not pose any threat to the region – not at all in Kenya neither in Somalia nor in Ethiopia.

Carla Mucavi:

Kenya is currently free from Desert Locust after two consecutive invasions in 2019 and 2020. We were able to come together and control the invasions. This happened after 70 years without seeing any locust in this country. No one was prepared to address the invasion of such magnitude. FAO was the only UN agency that had the expertise and knowledge that made it possible to address the challenges posed by the Desert Locust. We were able to mobilize the necessary expertise and resources and provide timely forecasts that helped Kenya in terms of training, surveillance, control, spraying the areas with pesticides, while minimizing the risk for the communities and their crops.

Although Kenya is currently free from Desert Locust, it does not mean that we can afford to lower our guard. As we know, Desert Locust is a migratory pest that knows no boundaries, and we have to remain vigilant and continue to do surveillance and control.

- How were locusts brought under control? What was FAO’s role?

Cyril Ferrand:

The problem that we faced in a number of countries, especially those that are not the frontline countries like Kenya, is that they did not have the adequate capacity to address the threat. As you can imagine, in any country in the world, it is very hard to maintain capacity to respond to a shock that happens only every 70 years as in Kenya’s case. Just to compare with COVID-19, the world was not prepared for it because it was abnormal and for the first time. Here, we somehow saw the same: when you do not see an invasion for long periods of time you have a generational gap of expertise and it is hard to invest resources in preparedness in something that is unlikely to happen, especially if you have competing priorities such as droughts, floods and other shocks.

What FAO did was to create a minimum capacity for governments to conduct surveys and control operations. We have trained 3 800 people in the entire region on how to use innovative applications such as eLocust3 to recognize and report on Desert Locust. We helped the Government to establish a national locust information office to manage the data for daily field operations. We also purchased vehicles and motorbikes for the governments to be more mobile. We procured pesticides, provided people with safety protection kits including masks, gloves, overclothes and glasses. And, finally, we hired a number of aircrafts and helicopters to increase capacity on surveillance and control.

Carla Mucavi:

This was a combination of efforts and teamwork, well-coordinated by FAO under the strong leadership of the Government. Controlling Desert Locust was a complex task, and the magnitude of the invasion really required a lot of resources. We worked in close collaboration with national Government, counties at the subnational level, as well as with the communities and the press to raise awareness about the situation. FAO had to train people, particularly youth, on how to use new technologies such as eLocust3 to be able to report on the locust upsurge.

The Government of Kenya with the support of FAO, managed the first and second wave of the Desert Locust invasion. FAO raised about $24 million from 18 donors, resources that were used to procure insecticides, vehicles, spray equipment and facilitate human resource. In terms of operation, the resources were used to facilitate survey and control activities and further used to support livelihood recovery. By the end of the two waves, a total of 19 million hectares had been surveyed out of which 212 000 hectares were sprayed (treated). Spraying protected 320 000 hectares that could have been invaded. These data show the role that FAO played in saving crops and lives. The control efforts averted the loss of more than 11 000 hectares of crops worth around $3.4 million. Consequently, more than 75 000 people were able to meet their annual cereal needs and almost 5 500 households were able to feed their livestock and produce milk, to improve dietary diversity and nutrition.

- Did the response in East Africa also involve protecting livelihoods?

Cyril Ferrand:

Yes, we had reviewed the lessons of the 2003-2005 upsurge in West Africa where one of the recommendations was that we should not focus only on surveillance and control but at the same time invest in protecting livelihoods. In the past, it used to be done one after the other in a sequential manner. But we learned that it had to be simultaneous. Less grazing areas for livestock means less meat and less milk for children under five years, in particular. There was a risk of malnutrition that we averted through livelihood intervention, distributing animal feed, seeds and through cash transfer to affected people. Cash injection was quite important for stabilizing livelihood by providing people with the means to buy food especially for those who lost crops.

- Do desert locust upsurges occur with regularity? Is it possible to prevent their occurrence in the future?

Cyril Ferrand:

Despite what many people think, upsurges are not cyclical; however, Desert Locust can always come back. Thus, surveillance systems and early actions are of paramount importance. If climatic conditions are favourable for Desert Locust to breed and if countries do not survey the areas, there is a risk that Desert Locust will breed and multiply. The more often surveys are conducted, the lower is the risk of unnoticed breeding. Now the surveillance capacity is in place. So, yes, Desert Locust could come back if they were breeding in areas that could not be surveyed or controlled mainly for security reasons rather than the lack of surveillance capacity in countries like Yemen and parts of Somalia.

- How does FAO’s anticipatory approach help to avert severe locust crises and other shocks?

Cyril Ferrand:

Eastern Africa in particular is not spare from shocks whether they are human-induced or natural disasters – we have conflicts and displacements, droughts in Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia and floods in South Sudan. We see a significant increase in food commodity prices, which is global, of course. We have a conjunction of factors meaning that resilience building is paramount. Rural people, in particular, are never far away from shocks. On average, in the past ten years they never enjoyed one full year without being hit by a shock. It means that if you are not able to work in an anticipatory manner through a clear resilience agenda the probability that people will be affected by shocks is high.

For example, if you do not protect pastoralists from Desert Locust or drought, it would ravage rangelands and animals will die. When a pastoralist loses his/her productive assets, the probability that this person re-engages in the productive activity is close to zero. To recapitalize assets, it takes minimum five years, and in the meantime you can be hit by another shock. Anticipatory action is exactly meant to protect livelihoods and prevent significant loss of productive assets.

Carla Mucavi:

FAO really helped the Government of Kenya to build the capacity that now exists to be able to address similar invasions should they happen again. In close collaboration with the Government, FAO was able to establish structures and capacities, organize field teams, mobilize resources and roll out in terms of continuing training and reporting procedures. We need to deal with the growing severity and intensity of the impacts of climate change. The only way we can mitigate them is to use early warning systems that enable us to detect disasters in advance and act as early as possible.

- What is the current drought situation in the Horn of Africa?

Cyril Ferrand:

The drought is a tragedy in the region. It is not the first time the region is hit by a drought. In 2011, we already had one of the most severe droughts in the region that led to the death of 260 000 people in Somalia alone. At that time, we said early warning did not work and we have learned the lesson. The next drought was in 2016-2017 and the international community at that time was still very much under the shock of the failure. Everyone reacted quickly – all the development programmes were re-prioritised and donors came at scale to respond. At that time, we averted the catastrophe.

This time, the alert was there, all warning systems have been activated and worked well. Kenya declared a drought emergency in September 2021; Somalia - in of April 2021, more than a year ago. But funding was not sufficient to address the magnitude of the crisis.

The impact is dramatic. Already 15 million people have been affected by the drought across Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia. We have reached 85 percent of the time within the long rains’ season but the region has received only 50 percent of the rain. It is clear by now that the region is facing its fourth consecutive below average rain season. And yet we have not even experienced the full impact of the Ukraine crisis, which will materialise during the second half of the year, both in terms of prices, food and fertilizer supplies. The worse is still to come, and by the end of the year the region will be in a dramatic situation because of the cumulative effects of all the shocks.

Carla Mucavi:

The drought hit the same counties, the same areas that were previously affected by the Desert Locust. This was exacerbated by the impact of COVID-19 that affected the country. In Kenya, it is currently affecting 17 out of 23 counties. We see the sufferings of rural communities. Most of the pastoralists and agropastoral communities have lost their assets, livestock and livelihoods. It is a really severe drought that is intensifying because of the impacts of climate change. We are talking now about 3.5 million people that are affected and this number will grow if the situation does not improve. We, at FAO, together with other UN agencies are responding to this emergency

FAO is bringing over expertise to save the livestock since it is the only source of food and income for many rural communities. We have been providing range cubes and vaccines for animals, restoring water holes. This is combined with unconditional cash transfers to give some resources to the communities and diversify their diet. But it is not easy, the funding is not there to effectively respond to the drought emergency despite several appeals the UN have launched for Kenya.

Source: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations

Media Invitation: Police Minister to engage Khayelitsha youth on crime during Crime Summit

CAPE TOWN - Responding to high incidents of contact crimes that have been reported in Cape Town’s Khayelitsha township, Police Minister, General Bheki Cele will on Youth Day 16 June 2022, deliver an address at the Khayelitsha Response Summit, hosted by the Khayelitsha Development Forum (KDF).

The Youth Day multi-sectoral engagement will see the South African Police Service (SAPS) Police Ministry, officials from the three spheres of Government responsible for safety and security as well as community policing structures alongside the youth and residents of Khayelitsha, come up with cross sectoral and cross departmental solutions on what should be done to bring stability and lasting change to the lives of people of Khayelitsha and at the same time resolve their crime concerns.

Members of the media are invited to attend the event:

Date: 16 June 2022

Time: 08:00

Venue: False Bay College; Khayelitsha Campus

Source: South African Police Service

SA records 710 new COVID-19 cases

South Africa has recorded 710 new COVID-19 cases in the past 24 hours, bringing the total number of laboratory-confirmed cases to 3 979 836.

According to data provided by the National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD), this increase represents a 6.8% positivity rate.

The majority of new cases are from Gauteng at 41% followed by Western Cape at 19%.

KwaZulu-Natal accounted for 13%, Eastern Cape accounted for 9%, Mpumalanga and North West each accounted for 5% respectively, Free State accounted for 3%, and Limpopo and Northern Cape each accounted for 2% respectively of today’s cases.

“The proportion of positive new cases/total new tested today is 6.8%, and is higher than yesterday at 5.6%. The 7-day average is 7.4% today, and is lower than yesterday’s 7.7%. The 7-day moving average daily number of cases has decreased,” the NICD said.

The National Department of Health (NDoH) has reported 41 deaths, and of these, 10 occurred in the past 24 – 48 hours. This brings the total fatalities to 101 550 to date.

In terms of hospital admissions, the NDoH said that there has been an increase of 64 hospital admissions in the past 24 hours.

The cumulative number of recoveries now stand at 3 858 949 with a recovery rate of 97%.

A total of 25 515 180 tests have been conducted in both public and private sectors.

South Africa has administered a total number of 36 522 914 vaccines to date.

Source: South African Government News Agency