Suspect arrested for impersonating a police officer

KARIEGA - In order to portray a professional image in any organisation, employees must wear their uniforms with pride and dignity. The South African Police Service prides itself by the SAPS Code of Ethics and the Code of Conduct hence police officers are constantly reminded on the correct dress code.

Bearing this in mind, on Friday, 15 July 2022 at about 13:20, observant Anti-Gang Unit members were quick to spot a person walking in Kariega in police uniform which was not in accordance with the SAPS dress code. While patrolling in Durban Street, the 30-year-old male was seen wearing a police raincoat without any insignias, a police field dress pants that was not properly worn, safety shoes and a police cap. With the assistance of SAPS Uitenhage members, AGU members then followed the person who after becoming aware of their presence, started running and was arrested inside a shop in Gerald Smith Street. A toy firearm was also confiscated.

When the ‘police officer’ could not provide his appointment certificate, he was detained on a charge of impersonating a police officer.

He is expected to appear in the Kariega magistrate court on Monday, 18 July 2022.

Nelson Mandela Bay District Commissioner, Maj Gen Vuyisile Ncata welcomed the arrest of the impersonator. ‘Many crimes are committed by criminals who imitate and pose as police officials. Such behaviour tarnishes the image of the SAPS and results in the community losing credibility and faith in our men and women in blue. An internal investigation will also be conducted to ascertain how the suspect was in possession of the uniform,’ added Maj Gen Ncata.

Source: South African Police Service

City spotlight on unlawful occupation of Council flats

The City of Cape Town’s Public Housing Department has been looking at the detrimental issue of unlawful occupation in the City’s affordable rental housing units and is seeing how to assist to regularise the tenancy of those who are eligible. The unlawful occupation of the Community Residential Units (CRUs) takes away opportunities from the rightful and registered applicants who patiently await their turn to be assisted with rental housing; it continues a system of informality as unlawful occupiers do not have legal contracts with the city and therefore do not pay rent, the latter which is used for maintenance of CRUs. It increases the risks of crime, gangsterism and drug peddling as the unlawful occupants are not vetted by the City and it prevents debt management as the occupants are not the rightful tenants.

Therefore, the City issued notices to unlawful occupants in its CRUs across the metro over recent months. On Friday, 15 July 2022, the City’s Mayoral Committee Member for Human Settlements, Councillor Malusi Booi engaged with the CRU residents, including residents of Manenberg and Bishop Lavis and offered advice and support to those who could be considered for regularisation.

The City remains committed to assisting all lawful tenants in City owned units across the metro.

The City found that many residents who are unlawfully occupying units are either not registered on the City’s Housing Needs Register or have very recent application dates, which is not fair to those who have been registered for a long time. This effectively takes away opportunities from applicants who have followed the correct procedure of registering on the housing database and who are waiting patiently to be assisted.

‘We have engaged with the residents in Manenberg and Bishop Lavis and we continue to encourage those who need assistance to approach us.

‘It is important to note that every effort is made to consider those found in unlawful occupation of a City unit for regularisation, against the set criteria in terms of the reviewed City’s Allocation Policy. The notice to vacate a City unit is the last resort, and is only served once all options have been explored and applied.

‘A total of 1113 cases are currently being reviewed and thus far, approximately 222 cases have been identified for regularisation,’ said Councillor Malusi Booi.

An unlawful occupant refers to a person who in relation to the City’s rental housing stock, is not a family member listed on the City’s tenant family form and who:

• Has moved into a vacant dwelling without the City’s authorisation;

• Has forced the tenant out of his/her dwelling, or;

• Has been left behind by a vacating tenant or when the tenant died.

Qualifying criteria include:

• Must be registered on the City’s Housing Needs Register

• Monthly household income must not exceed R15 000

• The prospective tenant and family must personally occupy the premises

• Neither the prospective tenant nor his/her spouse/partner must be current property owners

(a) Have no proven record of anti-social behaviour; and

(b) Has been living with the tenant for an unbroken period of at least two years prior to the death of the tenant/tenant vacating or relinquishing the tenancy. The proof of stay provided must not be older than five years prior to the death of the tenant/tenant vacating or relinquishing the tenancy.

Contact us and make an appointment:

Members of the public may contact the City’s Human Settlements Directorate by phoning the Call Centre on 021 444 0333 or sending a message via WhatsApp to 063 299 9927.

Our housing offices are open on weekdays from 08:00 to 15:00.

Source: City Of Cape Town

Lebowakgomo police launch search operation for a missing man

LEBOWAKGOMO - The Police in Lebowakgomo have launched a search operation for a missing man, Kwena Lesley Mokoka aged 26 of Mafefe village who went missing on 30 June 2022 at about 19:00.

The victim reportedly informed his family that he was going to Lebowakgomo Zone S, phase 2 but never returned home. He was last seen wearing a black jean, grey jersey, black jacket with black and white Lacoste tekkies.

Anyone with information that can assist to reunite the missing person with his family should contact the investigating Officer Captain Phori on 0825658234, or the Crime Stop number 0860010111 or the nearest police station. Information can also be shared via MySAPS App.

Police investigations are still continuing.

Source: South African Police Service

City magnifies reach of neighbourhood watches

The City of Cape Town’s Neighbourhood Watch Support Programme will provide these vital community organisations with more than R5,6 million in patrol and crime prevention equipment.

The volunteers who are part of neighbourhood watches (NWs) are an integral part of keeping our communities safer and play an important role in keeping criminals away. The Safety and Security Directorate has an annual budget of R1,5m for procuring equipment for accredited NWs.

‘This is augmented by ward allocations from ward councillors, which for the 2022/23 financial year is R3 188 200. In addition, the Mayor recently indicated that he would be making an additional R1m available per annum for the next five years. We can therefore provide patrol and crime prevention equipment to neighbourhood watches to the value of more than R5,6m,’ said the City’s Mayoral Committee Member for Safety and Security, Alderman JP Smith.

High quality equipment is purchased and includes flashlights, spotlights, body cameras, dashboard cameras, bicycles, high visibility jackets, two-way radios, night vision equipment, and first aid kits.

During the past financial year, the Safety and Security Directorate provided more than 60 neighbourhood watches in 31 wards with equipment, while 20 more received training.

Neighbourhood watches are versatile organisations and apart from their crime prevention functions, contribute to other public safety issues and there is significant interest among accredited NWs for their possible involvement in the prevention and mitigation of disasters.

‘The Directorate will arrange for these NWs who wish to take part in this initiative to be capacitated so that they can assist the City with the management of disasters. This will include suitable training by the Disaster Risk Management Centre and the Fire and Rescue Service, as well as setting up a protocol for implementation. This will provide further skills to NW members who are passionate and dedicated to keeping their communities safe. We are aware of their impact and laud them for it,’ said Alderman Smith.

To be accredited as a neighbourhood watch, a properly constituted body must be comprised of at least seven patrollers who are members. The patrollers have to be verified as having no criminal offence against their name. Currently there are 312 accredited watches in the metropole.

The patrollers swear allegiance to a code of conduct and the patrol area is strictly defined.

‘The patrollers are the eyes and ears in the community. Through their vigilance, they promote and build safe neighbourhoods and work hand in hand with the SAPS to ensure safer communities,’ added Alderman Smith.

Source: City Of Cape Town

Alleged copper cable thieves expected to appear in courts in Hartbeesfontein and Bloemhof

POTCHEFSTROOM - Police in the province remain steadfast in the fight against tampering with and damage to critical infrastructure. It is for this reason that Mario Mulanga (41) and Justice Sithole (25) are expected to make a second appearance in the Hartbeesfontein Magistrates' Court on Tuesday, 19 July 2022, for possession of copper cables.

It is alleged that Sannieshof police sensitised their counterparts in Hartbeesfontein and Klerksdorp about a suspicious white Isuzu bakkie vehicle loaded with copper cables and driving towards Klerksdorp on Wednesday afternoon, 13 July 2022.

The said vehicle was ultimately spotted and stopped on the R503 (Hartbeesfonrein / Coligny) road near Hartbeesfontein for a search. Consequent to the search, copper cables worth R10 000-00 were found in the vehicle. As a result, Mulanga and Sithole were arrested after failing to account for the possession. The pair will also be processed as suspected undocumented persons.

Meanwhile, the copper cables were positively identified as those of Eskom and stolen in Sannieshof.

In another incident in Bloemhof, two suspects were on Friday, 15 July 2022, arrested for tampering with essential infrastructure.

It is alleged that members of Community In Blue, noticed two unknown males entering into a manhole with their tools. The vigilant and law abiding citizens who are also working with the police in the fight against crime, reported the incident. The police responded swiftly and found the suspects busy cutting the cable. The suspects who are Lesotho and Zimbabwean foreign nationals respectively, were arrested. They will also be processed as suspected undocumented persons after failing to produce documents.

The suspects are expected to appear before the Bloemhof Magistrates' Court on Monday, 18 July 2022.

The Provincial Commissioner of North West, Lieutenant General Sello Kwena applauded both the police and members of the Community In Blue for their vigilance and cooperation which led to the successes.

Source: South African Police Service

President Cyril Ramaphosa: Eulogy at the funeral of Yasmin ‘Jessie’ Duarte

Eulogy by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the funeral of ANC Secretary-General Yasmin 'Jessie' Duarte, Johannesburg

Programme Director, Minister Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma,

The Duarte, Dangor and Whitley families,

Deputy President David Mabuza,

Ministers and Deputy Ministers,

Leadership of the African National Congress,

Leadership of the Alliance and Democratic Movement,

Religious and community leaders present,

Comrades and friends,

We gather here in sorrow and disbelief.

Although our beloved comrade, Jessie has been gravely ill for several months, it is difficult to comprehend that someone with such vitality and such spirit has departed this earth.

Comrade Jessie was a faithful, dedicated and fiercely loyal leader of the African National Congress.

It is difficult to imagine the ANC without our beloved DSG, and to think that we will never again hear her voice and her laughter carrying down the corridors of Luthuli House.

For close on 10 years, she served as ANC Deputy Secretary General.

For 25 years, she served on its National Executive Committee.

And from the years of her youth to her final days, she served the people of South Africa with dedication, with humility and with a passion that is all too rare.

She worked alongside great leaders of our struggle.

She learnt the politics of liberation from leaders like Mama Albertina Sisulu, Oom Beyers Naudé and Madiba.

From them she imbibed the qualities of revolutionary leadership.

Qualities that she was to demonstrate in every position she occupied.

Qualities that she was to pass on to future generations of activists.

Throughout her life, Jessie Duarte was an organiser.

She was an organiser of women.

As the Secretary of the Federation of Transvaal Women – FEDTRAW – she was part of building and leading a powerful women’s movement that directly challenged the oppression of black women and shook the foundations of the apartheid state.

She mobilised women across the country to resist the restrictions imposed upon them by a racist and sexist political system and a patriarchal society.

Like the generations that had come before, like the defiant women who burnt their passes in 1913, like the defiant women who marched on the Union Buildings in 1956, Jessie was determined that women should occupy their rightful place in the struggle for national liberation.

We remember her immense contribution to the hearings of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission on the experiences of women in detention.

We remember the courage with which she spoke against the abuse of women not just by the apartheid security forces, but within the ranks of the liberation movement itself.

Even in the democratic era, Jessie was relentless in advancing the position of women in all areas of public and private life.

She confronted the patriarchal attitudes and practices that sought to diminish the role and contribution of women in Parliament, in government and across society.

She did not hesitate to confront inadequate representation of women in the ANC itself.

Cde Jessie was an organiser of workers.

Her involvement in the mobilisation of domestic workers was part of a lifelong commitment to the struggles of the working class.

Cde Jessie was an organiser of writers.

Her role in the formation of the Congress of South African Writers and her work for Ravan Press revealed not only her love for literature, but also her conviction that writing, art and culture serve as powerful instruments of empowerment and liberation.

Comrade Jessie said last year that she was looking forward to writing books during her retirement.

It is our ardent wish that the family will publish some of the work she has produced, so that future generations may draw inspiration from the record of this fine activist.

Cde Jessie was an organiser of activists.

She firmly believed that the people were their own liberators.

She was never content to remain closeted in an office, to sit on a stage, or to direct the struggle from the comfort of a boardroom.

She was always among the people, on the conference floor, in the community halls, in homes, on the streets.

Wherever there was suffering, wherever families were mourning, where students were organising, you would find Comrade Jessie there, offering comfort, hope and encouragement.

Comrades have remarked that whenever Cde Jessie entered a room where people were mourning she was able to comfort those in pain with her kind and encouraging words.

She was gracious, compassionate and always kind.

She was always there, teaching, organising, mobilising.

She never missed a beat, she was on top of every issue, she led with distinction, and she always made her voice heard.

It was a matter of great distress to her that she felt that the movement to which she had dedicated her life had grown so distant from the people they were given the responsibility to serve.

This is a deficiency that we are called upon to remedy.

Drawing on her example, let us – as leaders and activists – humble ourselves before the people.

We are called upon to retore the values of our Constitution and our movement.

We must take up the concerns and champion the interests of the people of this country, particularly the workers, the poor and the vulnerable.

Above all, we need to work together with the people to improve their lives and to transform our society.

Comrades and friends,

The Holy Quran says:

“Stand firmly for justice, even if it is against yourselves, against your parents, against your kin, against rich or poor.”

Jessie Duarte’s sense of justice was keen.

Her sympathies for the poor, the vulnerable, the destitute and the marginalised ran deep.

She had empathy and was able to walk in other people’s shoes and see through their eyes. It is this that enabled her to see the suffering of our people and empathise with them.

She took up their cause and stood firm on her principles, even when her stance attracted criticism or personal attack.

She was a champion of the oppressed everywhere.

She will forever be remembered for her commitment to the cause of the Palestinian people and to keeping the issue alive in the minds of the South African people.

She had great courage.

She was at the forefront of the fight against the apartheid state at the height of its cruel and oppressive rule.

Who can forget the power of her intervention during the inquest into the death of Ahmed Timol five years ago, when she exposed the lies of the security branch police, telling the world what she and her family had witnessed and endured at their cruel hands.

She also had the courage to speak out – honestly and directly – about the abuses and destructive tendencies she saw within her movement and within the democratic government.

At a time like this, our nation needs more people of her courage and consciousness.

Our nation calls out for people who are not afraid to confront wrongdoing and to speak hard truths.

Our nation calls out for people who will, even in the face of severe resistance, champion the values of honesty, integrity, selflessness and service.

Jessie Duarte was a unifier.

She embodied a politics that was neither divisive, mean, nor small.

Her politics were empowering and unifying.

She understand the immense power of a united people and a united movement.

There was no difficulty, no challenge, that could not be overcome by a people united in purpose and action.

And so she fought against factionalism and disunity.

She stood firm against those who would sow division, who were interested only in personal advancement, who pursued narrow interests to the neglect of the needs of the people.

Let us, in her memory and in following her example, strive towards unity and common purpose.

Let us build a united nation and a united movement founded on the principles of our democratic Constitution.

Comrade Jessie has run her race.

Our nation’s thoughts and prayers are with the family at this difficult time.

The nation shares in your grief.

May you be comforted by the knowledge that the life of this great patriot has inspired us all and her contribution will never be forgotten.

May we all strive to honour her life by doing everything within our means, sparing neither strength nor courage, to achieve the free, united and equal society for which she so gallantly fought.

May her soul rest in peace.

Hamba Kahle Umkhonto.

I thank you.

Source: Government of South Africa

Gabon’s Marauding Forest Elephants Test Public Patience with Green Agenda

Forest elephants are smaller than their cousins on the African savannah, but in Gabon their destructive raids of farmers' fields are having an outsized impact on support for the government and its conservation agenda.

With over 10% of its land protected in national parks, Gabon has become the main stronghold in central Africa for critically endangered forest elephants, whose relative abundance and marauding habits are undermining efforts to protect them there, authorities and scientists warn.

The long-standing conflict has become markedly more acute in the past few years - 2021 saw the most widespread anti-elephant protests so far by farmers across Gabon, according to the environment ministry.

"Some people cannot farm anymore - the elephants are eating so much of their crops," Environment Minister Lee White told Reuters. "It has become a political issue and is eroding support for conservation and for the president (and) government."

Just outside the capital Libreville, splintered tree-trunks, trampled undergrowth and churned-up earth mark where an elephant strolled through the forest.

When they draw close to villages, these natural bulldozers can wipe out carefully tended crops in just a few hours.

"You can see how people get mad and sometimes kill the elephants," said guide Djakel Matotsi as he followed the elephant tracks in Pongara National Park.

Up to 50 elephants are killed per year in revenge or self-defense, while around 10 people have been killed by elephants in the past 2-1/2 years, according to the environment ministry, which says there is not enough data to quantify long-term trends.

The raids are causing food prices to rise, spurring rural exodus and driving up perceptions that the authorities prioritize elephants' interests while doing little to support the around third of Gabonese who live in poverty, said Oliwina Boudes, head of a female farmers' association.

"All rural communities harbor this feeling," she told Reuters.

Need for detente

The need for a detente is clear. Gabon is home to 95,000 or 60-70% of all African forest elephants, which are facing dramatic decline elsewhere, a study published in Global Ecology and Conservation in December showed. Managing these herds while promoting rural development in Gabon is of "critical importance to the species' persistence," it said.

After nationwide consultations in 2021, authorities are rolling out new initiatives this year to try to strike this balance.

To address the lack of data on elephant disturbances, the ministry has launched a database and app to track and verify complaints while for the first time, the government has set aside $4.5 million in this year's budget to compensate farmers for trashed crops.

The government is also allowing charity Space for Giants (SfG) to trial elephant-repelling electric fences around fields, customized to simplify their installation and maintenance in tropical forest conditions.

The 57 single-strand fences set up so far have repelled all interactions with elephants, SfG said in June. It plans to install 500 by year-end if it can get the funding.

Even with the fences, the government will need to do more to help farmers cope with elephants as it pursues its 'Green Gabon' plan for sustainable development, said John Poulsen, elephant ecologist at Duke University, who is helping SfG assess the impact of the fence trial.

He said that the government could potentially deploy agents in the field to help keep troublesome elephants away from villages and provide training so communities can deal with problem animals better themselves.

"If they have that perception that elephants are that bad ... it absolutely affects their outlook and willingness to work with the government and with other conservation efforts," he said.

Source: Voice of America