Hawks National Head to give account on national priority offences

PRETORIA – The National Head for the Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation, Lieutenant General (DR/Adv) Godfrey Lebeya and management will on Thursday 11 August 2022 hold a media briefing to outline and take stock of milestones achieved since his appointment in 2018 thus far.

He will also give highlight on National Priority Offences depicting DPCI successes and high profile cases investigated.

Details of the briefing are as follows:

Date:    Thursday, 11 August 2022

Venue:  GCIS, Ronnie Mamoepa Conference Room

1035 Francis Baard, Hatfield, PRETORIA

Time:  14:00

Members of the media are cordially invited to attend.

Media confirmation: Warrant Officer Bonnie Nxumalo on 082 373 2408 or NxumaloBonnie@saps.gov.za

Source: South African Police Service

Two suspects bust in glen for business robbery, shooting at police and car hi-jacking

Following the incident, on 06 August 2022 at about 02:00 a 39-year-old man was hi-jacked his silver BMW at Virginia by two armed suspects.

The circulation of the hi-jacked vehicle was done and two suspects aged 35 and 40 were spotted and arrested, in their possession a firearm linked with the business robbery at a filling station in Welkom and the shooting with SAPS members at Virginia was found. The hi-jacked silver BMW was also found in their possession.

These two suspects will appear in Welkom Magistrate Court soon.

Source: South African Police Service

SAPS celebrates its women in blue: meet the first ever female Deputy National Commissioner: Policing

As the country observes women’s month, the South African Police Service joins the nation in celebrating the strength and resilience of women in policing who in their daily duties strive towards making South Africa a much safer and better place to live in.

This is the first of a series of profiles of women officers who often go beyond the call of duty to serve and protect the people of the Republic of South Africa.

Today, we introduce the nation to the organization’s first female Deputy National Commissioner responsible for Policing.

Lieutenant General Tebello Mosikili was appointed in the position with effect from 01 July 2022. As the Deputy National Commissioner responsible for Policing, Mosikili is responsible for overseeing all Visible Policing and Operational environments, as well as Protection Security Services (PSS). She also takes over the role as Co-Chairperson of the National Joint Operational and Intelligence Structure (NATJOINTS). In addition to her roles, she is also overseeing the Crime Detection environment.

The officer possesses 33 years’ service having joined the organization in 1989 as a student constable.

Born and bred in the Free State, this highly decorated female officer boasts three decades in the detective and visible policing environment where she served the organization in a number of roles including, as an Investigator, a Station Commander of Mangaung, Makoane, Maokeng, Tseki and Bethlehem Police Stations and the Provincial Head responsible for Visible Policing in the Free State. She also served as the Deputy Provincial Commissioner responsible for Crime Detection in Gauteng.

As she steadily rose through the ranks, Mosikili went on to hold even more senior roles within the organization. Prior to this appointment, she had been serving as the Deputy National Head: Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation (DPCI) since August 2020. Her extensive experience and expertise in solving cases landed her the role of Divisional Commissioner: Detective Services in 2018. 

Between 2016 and 2018 she was responsible for overseeing the Family Violence, Child Protection and Sexual Offences Investigations (FCS) Unit. In this role she was overseeing 176 units and nine Serial and Electronic Crime Investigations Units across the country.  The FCS unit is responsible for the policing of crimes against women, children, and vulnerable groups. Family Violence related crimes include GBV, sexual offences, person-directed crimes (where the family is involved), the illegal removal or kidnapping of children under 12 and crimes facilitated through electronic media.

She has represented the country in New York, Singapore, Netherlands and America on crime fighting efforts and in addition also serves as a board member of Crime Stoppers International (CSI). CSI is a global non-profit organization representing seven regions committed to supporting law enforcement efforts to prevent and solve crime by mobilizing citizens to anonymously share information about crime and suspected illegal activity.

Following her appointment, Mosikili says one of her immediate priorities is to ensure heightened police visibility throughout the country.

“Our focus is to ensure South Africans are and feel safe. In our quest to make the country a much better place to live in, we are working on ensuring that we have more boots and resources on the ground so that we are able to prevent, combat and investigate cases”, said Lt Gen Mosikilli. With a B-tech degree in Policing, Mosikili is currently in pursuit of an LLB degree.

Source: South African Police Service

Blue Monday for firearm suspect

The suspect was arrested after Metro Police Officers received a tip off from the public. He is one of 329 arrests made by the City’s enforcement agencies in the past week. 

Metro Police Officers attached to the Gang and Drug Task Team arrested a suspect for the illegal possession of a firearm and ammunition in Philippi this morning. 

At around 08:00, officers followed up on information received and tracked down the suspect in an informal settlement in the area. He granted permission for them to conduct a search, and was found in possession of a .38 special revolver with the serial number still intact and four live rounds of ammunition (pictured). 

The 37-year-old suspect was arrested and detained at Philippi SAPS.

In general enforcement in the past week, Metro Police officers made 86 arrests and issued 3 323 traffic and by-law fines.

LAW ENFORCEMENT

Officers made 183 arrests in the past week and issued 3 335 by-law fines.

On Friday, 5 August, LEAP officers were on patrol in Harare, Khayelitsha at approximately 23:00.

A pedestrian who was walking along the road suddenly started running away when he spotted the officers, but was caught after a short chase.

The suspect was found in possession of a firearm and 34 rounds of ammunition (pictured). He was detained at Harare SAPS.

TRAFFIC SERVICES

Officers arrested 59 motorists – 51 for driving under the influence of alcohol and eight for reckless and negligent driving.

During a series of integrated operations in the past week, officers impounded 145 public transport vehicles, executed 1 763 warrants of arrest, issued 32 708 fines for various traffic violations and recorded 38 322 speeding offences. 

The highest speeds recorded were as follows: 

• 147 km/h on Marine Drive  (60 km/h zone)

• 146 km/h on the N1 at Koeberg Interchange  (70 km/h zone)

• 213 km/h on the N1 at Plattekloof road (120 km/h zone)

‘It blows my mind how motorists can engage in such reckless behaviour and think that it is okay. How many more times do we have to highlight the potential consequences for yourself, but also those around you before the penny will drop? How many more horrific road accidents will it take? These excessive speeds are but one of the many reasons why we undertook the review of our Traffic by-law. For too long, people have been behaving in the most shocking manner on the roads, and effectively getting away with a slap on the wrist. The measures built into the new by-law will now make people think twice, especially when their vehicle is impounded and they’re left to pound the pavement,’ said the  City’s Mayoral Committee Member for Safety and Security, Alderman JP Smith. 

PUBLIC EMERGENCY COMMUNICATION CENTRE

The City’s emergency call centre logged 1 777 incidents between Friday, 5 August and Sunday, 7 August.

These included 41 motor vehicle accidents and 21 accidents involving pedestrians.

There were also 156 assault cases, and 28 reports of domestic violence.

‘Over the past three weekends, the average number of incidents related to domestic violence has crept up to just over 25, from an average of 16 in the first three weekends of July. It’s likely that these calls are but a fraction of the number of actual incidents, but it’s incredibly disappointing to see the increase, particularly as we commemorate Women’s Month. It’s an indictment on us as a society, and we really need to do better,’ added Alderman Smith. 

Source: City Of Cape Town

Nonprofits Launch $100M Plan to Support Local Health Workers

A new philanthropic project hopes to invest $100 million in 10 countries, mostly in Africa, by 2030 to support 200,000 community health workers, who serve as a critical bridge to treatment for people with limited access to medical care.

The Skoll Foundation and The Johnson & Johnson Foundation announced Monday that they donated a total of $25 million to the initiative. The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, which will oversee the project, matched the donations and hopes to raise an additional $50 million.

The investment seeks to empower the front-line workers that experts say are essential to battling outbreaks of COVID-19, Ebola and HIV.

“What have we found out in terms of community health workers?” said Francisca Mutapi, a professor at the University of Edinburgh, who helps lead a multiyear project to treat neglected tropical diseases in multiple African countries. “They are very popular. They are very effective. They are very cost effective.”

On a recent trip to Zimbabwe for research, Mutapi described how a community health worker negotiated the treatment of a parasitic infection in a young child who was part of a religious group that doesn’t accept clinical medicine.

“She’s going to the river, getting on with her day-to-day business, and she notices that one of the children in her community is complaining about a stomachache,” said Mutapi.

The woman approached the child’s grandmother for permission to bring the child to a clinic, which diagnosed and began treating the child for bilharzia. That would not have happened without the woman’s intervention, Mutapi said.

Ashley Fox, an associate professor specializing in global health policy at Albany, SUNY, said evidence shows community health workers can effectively deliver low-cost care “when they are properly equipped and trained and paid – that’s a big caveat.”

Though the current number of these workers is not well documented, in 2017, the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated that the continent required 2 million to meet health targets. Many of these workers are women and unpaid, though The Global Fund advocates for some sort of salary for them.

“It’s hard to think of a better set of people that you would want to be paying if you think about it from both the point of view of creating good jobs as well as maximizing the health impact,” said Peter Sands, the fund’s executive director.

The Global Fund, founded in 2002, channels international financing with the aim of eradicating treatable infectious diseases. In addition to its regular three-year grants to countries, it will deploy these new philanthropic donations through a catalytic fund to encourage spending on some of the best practices and program designs.

Last Mile Health, part of the Africa Frontline First health initiative, has worked with the Liberian government to expand and strengthen its community health program since 2016.

In the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, former Liberian president and Noble Peace Prize recipient, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, convened Last Mile Health and other organizations to grapple with a response.

“We were all kind of seeing the Deja vu moment of recalling back to a couple of years ago where Liberia was beset by this tragic epidemic of Ebola,” said Nan Chen, managing director of Last Mile Health. “And as President Sirleaf reminded us: the tide was turned when we turned to the community.”

Along with the other organizations that specialize in the financing, research and policy of public health, they set about designing an initiative to expand community health programs and to capitalize on the attention the pandemic brought to the need for disease surveillance.

The catalytic fund is the result. “I think the pandemic has shone a light on the critical role of these health workers,” said Lauren Moore, vice president of global community impact at Johnson & Johnson.

Don Gips, CEO of the Skoll Foundation, emphasized that these workers also can raise early warnings that benefit people everywhere.

“It’s critical not just for delivering health care in Africa, but this is how we’ll also catch the next set of diseases that could threaten populations around the world,” said Gips, who is also the former U.S. ambassador to South Africa.

Last Mile Health won a major donation from the Skoll Foundation in 2017 and has also received large donations from the Audacious Project from TED and Co-Impact, another funding collective. The organization’s co-founder, Raj Panjabi, now serves in the Biden administration.

“What philanthropy has noticed about Last Mile Health is that we were not only taking direct action on the problem by actively managing community health worker programs, but that we were seeing our innovation adopted in national policy at scale,” said James Nardella, the organization’s chief program officer.

SUNY’s Fox and other experts say linking the work of community health care workers to the national health system is a priority, along with securing sustainable funding for their programs.

The Global Fund said it will assist countries with the design of proposed community health care worker expansions over the next year.

Chen acknowledged there is no silver bullet for the issue of sustainability.

“Part of the work that organizations like Last Mile Health have to do is to sit in that discomfort and wrestle with it, with our partners, with donors, until we incrementally squeeze out the solution here,” Chen said.

Mutapi said eventually governments must fund the programs themselves and she argued the experiences of places like Zimbabwe and Liberia with community health workers could benefit people in other contexts as well.

“Actually, having lived on Scottish islands, which are inaccessible,” she said, the innovation of community health workers is “something that actually can be exported to Western communities that are remote because that connection between a health provider and the local community is really important for compliance and for access.”

Source: Voice of America

Women challenged to find solutions to climate change

South African women have been challenged to take part in conversations aimed at finding solutions to mitigate the impact of climate change.  

Member of the Presidential Climate Change Commission, Princess Tsakani Nkambule, said women must be at the centre of decision making because they endure the most of the adverse effects of climate change.

“As women, we need to prepare [ourselves] on how we will be impacted by this climate change conditions, [and] how do we adjust our businesses in our environment to respond to the impact of climate change.

“Women in South Africa, especially women in rural areas are vulnerable and at the worst conditions. Women, children and the unemployed form part of society that need to ensure that during transition they are not left behind,” Nkambule said on Friday.

Nkambule was speaking at a webinar on the impact of climate change on women.

The webinar, hosted by the Government Communication and Information System (GCIS) as part of Women’s Month celebrations, provided a conversational space for women to reflect on the unique ways in which they are impacted by climate change, including ways in which different industries can adapt their operations to respond to the effect of climate change.

Nkambule noted that the country is pursuing an energy mix that includes renewables.

 “As women where are we? How do we participate in this environment, how do we transform our businesses as we are operating today and move towards the green economy? How do we ensure that in our environment there’s upskilling to allow us to participate in this economy?” 

Farmer Thandiwe Mchunu, from Amahlongwa near Umkomaas, on the KwaZulu-Natal south coast, insisted that there is no need to take organic waste to landfills.

Instead, she said, households can use their vegetable peels.

“What we need to do, even at household level, whenever you are in the kitchen peeling that onion, or just eating your banana or orange, do not take the peels to the bin. We are turning food waste into fresh food, we have the skills and strength [and] even support from our communities and families. Ours is to access the market to grow from small scale to big scale farmers,” Mchunu said.

She also admits that while there is plenty of land in rural areas to be used for farming, it is not easy for women to access it.

“Everyone needs to come into [the] economic war and fight to enter the space, whether you are in rural areas or in the township, you need to be able to ask yourself what are you contributing to mitigate climate change,” Mchunu said.

Mchunu, who is currently studying towards a Master’s Degree in Chemical Engineering, also noted that South Africa has many women graduating in engineering, even in the Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) areas. She said these are change maker careers that can come up with solutions to address climate change.

Just Energy Transition Framework

Last month, the Presidential Climate Committee (PCC) presented the Just Energy Transition (JET) Framework to President Cyril Ramaphosa, which will serve as a key evidence-based guide for policy making for South Africa’s transition from a carbon intensive economy towards a greener and cleaner economy.

President Ramaphosa said as the framework underscores, combating climate change is not only an environmental imperative, but an economic one as well.

“This framework is an evidence-based document and a victory for evidence-based policymaking. The publication of this framework must now serve as a call to action to each of us to embrace the opportunities presented by a low-carbon, inclusive, climate resilient economy and society,” the President said at the time.

The PCC has held stakeholder engagements, community dialogues and colloquiums in a bid to conduct robust research and analysis and hear views on South Africa’s transition in a bid to leave no one behind.

Source: South African Government News Agency

When women hold hands, change follows

As the country commemorates Women’s Month, civil society organisations like the Umtata Women Support Centre (UWSC) make it their daily mission to provide gainful employment opportunities, psychosocial support and counselling to women who experience gender-based violence (GBV) and domestic abuse.

Based in Mthatha, UWSC creates a safe space for women and provides holistic healing interventions targeting physical, spiritual, psychological and financial wellness.

Established in 1999 as a centre for abused women, UWSC’s mission has been community development where women placed in shelters are empowered with skills that can generate them an income.

The centre has since progressed to include the provision of social worker services and offers free therapy counselling that supports the victim’s mental health.

At the helm of the organisation is Koliwe Nongauza, who is the Programme Director and a leading figure and pillar of strength for women in and around Mthatha, including the villages of King Sabata Dalindyebo Local Municipality and Baziya, Mpheko, Tabase, Ntshabeni, Msana and Bumbane.

Born into a nuclear family of nine children in Willowvale Village of Mbhashe, Nongauza aspired to be a teacher. She went on to study BCom Accounting and Personnel Management before starting her career at Standard Bank of South Africa until her resignation in 2015 at managerial level.

In 2010, she eventually followed her calling – taking on studies towards becoming a social worker and after graduating joined UWSC.

Nongauza’s core belief is ‘Knowledge is Power’, that communities can only advance their own development when mindful and through programmes.

One of UWSC’s leading Victims Empowerment Programme (VEP) focuses on mental health. The programme, called Masiphunge, offers therapeutic support group sessions where groups of rural women gather in safe spaces to talk about issues that affect them and collectively find solutions. 

The programme took full effect in 2020, when the National Development Agency (NDA) granted UWSC funds to the value of R300 000 as part of government’s response to high incidents of gender-based violence and femicide (GBVF) during the COVID-19 lockdown.

UWSC and 64 other emerging and established community organisations received funds totalling R16 400 000 for the provision of prevention and direct GBVF services across the Eastern Cape from the Criminal Assets Recovery Account (CARA).

Forty rural women, who are independent small business owners, have continued to meet and support each other after the sessions and are whistle blowers of GBVF and other social ills in their communities.

About 65 cases of abuse have been brought to the attention of social workers from these groups.

Nongauza said communities with high levels of social ills are not easy to develop, and despite greater awareness and effective community development programmes, too many women and vulnerable people still experience violation of their human rights and economic exclusion.

She said working in close partnership with government departments is key to the organisation’s programmes for follow through of victim cases and attainment of justice, but also for the sustainability of programmes.

The sector requires servants with passion and empathy, she said, as “we work with poor and vulnerable people who look to us to help them positive change to their lives”.

“UWSC is championing and advocating for issues of development affecting women in the rural communities. We are forging a legacy for rural community development that will continue for many generations to come,” Nongauza said.

Her wish is to get assistance to build a structure for social worker offices and a skills development centre to capacitate young and older women towards job opportunities.

“This way UWSC can create additional employment for the social workers that are currently volunteering at UWSC,” Nongauza said.

Apart from being a beacon of light for rural women, a mother of three children and grandmother of two, Nongauza also mentors and coaches aspiring GBVF organisations and serves as a member of O.R Tambo Ikwelo.

Her message to women is that there is power in unity and “when women hold hands change follows”.

“Let us take a firm stand against social ills, the protection of our children and continue to be sources of strength, role models and prayer warriors for ourselves, our households and our country,” Nongauza said.

Mthatha is one of 30 GBVF hot spot areas identified by the South African Police Services. 

Source: South African Government News Agency