Huawei’s Yang Chaobin Launches All-Band 5G Solution Series

BANGKOK, Oct. 27, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — At the Global Mobile Broadband Forum 2022 (MBBF2022), Yang Chaobin, President of Huawei ICT Products & Solutions and Huawei Wireless Solution, releases One 5G concept and set of solutions designed to facilitate the evolution of all bands to 5G. “5G is in the fast lane,” Mr. Yang said. “The future calls for the evolution of all bands to 5G. Huawei’s All-Band 5G Solution series will help customers build 5G networks with optimal performance, ultimate experiences, and minimal energy consumption.”

Yang Chaobin speaking at MBBF2022

5G has been commercialized for three years. It has developed rapidly in terms of network coverage, devices, and user scale. 5G delivers a more HD and immersive digital experience to consumers, and has accelerated digital transformation across industries. It has improved the way people work and the production efficiency of industries. In terms of 5G network construction, operators focused on TDD and mmWave development during the initial phase, but recently TDD+FDD convergence has been the choice for most operators.

Moving forward, all connections and services will evolve to 5G, and so will all bands. Huawei has developed the One 5G concept and solutions to maximize the capabilities of all bands, and facilitate in-depth coordination between bands, which lays the groundwork for the construction of efficient and cost-effective 5G networks.

MetaAAU with ELAA Improves TDD Uplink and Downlink Coverage While Reducing Energy Consumption

Combination of TDD high bandwidth and Massive MIMO has enabled cross-generation 5G experience. It is important to provide better coverage and higher capacity with lower energy consumption, which has inspired a series of new TDD Massive MIMO solutions.

Huawei’s MetaAAU boosts performance and energy efficiency to new levels, by making use of extremely large antenna array (ELAA) technology, as well as innovative software and hardware coordination. MetaAAU has been deployed at scale around the world. It has been proven to boost uplink and downlink coverage and user experience, while consuming less energy.

Products with wider bandwidth will be a must-have for operators to fulfill new band allocation needs and simplify the ultra-wide bandwidth deployment. Huawei’s new 800 MHz MetaAAU supports current deployment on C-Band and enables simplified deployment on future new spectrum.

For scenarios with limited antenna installation space, Huawei provides Meta BladeAAU, which combines Meta and Blade technologies in a unique way, to allow for easy deployment of MetaAAU and all sub-3GHz bands on a single pole, making it ideal for single-antenna scenarios.

Ultra-wideband and Multi-antenna Technologies Simplify Deployment with Fragmented FDD Spectrum and Improve Spectral Efficiency

Legacy FDD bands will continue to evolve to 5G. This process may meet challenges of the fragmented spectrum of narrow-band and co-existence of multi-RATs.

Huawei has been upgrading its ultra-wideband and multi-antenna solution series to help operators simplify deployment, improve spectral efficiency, and provide high-level user experience for all RATs.

Huawei’s ultra-wideband 4T4R RRU supports simplified multi-band network deployment on 700–900 MHz or 1.8–2.6/1.4 GHz, and millisecond-level power sharing across all carriers, bands, and RATs, which reduces power consumption while ensuring GU coverage.

Another Huawei product, ultra-wide band 8T8R RRU can increase 4G and 5G network capacity by 1.5 and 3 times, respectively. Together with the Hertz platform antenna which having built-in signal direct injection feeding (SDIF) technology, 8T8R RRU is able to reduce energy consumption.

For scenarios requiring a large capacity, Huawei provides FDD Massive MIMO AAU, which can increase 4G and 5G network capacity by 3 and 5 times, respectively, enhancing 4G and 5G performance. This product has been commercially deployed at scale on over 70 networks around the world.

For single-pole scenarios, Huawei provides the FDD BladeAAU solution, which is the industry’s first to combine FDD Massive MIMO AAUs and sub-3 GHz passive antennas. It allows for simple deployment on one pole.

LampSite and RuralLink Solutions Enable Ubiquitous 5G

Considering that 70% of wireless network traffic comes from the indoor scenarios, Huawei has developed the LampSite 5.0 solution that features TDD+FDD multi-band and multi-RAT combination. Thanks to a highly-integrated design, LampSite 5.0 reduces hardware weight and volume while reducing power consumption. In addition, mmWave is introduced for the LampSite solution to deliver indoor 10 Gbps capacity based on ultra-wide bandwidth and distributed architecture.

Huawei has also launched the RuralLink solution that is designed for remote areas. With this solution, a single RRU and antenna are all that’s needed to provide rural coverage for three sectors, and microwave fronthaul can save BBU deployment on the site. The inter-site distance between RuralLink site and host site is up to 20 km. With simplified design and ultra-low power consumption, only 6 solar panels are enough to power a single site and remote O&M is supported.

I nnovative mmWave Solution Enables mmWave Commercial Deployment in Outdoor Hotspots and Indoor Scenarios

mmWave spectrum resources are abundant, and more than 140 operators have obtained access to the high-bandwidth spectrum. Outdoor hotspots and indoor environments are typical application scenarios of mmWave.

In outdoor hotspot scenarios, Huawei’s mmWave solution makes use of iBeam and intelligent high- and low-band coordination algorithm to achieve precise beam alignment and fast tracking. Performance under continuous networking reveals that a continuous high user-perceived rate can be delivered in moving vehicles and indoor environments along streets.

In indoor scenarios, Huawei’s LampSite 5.0, supporting 800 MHz mmWave, C-band, and the 1.8 GHz band, works with the distributed architecture, providing an ultra-large capacity of more than 10 Gbps. These new capabilities will also make indoor connections seamless while unlocking the full potential of mmWave.

IntelligentRAN Empowers Intelligent 5G Networks

As all bands evolve to 5G, intelligent networks are needed to support the requirements of diversified services, enhance multi-RAT O&M efficiency, and balance user experience and energy consumption. With layered intelligence architecture, Huawei’s IntelligentRAN helps operators reduce network O&M costs, open network capabilities, and create more business opportunities.

The combination of One 5G all-band solutions and IntelligentRAN unlocks the full potential of all bands including TDD, FDD, and mmWave, and facilitates all-band coordination for better network performance and lower power consumption, following the principle: Bands Work As One and Networks Work As One.

“This is the best of times,” concluded Mr. Yang. “5G is entering a new era. Let’s continue 5G innovation with the goal of fulfilling the vision of reshaping the world with 5G, and stride towards the intelligent world.”

The Global Mobile Broadband Forum 2022 is hosted by Huawei, together with its industry partners GSMA and GTI. This annual forum gathers mobile network carriers, vertical industry leaders, and ecosystem partners from around the world to discuss how to make 5G a commercial success, as well as other high-priority industry topics like green development, intelligence, and 5G evolution. For more information, please visit:

https://www.huawei.com/en/events/mbbf2022.

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1931498/Yang_Chaobin_speaking_MBBF2022.jpg

Huawei’s Wang Jinping: Expand the Experience Dividend Pattern and Lead the Era of Experience-based Network Operations

BANGKOK, Oct. 27, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — The 14th Huawei User Group Meeting was held in Bangkok, Thailand. During the meeting, Wang Jinping, Marketing Director of Huawei NCE Optical Network Domain, delivered a speech saying that Huawei’s Premium Broadband solution can effectively help carriers to implement user experience operations, seize business growth opportunities and provide users with quality experience.

Nowadays users have high requirements for premium HBB experience, and users want a better network experience even if it comes at a higher cost.

Wang Jinping also mentioned that carriers should develop HBB services from the following three aspects:

  • To meet the requirements of various services and the huge potential user market, apply intelligent technologies to improve the accuracy of identifying potential users and increase the marketing success rate, thus quickly gaining market share.
  • Ensure the device-network-service matching, construct networks based on user experience requirements, and maximize the return on investment (ROI).
  • Build capabilities that help perceive user experience to improve HBB user experience and user satisfaction, thereby improving brand reputation and achieving service growth.

To help carriers realize these goals, Huawei launched the Premium Broadband solution outside China for the first time. In this solution, intelligent AEC boards are installed on OLTs to collect application KPIs such as delay and jitter in real time so that user experience can be accurately and effectively perceived. In addition, the collaboration between iMaster NCE (a management, control, and analysis system which provides the big data intelligent analysis capability) and Agile Digital Operations (ADO) helps carriers gain dividends from HBB user experience operations.

Insights into Experience Requirements, Facilitating Marketing Growth

In this solution, the potential user identification model is optimized from being single-dimensional to being multidimensional, helping carriers perceive user experience requirements. Accordingly, the marketing department can formulate marketing strategies to meet user requirements.

Device-Network-Service Matching, Facilitating Orderly Network Upgrades

In this solution, carriers can further ensure the correctness of device-network-service mapping, upgrade networks in an orderly manner, and provide basic assurance for high-quality HBB connections and optimal experience.

Minutes-level Experience Perception, Improving Passive Responses to Proactive Services

This solution integrates the upgraded perception capability, which implements minutes-level perception of poor-QoE issues. It changes the passive perception mode to the brand-new proactive experience perception and assurance mode, helping carriers to improve the user retention rate and user satisfaction.

The Premium Broadband solution has been widely commercially deployed in China. In Henan, the marketing success rate increased from 3% to 10% and the network ROI was improved by 40%. In Zhejiang, the poor-QoE rate decreased from 4.3% to 2.7% and complaints per 10,000 users decreased from 165 to 95.

According to Wang Jinping, through solution enablement and joint verification of best practices, user experience operations will truly facilitate development, further broaden business boundaries, and expand the dividend pattern.

CONTACT: Peng Cai, felix.cai@huawei.com

4 million+ offences show that road users are not slowing down

Over a 15 month period, the City’s Traffic Service has recorded a record number of offences – a worrying indication that many road users simply refuse to stay in their lane. 

‘Five years ago, our Traffic Service recorded on average two and a half million offences a year. This includes an array of driving offences like dangerous overtaking, not wearing seatbelts and overloading, to the state of vehicles, unlicensed drivers and of course drunk driving and vehicle impoundments. In the last financial year, that number shot up to more than 3,7 million offences, and if the statistics for the first quarter of the current financial year are anything to go by, this appears to be the new normal.

‘The pandemic impacted on some categories, like arrests made and warrants executed, but we are noticing an upward trajectory once more. And, while there are likely more cars on our roads than there were five years ago, particularly because of the collapse of the rail system, it’s still no excuse or justification,’ said the City’s Mayoral Committee Member for Safety and Security, Alderman JP Smith. 

CATEGORY2017/1822018/192019/202020/212021/22Q1 2022/23
Offences2 784 2642 781 6632 655 8452 650 8763 725 338891 074
Speeding1 433 9071 477 0991 424 2972 170 9102 054 477505 067
Warrants executed93 269167 928149 95877 247105 74029 022
Cellphones impounded9 7499 1527 0813 0436 2831 173
Taxi impoundments3 4524 2314 5986 6885 8841 590
Total arrests5 4285 8654 2551 5142 826912
Warrant arrests43 59659 82237 44520 17629 5926 524
DUI arrests3 4443 6882 84210731 553641
Rec & neg. arrests986808564830685174

TAXI ENFORCEMENT

During the 15-month period under review, a total of 7 474 public transport vehicles were impounded where drivers could not produce a valid operating permit, or if they were found to be operating contrary to the conditions of their operating permit.

‘The City is overrun by complaints about the behaviour of taxi drivers from the general public, but also from legitimate operators who are having to contend with illegal or pirate operators, muscling in on their routes, resulting in unnecessary and sometimes violent conflict. We’ve also seen a disturbing pattern of unrest in reaction to enforcement operations. It is an unenviable situation, but we are duty-bound to act on complaints and follow the letter of the law,’ said Alderman Smith.

APPLICATION OF AMENDED TRAFFIC BY-LAW

The amended by-law was gazetted on 29 July 2022.

Following the gazetting, the City’s enforcement services are currently awaiting finalisation of admission of guilt penalty amounts by the courts, after which staff will participate in training and information sessions on the practical application of the amended by-law. 

‘This amended by-law will go a long way in helping us to address some of the selfish and risky behaviour on our roads. The sheer number of offences that are being recorded on a daily basis are proof enough that we need to do more to tackle this scourge. So, if road users refuse to change their ways, we’ll simply have to act by impounding their vehicles in instances where the amended by-law now makes provision for such impoundments,’ added Alderman Smith.

Source: City Of Cape Town

Voice service maintenance scheduled

Several incoming numbers may be disrupted during the mentioned times.

Please note that due to the planned migration of the City of Cape Town Voice services, several incoming numbers may be disrupted during the hours of 17:00 and 20:00 today, Thursday 27 October 2022.

The City does not have control of the change window as it is a nationally defined process and will endeavour to limit any impact.

Where possible, the City will communicate alternative numbers to call.

Affected numbers:

0800 110077

0800 212555

0800 220441

0800 222771

0800 225669

0800 225659

0800 278729

0800 435748

0800 611223

If the above numbers are unreachable, please dial 021 444 3578 during this time period.

Source: City Of Cape Town

Thousands can now own their Council rental flats

Council Speech by Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis

Speaker,
City colleagues,
Members of the public and guests,
Members of the media,

Good Morning, Molweni, More, Assalamu alaikum, Shalom,

On the ground floor of this building, the Cape Town Civic Centre, visitors are greeted by the smile of the late Archbishop Desmond Tutu and his words:

“Hope is being able to see that there is light despite all of the darkness.”

I know that right now many South Africans are struggling to see beyond the literal and figurative darkness that engulfs our nation.

Last week Eskom announced an urgent escalation of load-shedding to stage 4, marking the 141st day of load-shedding in 2022.

Dit beteken Suid-Afrika het vanjaar amper elke tweede dag beurtkrag gehad. En verlede week was daar nog ‘n twyfelagtige rekord vir Eskom toe daar 30 dae agtereenvolgens beurtkrag was.

(This means that South Africa has been load-shed almost every second day this year. And, last week, Eskom achieved another dubious record: 30 straight days of load-shedding.)

The Energy Minister last week cautioned that this is not sustainable and that, without a reliable electricity supply, the economy will collapse.

Top economists are warning that the contraction of the economy caused by load-shedding will put South Africa back into recession, resulting in further job losses and increasing poverty.

Here, in Cape Town, there is light despite all the darkness. Between February and September this year, City of Cape Town customers were protected from more than 1 100 hours of Eskom’s 1 900 hours of load-shedding. For 230 of those hours, we had no load-shedding at all, while the rest of the country had load-shedding.

This is a testament to the hard work of our Energy directorate and I would like to commend them for the work they do in keeping the lights on in Cape Town.

You quickly learn in government that there is no single recipe for success. There are, however, certain key ingredients. One such ingredient is the calibre of people you are able to attract and retain in your administration. And, here in Cape Town, we are blessed to work with the top officials in the country – our Team Cape Town.

The lack of state capacity elsewhere in the country is beginning to show in terrifyingly stark terms. As we speak, Gauteng is beset by a devastating water crisis due to rampant corruption and chronic underinvestment in infrastructure.


We are so pleased that Mayor Mpho Phalatse is back in office, after a brief commercial break, so that she can continue the good work her coalition government was doing to repair and rebuild after decades of neglect.

Investing in infrastructure

EKapa, kule minyaka mihlanu idlulileyo, iSixeko sityale iR4,1 yeebhiliyoni kwiziseko ezingundoqo zamanzi nasekukhuseleni amanzi ethu. Kulo nyaka, iSixeko siza kuchitha enye iR910 miliyoni ukuqinisekisa ubonelelo lwamanzi oluthembekileyo kuluntu lwethu.


(In Cape Town, over the past five years, the City has invested R4,1 billion in water infrastructure and building our water security. This year, the City will spend another R910 million to secure a reliable supply of water for our residents. ) 

Investment in infrastructure underpins a growing economy and a growing city, and I am pleased that there is another new water infrastructure project on today’s council agenda: the Berg River Voelvlei Augmentation Scheme.

The Berg River Voelvlei Augmentation Scheme will produce 40 million litres of water per day, and will help ensure our future water security.

Speaker, staying with our commitment to deliver reliable infrastructure for our residents, I this week met with Dr David Masondo, Deputy Finance Minister and a team from National Treasury to demonstrate how we are prioritising the delivery of infrastructure projects across the city.

I used this opportunity to highlight a number of areas where the National Government could assist with reforms that will help simplify the supply chain process, including:

  • Preventing unsubstantiated and vexatious tender appeals from frustrating service delivery;

  • Implementing changes to MFMA regulations around contract management so that we stop incurring costs and delays when capital projects go beyond our three year budget period; and
  • Increasing the current limit of R200k below which we can follow a simple three quote procurement process.

    I also used the opportunity to re-iterate our case for reforms on energy, rail, and land release – including:
  • My previous request for the City’s procurement of energy from SSEG to be granted an exemption from the competitive bidding process, as well as the time limits imposed by the MFMA;
  • The release of state-owned land for affordable housing; and
  • The devolution of passenger rail.

    I look forward to working with Treasury and other national departments as we strive to improve the lives of Cape Town residents.


    Devolution does not mean secession 

    Speaker, everything that we do is done with our residents in mind. But there are many things that affect Cape Town residents that we have little power to change. And this is why I have pledged to make sure that more powers are devolved from the failing national government to this City government.

    Our call for devolution is rooted in our love for this country and the people who live in it.

    Ons wil vir Suid-Afrika ‘n bloudruk vir goeie regeringsbestuur bied sodat hierdie stad ‘n baken van hoop vir die res van die land kan wees.

    (We want to provide South Africa with a blueprint for good governance, so that this city may be a beacon of hope to the rest of the country.)

    Our plan is not – and never will be – to become a separate country. That’s just crazy talk. 

     
    Ons is trots Suid-Afrikaans. Ons wil hê Suid-Afrika moet werk, en ons weet dit kan gedoen word. Dit is ‘n wonderlike land, wat onder ‘n swak regering swaarkry, maar dit kan reggestel word en ons wys hoe dit gedoen kan word.

     

    (We are proudly South African. We want South Africa to work, and we know it can. This is a wonderful country, suffering under a bad government, but it can be fixed and we are showing how.)

    It is true that, through devolution, we see an opportunity to take greater control of our destiny.

    Kodwa oku akuthethi ukuba sibuncame ubuzwe bethu. Soze siwuncame uMzantsi Afrika.
    (But this does not mean giving up our national identity. We will never give up on South Africa.)

    If we are to end load-shedding, we need the authority to make and implement our own plans, many of which still require jumping through hoops of unnecessary national government red tape.


    If we are to sort out the chaos on our commuter trains, we need passenger rail to be devolved to us so that we can make travelling by train safe and reliable once more.

    And if we are to reduce crime in Cape Town, we need more powers for our local police officers to fully investigate crime so that criminals are caught, prosecuted and put behind bars.

    On the topic of crime, Speaker, all of us should be alarmed by the words of Judge Thulare of the Western Cape Bench in a judgement handed down this week, and reported on in Die Burger yesterday.

    This is not the musing of a commentator or a columnist, these are the findings of a Judge of the High Court in this province, and these words should give us all cause for the most grave concern. I quote at length, because I think we all need to listen to this:

    “The evidence suggests not only a capture of some lower ranking officers in the SAPS. The evidence suggests that the senior management of the SAPS in the province has been penetrated to the extent that the (gangs) have access to the table where the Provincial Commissioner of the SAPS in the Province sits with his senior managers…decide on tactics and approaches to the safety and security of inhabitants of the Western Cape. This includes penetration of and access to the sanctity of reports from the specialised units like the Anti-Gang Unit and the Commercial Crimes Unit.


    The evidence further shows that the gangsters are breathing heavily down the necks of public prosecutors… whose lives and the lives of their families are under constant threat. The evidence also shows that these gangsters are interfering in the decorum of the courts and the independence of judicial officers, and testing the judicial oath of office, especially the words “without fear”.”

    Speaker, this is a statement so chilling and so shocking, coming as it does from a Judge, that it demands the most urgent and serious response from the Provincial Commissioner of the SAPS.

    I ask that he take this very seriously, and act swiftly to reassure the public of the trustworthiness of his senior management team.

    This also underscores the importance of our call for more powers for our city police. The concentration of law enforcement powers in one agency, the SAPS, makes capture easier. But more diffuse and devolved power makes it much harder.

    Put simply, if the SAPS are captured by gangsters, then our city police really are the thin blue line.


    Delivering more housing opportunities

    Speaker, just as we seek to protect our residents from violent crime, so too are we committed to delivering more affordable housing in Cape Town. Our goal is for all our residents to be able to enjoy the dignity of a home.

     
    We launched the affordable housing priority programme earlier this year to position the state as an enabler of far greater private sector housing delivery.

    Our priority programme has four pillars:
  • Cutting red tape to enable the private sector to deliver faster;
  • Enabling micro-developers to deliver more rental units;
  • Giving people title deeds and clearing historical backlogs; and
  • Finally, speeding up the release of municipal land for social housing.


    Apartheid moved people to the distant corners of South Africa’s cities, and entrenched intergenerational poverty by taking away people’s homes and stopping them from saving, owning assets and passing them down to their children.

    Incredibly, there are some parties in South Africa who want to see people remain permanent tenants of the state, with nothing to call their own and nothing to give their children when they die.

    We fundamentally disagree with this.

    To break the cycle of intergenerational poverty we have to help people get themselves onto the first rung of the asset ownership ladder.

    We have to help people own homes.

    Our government is passionate about seeing many more people as home owners, with a stake in the success of our society and committed to our mutual prosperity.

    Previously, we have allowed tenants to buy their council homes, but they needed to pay half of the transfer costs themselves. And, as those of us lucky enough to own a home know, transfer costs can be prohibitively expensive. As a result, uptake was very low.


    So I am particularly excited today to announce our “No Cost Transfer Programme”, which will allow long-standing tenants of Community Residential Units or CRUs to buy their units – with the transfer costs covered by the City in full.

    In other words, these tenants will become property owners at no cost at all. This is a big policy shift that will have a far-reaching impact for generations to come.

    We are currently focusing on at least 7500 units that are ready for their tenants to own because they are single residential units or maisonettes. Sectional title schemes will be next as we extend this programme across the city.

    To enable this policy change, we are today seeking Council approval for the City to:
  • Approach the provincial government to remove the regulatory provision that forces beneficiaries to settle outstanding debts on a property before ownership can be transferred;
  • Fund the full payment of transfer fees on behalf of beneficiaries, and to fix these fees at R2 500 regardless of the property value; and
  • Write-off rental and municipal services arrears on rental units where these are in excess of the available subsidy.

    We expect this single approval by Council to unlock the ownership transfer of some 1500 units before June next year alone.

    Speaker, just think about what this means for those families. Some have lived in these homes for decades. Some have raised children and grandchildren there.

    Now, these homes can be theirs so that when great-grandchildren arrive, they can one day live in a home that is theirs.

    This is true empowerment. This is breaking the cycle of intergenerational poverty and changing the lives of our poorest residents.

    But Speaker, we are not stopping there.

    We know that our No Cost Transfer Programme could benefit 7500 families very soon, 1500 by June already. 

    But there are hundreds of thousands of Capetonians who are able to pay something for accommodation, but who cannot afford to rent anything available now.

    They live in backyards in Kalkfontein and Tafelsig. Some pay two thousand rand to rent a shack in DuNoon or Joe Slovo, or a tiny room in Delft or Lentegeur.

    That is why we are so focused on freeing up land faster for more social housing.

    And today we bring another piece of land to Council, the so-called ‘Fruit and Veg’ site, right in the middle of the CBD, in Roeland Street.

    With today’s approval, we can proceed to a competitive process to release this site to deliver another 150 social housing units.

    You will have seen, Speaker, that there is a steady drum beat of these properties through the system, being approved in Council every month and on their way to delivering social housing projects.

    With this latest property, we have now had 1130 social housing unit approvals through Council since May.

    We are also not giving up on the Woodstock Hospital precinct, where around 700 social housing units have been delayed by the orchestrated building hi-jackings of March 2017. The City is committed to doing everything possible to get this social housing project back on track through the correct legal channels.

    In closing, Speaker, we are on a mission to make Cape Town a place where you can feel secure in your future and hopeful for your family, despite all the evidence of decay in South Africa.

    We will grow this economy and lift people out of poverty.

    We are delivering on the commitments we made to end load-shedding, to increase safety, to take over passenger rail, and modernise our service delivery offering.

    We are getting more land through the system. Changing people’s lives by helping them own their houses, and giving them a legacy to leave forever.

    Recently Zakes Bantwini – who is an acclaimed recording artist and DJ –  reached out to me on Instagram last week. He told me that he is considering moving his family to Cape Town permanently. We had a chat and by the time we were done he said I had convinced him to make the move, but now for the difficult part of convincing his wife.

    What this shows is that the beacon of hope we aim to turn Cape Town into is slowly but surely shining brighter and brighter. And those outside of Cape Town are taking note.

    There is still lots that needs to be done, and we are working on doing more. 

    We are now one month away from a Festive Season that is going to be a bumper tourism season. 

    Our city is cleaner, and residents are answering the call to take pride and help #SpringCleanCT.

    Visitors are back. 191 direct flights a week are back, more than ever before. Jobs are coming back.
     
    One gets the sense that Cape Town is back.

    This is all thanks to Team Cape Town, every person here who makes it happen for our City every day.


    Thank you!

Source: City Of Cape Town

Disbarred attorney in the dock for trust funds theft and fraud

GAUTENG – Disbarred Attorney, Clement Jos Hooyberg (46), is expected to appear in the Specialised Palmridge Commercial Crimes Court on Tuesday, 08 November 2022, after he was additionally charged for theft and fraud to the tune of just over R20 million from a trust fund account. 

It is reported that in spite of Hooyberg being struck off the roll of attorneys on 15 November 2016, he continued to practice. As a result, he allegedly enriched himself for a period of just over a year between 2017 and 2018. In the said period he unduly accumulated millions of rands after he stole from the trust fund.

The Serious Commercial Crime Investigation started in November of 2017, for a similar charges reported at Norwood police station. He was consequently arrested on 12 February 2020, and granted bail. He has made a series of court appearances since.

Hooyberg has now been additionally charged on Wednesday on 26 October 2022, on nineteen counts of theft on separate but related case. Both cases have now been enjoined hence his upcoming court appearance in November.

Source: South African Police Service

Operation Vala Konke activities yields good results in Mangaung Metro

FREE STATE – Operation Vala Konke crime combating and prevention activities are in full swing in the district of Mangaung Metro.

On Wednesday 26 October 2022 members of Tactical Response Team were busy with stop and search activities when they came across a 31-year-old male in Nelson Mandela Drive towards Langehovernpark outside Bloemfontein.

The members asked for permission to search the male person and found ten (10) Star etched Mandrax tablets and a package folded with transparent plastic containing Chrystal Meth in his possession. The 31-year-old male was arrested and a case of possession of drugs was opened at Bainsvlei Police Station.

The team proceeded to Joe Slovo Location to follow up on information about housebreaking and theft that occurred in the Bayswater Police Station policing area. They arrived at the mentioned house and two suspects aged 20 and 40 were arrested after two (2) pairs of Asics sneakers, identity document and an Arena backpack bag were found and seized.

A case of possession of presumably stolen property was opened at Mangaung Police Station and the two male suspects were detained in police custody. The suspects will appear in Bloemfontein Magistrate Court soon.

Source: South African Police Service