07/16/2008
Genocide in South Africa
18:40 Posted in Crime | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: South Africa, Soweto, World Cup, 2010, ANC, Violence, Rape
crime report
18:26 Posted in Crime | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: South Africa, Soweto, World Cup, 2010, ANC, Violence, Rape
Smash and Grab caught on tape
18:20 Posted in Crime | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: South Africa, Soweto, World Cup, 2010, ANC, Violence, Rape
Shot dog protects dead farmer
Buks Viljoen, Beeld
Johannesburg - A wounded boerboel lay down on top of his murdered master after the young man was shot dead on Monday night on a farm near Komatipoort.
Armed robbers killed Jan-Daniel Venter, 21, on the farm Blikkor near Komatipoort where he lived with his father Jan, 50.
Both worked as contractors on a nearby farm.
Jan-Daniel, who was studying law part-time, was shot several times during the robbery, which took place while he was watching 7de Laan with his father in the living room. He apparently rushed at the robbers with a chair in his hands.
According to a person who was on the scene shortly after the attack, Jan-Daniel's boerboel started barking like crazy and the next moment, the three robbers barged in.
'We want money'
"We want money, we want money," they apparently shouted in broken English.
Jan-Daniel was shot in the chest when he wanted to protect his father. He collapsed in the living room and died shortly afterwards, said Constable Richard Khumalo, spokesperson of the Komatipoort police.
His father, Jan, was tied up by the robbers. They stole several household items, as well as a .38 revolver and fled with his Nissan bakkie. He managed to wriggle free and ran about 2km to the house of a farm foreman to get help.
When police arrived at the house, the boerboel - who had also been shot by the robbers - was lying on top of Jan-Daniel's body.
"It looked like he was trying to protect his master," said Beeld's source.
Jan-Daniel's mother, Superintendent Elarda Venter, is the commanding officer of the Modjadjiskloof (Duiwelskloof) police station in Limpopo. She had been on the farm on Sunday to fetch her other son, Elardus, 17, who had visited his father and brother during the school holidays.
Khumalo said the murderers were suspected to be from Mozambique. "They spoke a perfect Mozambican Shangaan dialect."
Five 9mm cartridges were found on the scene. The stolen bakkie is still missing.
Source:News24
http://www.news24.com/News24/South_Africa/News/0,...
17:49 Posted in Crime | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: South Africa, Soweto, ANC, Violence, Rape, Murder, Johannesburg
Has South Africa betrayed Madiba's legacy?
By Barry Moody
Nelson Mandela celebrates his 90th birthday on Friday as a widely revered statesman, but South Africa faces a host of problems that challenge the dream he embodies of a harmonious rainbow nation.
Mandela, imprisoned for 27 years but forgiving of his former captors, is hailed as a shining example of the power of forgiveness and reconciliation.
His smile and sense of humour have made him a treasured international icon. He is rare among African leaders in agreeing to give up power quickly, after only one term subesequent to the end of apartheid.
He transcends races and opinions in South Africa itself, acclaimed by all sides of society including the whites whose rule he fought to overthrow.
Yet his birthday comes at a time of crisis in the country under the rule of his successor, Thabo Mbeki, widely attacked for failures in fighting HIV and Aids, poverty, a major power crisis, violent crime and the disaster in neighbouring Zimbabwe.
Describing how Mbeki was hailed when he became president, Financial Mail editor Barney Mthombothi wrote this week: "Needless to say, their prince has turned out to be a frog."
He added: "Mandela united the country. Mbeki has divided it...It's sad to see the current lot trashing his legacy."
Some analysts say the idea that Mandela represented a golden age of hope now betrayed is false.
"The first time I heard a claim from a journalist that Mandela's dream had been dashed was the beginning of 1995. It is part of a knee jerk reaction to this kind of situation," said Professor Steven Friedman of Rhodes University.
But there is no doubt the euphoria of Mandela's rule has evaporated.
Many South Africans, especially the more educated, are leaving for other countries and others are talking about it.
A leaked research report commissioned by the government shows that 36 percent of the population are no longer committed to the country and 29 percent are considering emigration, the weekly Mail & Guardian newspaper reported.
South Africa suffers some of the worst violent crime outside a war zone, especially in the Gauteng region around Johannesburg. The country has the world's highest HIV caseload.
Mbeki is accused by trade unions and the leftwingers in his own ruling African National Congress (ANC) of business-friendly policies that have delayed bringing the fruits of black rule to the legions of poor. Unemployment stands at around 23 percent.
Growth in Africa's biggest economy is endangered by a power crisis that has robbed vital platinum and gold mines of electricity and threatens to stoke already high inflation, in turn fuelling unrest among trade unions and in poor townships.
Mbeki also stands accused of ineffective mediation in Zimbabwe, where a worsening crisis has flooded neighbouring countries, especially South Africa, with millions of refugees.
Those refugees were among the targets of a shocking outburst of xenophobic violence in May. Scenes of foreigners burned alive reminded many of the brutal violence at the end of apartheid.
Recent moves by the ANC have raised even more concern among commentators, with party leaders accused of a dangerous assault on the independence of the judiciary to protect new leader Jacob Zuma against corruption charges that could derail his expected succession to Mbeki in 2009.
But some analysts say the cries of doom are overblown.
Friedman said that while Mandela played a "brilliant and superb" role in reconciling the races, "He wasn't the Messiah and he isn't the Messiah."
Susan Booysen, a political analyst at Wits, SA's top university, said: "The kind of dream we all cherished in the Mandela era had an expire-by date."
Analysts say Mandela's place in history is due to the way in which his inspirational leadership and power of reconciliation averted civil war at the end of apartheid and united the races in a new democracy against great odds.
But he was seen to have only a vague grasp of economic issues and left detailed policy to Mbeki, his deputy president, who effectively ran government even then.
"Mbeki's great strength and weakness is that he is a policy wonk who is obsessed with all this stuff and pays absolutely no attention to people. Mandela was obsessed with people and ignored the policy," Friedman said.
"As a team they were pretty good but when one has to rely on any one of them it became a bit of a problem."
And despite the many problems, optimism lingers.
"There is still, certainly a very strong grassroots expectation that this government stands a chance to make things better. It is a continuously adapting dream, not the end of the dream for a long time yet," said Booysen.
Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Mandela's friend and fellow Nobel peace laureate, said in a newspaper birthday tribute: "We are richly blessed with the one who has made us believe that a rainbow nation is a viable proposition."
From : http://www.int.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=...
17:24 Posted in The New Government | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: South Africa, Soweto, World Cup, 2010, ANC, Violence, Rape





