2015

1
7/21/2019 2015 http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/20155695cfbe1a28ab9b028f5574 1/1 6 CITYPRESS,27 DECEMBER, 2015 news CITYPRESS,27 DECEMBER, 2015 7 news We were riveted... We told you so... By the saga going on at the Hawks. Independent Police Investigative Directorate (Ipid) head Robert McBride came out in support of suspended Hawks head Anwa Dramat and Gauteng Hawks boss Shadrack Sibiya over their alleged role in the illegal renditions of five Zimbabweans into the arms of their police. After a soap opera to rival Days of our Lives, Dramat was eventually canned after not putting up much of a fight, Sibiya lost his disciplinary case and his job, but McBride ultimately won at the Constitutional Court against Police Minister Nkosinathi Nhleko, who had suspended him The police soap opera continued with the appointment of Major General Mthandazo Ntlemeza as head of the Hawks.  He was described by Judge Elias Matojane of the North Gauteng High Court as “biased and dishonest”. A good choice? Maybe not When Oscar Pistorius started his year off in jail and was due for release in August. After Justice and Correctional Services Minister Michael Masutha intervened, he was eventually released into house (read mansion) arrest in October. Then the Supreme Court of Appeal overturned Judge Thokozile Masipa’s culpable homicide ruling and found Pistorius guilty of murder. The disgraced Olympian will now appeal to the Constitutional Court. Will he go back to jail? We don’t know, but he’s lucky to be spending Christmas at home with Uncle Arnold When in May, police commissioner General Riah Phiyega told President Jacob Zuma she would refuse to quit. Eventually, Zuma suspended her after instituting a board of inquiry into her fitness to hold office, which has yet to sit. Western Cape police commissioner Arno Lamoer was suspended and appeared in court charged with 109 counts of racketeering after he and three senior cops accepted bribes and gifts worth R1.6 million from Cape Town businessman Mohamed Salim Dawjee By the war at the SA Revenue Service (Sars), with the new leadership suing former acting commissioner Ivan Pillay for R110 million. Sars asked its former commissioner and now Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan to testify against his former colleagues. Sars then brought out three reports against them – two of which featured no interviews with Pillay and his crew. The war is not over yet... At the revelations contained in the so-called spy cables, which detailed some of the goings-on in the South African intelligence community and had spies running for cover. We found out that our spooks had been monitoring the White Widow, Samantha Lewthwaite, for a year before the Westgate Mall attack happened in Nairobi, that Iranian front companies were operating on our shores, and state laptops were being stolen for the information they contained When the #RhodesMustFall movement began at the University of Cape Town after student leader Chumani Maxwele flung poo at a statue of old Cecil John. The offending statue was eventually removed, but not before student protests against colonialism and its vestiges broke out countrywide By #FeesMustFall, a massive student movement countrywide, which forced government and universities to suspend fee hikes for next year after protests from Parliament to Potch. The students, with few exceptions, protested peacefully and with dignity, and government was forced to listen. A new generation of leaders was forged When US Attorney General Loretta Lynch charged nine Fifa officials with corruption in a scandal that has continued to rock the world football body. Her 167-page indictment revealed that co-conspirators 16 and 17 were South African officials who facilitated a $10 million payment to the then president of the Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football, Jack Warner, for the “African Diaspora”, allegedly a disguised bribe for his vote for South Africa to host the World Cup in 2010 When retired Judge Ian Farlam released the report of his inquiry into the Marikana massacre in which he found that police had lied, Phiyega was a bad witness, and mining house Lonmin failed to build proper housing for its employees, which fuelled the tensions When armed Islamic State gunmen attacked the Bataclan theatre and cafés in Paris , killing 130 people and injuring more than 80 in the worst concerted terror attack on European soil. This took place in the same year 11 car toonists at satirical French magazine Charlie Hebdo were killed by two brothers affiliated to al-Qaeda in Yemen. The magazine had carried cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad Presidential spokesperson Mac Maharaj, who quit his job this year. We miss his “clarification” of his boss’ comments and his insistence that Zuma was quoted out of context By the discovery of Homo naledi in a deep cave in the Cradle of Humankind by accountant and caver Steven Tucker. Archaeologists from Wits University, led by Professor Lee Burger, had the world enthralled at the news of a new human ancestor We fumed... At the goings-on at Eskom, which announced massive load shedding after spending billions on diesel to run turbines to keep the lights on. After dark mutterings of an impending two-week nationwide blackout, then CEO Tshediso Matona and some of his management team were suspended and later left.  Brian Molefe took over, which many now consider one of government’s best decisions of the year. No load shedding for months! Who would have thought? When President Zuma suspended then national director of public prosecutions Mxolisi Nxasana, who appeared to be doing a good job. After the i nquiry into his fitness to hold office was aborted at the last minute, Nxasana quit and the president gave him a R17 million golden handshake When we discovered that then Passenger Rail Agency of SA (Prasa) CEO Lucky Montana and his PhD-less chief engineer Daniel Mthimkhulu spent R600 million on Spanish trains that could only run between Kimberley and Port Elizabeth. They were too high for the rest of the country’s rail network. Now Prasa board chair Popo Molefe is trying to get their money back from middleman Swifambo Rail Leasing, whose boss, Auswell Mashaba, bought a game farm for R27 million cash just days after being paid. Nice work if you can get it During the opening of Parliament this year when the State Security Agency jammed the cellphone signal in the House and then later said it did it to enforce a no-fly zone above the building. WTF? And then we fumed even more when presidential protection officers and burly riot cops in white shirts threw out the Economic Freedom Fighters after they interrupted President Zuma’s state of the nation address, demanding that he #PayBackTheMoney. Few people, except for the ANC, remained to listen to the president speak after that When government let Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir leave the country despite a court order that he be arrested in line with a warrant issued for him by the International Criminal Court. Al-Bashir remains wanted for crimes against humanity When Ipid gave Deputy Police Minister Maggie Sotyu’s daughter, Boniwe, the plum job of deputy director of investigations in the Free State without her having the right qualifications. She was given the job over a candidate with 22 years of experience. What followed was a witch-hunt by Ipid, which suspended many officials it believed leaked the information to City Press When the SA Rugby Union picked a mostly white team for the rugby World Cup in England When President Zuma fired Nhlanhla Nene as finance minister, replaced him with no- name-brand Des van Rooyen, only to replace Van Rooyen with Pravin Gordhan – all in five days. No man. This is no way to run a country We were horrified... By the Cape Town fires that burnt houses and vast swathes of the city for a week. It’s still not known what started the blaze At the unfolding jobs blood bath this year, with Anglo American announcing it was downgrading its operations in SA at a cost of 50 000 jobs. City Press reported in August that 23 000 people had been given notice that they were about to lose their jobs between April and June At the goings-on at SAA. First City Press reported that chairperson Dudu Myeni, in her capacity as the head of the Jacob Zuma Foundation, was selling face time with the prez. And then there was the R6 billion Airbus deal that Treasury said was unaffordable, which she wanted to go ahead with anyway through some mystery company playing middleman. This is an airline, not a two-bit business. Run it properly! At the Syrian refugee crisis that saw hundreds of thousands of people trying to flee to Europe. What r eally shocked us was the photograph of three-year-old Aylan Kurdi’s body washed up on a Turkish beach. He drowned trying to get to Greece alongside five-year-old brother Galip and their mother, Rehan By the case of Peter Frederiksen, the Danish man who is on trial for allegedly mutilatingwomen’s genitals and keeping their body parts in his freezer in Bloemfontein. We said farewell to... Formernational policecommissioner Jackie Selebi, who succumbed to kidney failure early this year We grieved... When in January an estimated 2 000 Nigerians were slaughtered in the northern town of Baga by Boko Haram militants in a massacre eyewitnesses described as “indiscriminate killing going on and on”. The militants left the dead and injured lying in the streets, and then burnt the town to the ground When xenophobic attacks broke out in Soweto  and 120 foreign-owned shops were looted in late January. Then, in April, Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini’s comments that “foreigners must go” ignited a further wave of attacks on foreigners in KwaZulu-Natal and elsewhere in the country. At least six foreigners were killed, including Mozambican father Emmanuel Sithole, who was knifed to death in Alexandra. At least his killers were convicted When much-loved Skwatta Kamp rapperNkululeko “Flabba”Habedi was murdered by his girlfriend, Sindisiwe Manqele, who stabbed him in the chest with a knife. She was found guilty of his murder by the South Gauteng High Court and will be sentenced in March. For now, she is out on bail When Top Billing presenter Simba Mhere was killed with his friend, Kady Shay O’Brien, in a horror car accident on Johannesburg’sM1 highway, allegedly caused by a drunken driver When al-Shabaab militants killed 148 students at the Garissa University College in Kenya and injured 79 in retribution for Kenya’s military presence in Somalia and the “mistreatment” of Muslims in the country We laughed... When Police Minister Nkosinathi Nhleko released his report into the wild overspending on supposed security upgrades to President Zuma’s Nkandla home, which cited beam-busting chickens as a security threat. What made us giggle the most though were his fire pool videos in which officials were at pains to demonstrate why the presidential swimming pool wasn’t one. Then he travelled the country trying to convince editors to believe his spin At some of SABC COO Hlaudi Motsoeneng’s comments. One of his gems this year was that if the media reported on crime it would encourage people to commit crime. About his lack of a matric – which the Public Protector found he lied about – he said: “You have two kinds of people in this world. You have certificated people and educated people. You can have many degrees, but also in that you need a brain.” After an SABC disciplinary hearing found him not guilty of all charges, we are not laughing any more At how Dube TradePort CEO Saxen van Coller not only faked her qualifications to climb the corporate ladder but once duped one of South Africa’s wealthiest men, Johann Rupert, into giving her a job At the one about Alex Matsobane, a convicted criminal, who pitched up at the Seshego Police Station, told them he’d been sent “from national”, and proceeded to work there for years without anyone knowing what he was up to. He did such a good job he was even promoted to the station’s detective unit. He’s now finally in jail We were agog... When we learnt that  rapper AKA and DJ Zinhle were madly in love and having a baby earlier this year … then many happy Instagrams later, they split days after the baby was born because AKA was alleged to be in a relationship with TV hottie Bonang Matheba. We don’t know, hey? At the goings-on in the Gigaba household. Never far from a headline,  Minister Malusi’s wife Noma caused an unprecedented outbreak of gossip by taking on alleged nyatsi Buhle Mkhize. Their Instagram war is now the stuff of legend. As for Minister Malusi, he is #DenyingEverything. Can’t say we blame him At the news that First Lady Nompumelelo Ntuli-Zuma was allegedly behind a plot to poison her husband. She denies this, but iyoh! We celebrated... We were fascinated... When the Ebola virus was finally brought under control and the outbreak ended in west Africa after claiming more than 6 000 lives. A vaccine was developed that proved successful in trials When Nigeria went to the polls this year and power was handed peacefully to President Muhammadu Buhari from the outgoing Goodluck Jonathan. It was the first time there had been a peaceful transfer of power in Africa’s most populous nation When Trevor Noah bagged the top comic job of anchor on The Daily Show, giving us something – and someone – to be proud of When Desmond and Leah Tutu celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary in July When Wayde van Niekerk won the 400m gold medal and Anaso Jobodwana came third in the 200m, after superstars Usain Bolt and Justin Gatlin, at the IAAF World Championships That President Zuma’s guards were still living in guesthouses in Eshowe because their security village at the president’s private home in Nkandla was not furnished That now National Director of Public Prosecutions Shaun Abrahams would be the one to take Nxasana’s place. We knew before he knew CompiledbyNickiGüles  RUDI LOUW, Graphics24

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City Press rounds up your year.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 2015

7/21/2019 2015

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/20155695cfbe1a28ab9b028f5574 1/1

6 CITYPRESS,27 DECEMBER, 2015

news

CITYPRESS,27 DECEMBER, 2015 7

news

We were riveted...

We told you so...

By the saga going on at the Hawks.Independent Police Investigative Directorate(Ipid) head Robert McBride came out insupport of suspended Hawks head AnwaDramat and Gauteng Hawks boss ShadrackSibiya over their alleged role in the illegalrenditions of five Zimbabweans into the armsof their police. After a soap opera to rival Daysof our Lives, Dramat was eventually cannedafter not putting up much of a fight, Sibiya losthis disciplinary case and his job, but McBrideultimately won at the Constitutional Courtagainst Police Minister Nkosinathi Nhleko, whohad suspended him

The police soap opera continued with theappointment of Major General MthandazoNtlemeza as head of the Hawks.  He wasdescribed by Judge Elias Matojane of theNorth Gauteng High Court as “biased anddishonest”. A good choice? Maybe not

When Oscar Pistorius started his year offin jail and was due for release in August.After Justice and Correctional ServicesMinister Michael Masutha intervened, he waseventually released into house (read mansion)arrest in October. Then the Supreme Court ofAppeal overturned Judge Thokozile Masipa’sculpable homicide ruling and found Pistoriusguilty of murder. The disgraced Olympian willnow appeal to the Constitutional Court. Willhe go back to jail? We don’t know, but he’slucky to be spending Christmas at home withUncle Arnold

When in May, police commissionerGeneral Riah Phiyega told President JacobZuma she would refuse to quit. Eventually,Zuma suspended her after instituting a boardof inquiry into her fitness to hold office, whichhas yet to sit.Western Cape police commissionerArno Lamoer was suspended and appearedin court charged with 109 counts ofracketeering after he and three senior copsaccepted bribes and gifts worth R1.6 millionfrom Cape Town businessman MohamedSalim Dawjee

By the war at the SA Revenue Service (Sars),with the new leadership suing formeracting commissioner Ivan Pillay  forR110 million. Sars asked its formercommissioner and now Finance MinisterPravin Gordhan to testify against his formercolleagues. Sars then brought out threereports against them – two of which featuredno interviews with Pillay and his crew. Thewar is not over yet...

At the revelations contained in the so-calledspy cables, which detailed some of thegoings-on in the South African intelligencecommunity and had spies running for cover.We found out that our spooks had beenmonitoring the WhiteWidow, SamanthaLewthwaite, for a yearbefore the WestgateMall attack happenedin Nairobi, that Iranianfront companies wereoperating on our shores,and state laptopswere being stolen forthe information theycontained

When the #RhodesMustFall movementbegan at the University of Cape Townafter student leader Chumani Maxweleflung poo at a statue of old Cecil John. Theoffending statue was eventually removed,but not before student protests againstcolonialism and its vestiges broke outcountrywide

By #FeesMustFall, a massive studentmovement countrywide, which forcedgovernment and universities to suspendfee hikes for next year after protests fromParliament to Potch. The students, with fewexceptions, protested peacefully and withdignity, and government was forced to listen.A new generation of leaders was forged

When US Attorney General Loretta Lynchcharged nine Fifa officials with corruptionin a scandal that has continued to rock theworld football body. Her 167-page indictmentrevealed that co-conspirators 16 and 17 wereSouth African officials who facilitated a $10million payment to the then president of theConfederation of North, Central Americanand Caribbean Association Football, JackWarner, for the “African Diaspora”, allegedlya disguised bribe for his vote for South Africato host the World Cup in 2010

When retired Judge Ian Farlam  releasedthe report of his inquiry into the Marikanamassacre in which he found that police hadlied, Phiyega was a bad witness, and mininghouse Lonmin failed to build proper housingfor its employees, which fuelled the tensions

When armed Islamic State gunmen attackedthe Bataclan theatre and cafés in Paris , killing130 people and injuring more than 80 in the worstconcerted terror attack on European soil. This tookplace in the same year 11 car toonists at satiricalFrench magazine Charlie Hebdo were killed bytwo brothers affiliated to al-Qaeda in Yemen.The magazine had carried cartoons depicting theProphet Muhammad

Presidential spokesperson Mac Maharaj,

who quit his job this year. We miss his“clarification” of his boss’ comments and hisinsistence that Zuma was quoted out of context

By the discovery of Homo naledi in a deep cave in theCradle of Humankind  by accountant and caver Steven Tucker.Archaeologists from Wits University, led by  Professor LeeBurger, had the world enthralled at the news of a new humanancestor

We fumed...At the goings-on at Eskom, which announced massiveload shedding after spending billions on diesel to runturbines to keep the lights on. After dark mutterings ofan impending two-week nationwide blackout, then CEOTshediso Matona and some of his management teamwere suspended and later left.  Brian Molefe  took over,which many now consider one of government’s bestdecisions of the year. No load shedding for months! Whowould have thought?

When President Zuma suspended thennational director of public prosecutionsMxolisi Nxasana, who appeared to bedoing a good job. After the i nquiry intohis fitness to hold office was aborted atthe last minute, Nxasana quit and thepresident gave him a R17 million goldenhandshake

When we discovered that then Passenger Rail Agency of SA(Prasa) CEO Lucky Montana and his PhD-less chief engineerDaniel Mthimkhulu spent R600 million on Spanish trains thatcould only run between Kimberley and Port Elizabeth. Theywere too high for the rest of the country’s rail network. NowPrasa board chair Popo Molefe is trying to get their money backfrom middleman Swifambo Rail Leasing, whose boss, AuswellMashaba, bought a game farm for R27 million cash just daysafter being paid. Nice work if you can get it

During the opening of Parliament this year whenthe State Security Agency jammed the cellphonesignal in the House and then later said it didit to enforce a no-fly zone above the building.WTF? And then we fumed even more whenpresidential protection officers and burly riotcops in white shirts  threw out the EconomicFreedom Fighters after they interruptedPresident Zuma’s state of the nation address,demanding that he #PayBackTheMoney. Fewpeople, except for the ANC, remained to listen tothe president speak after that

When government letSudanese president Omaral-Bashir leave the countrydespite a court order that

he be arrested in line with awarrant issued for him by theInternational Criminal Court.Al-Bashir remains wanted forcrimes against humanity

When Ipid gave DeputyPolice Minister MaggieSotyu’s daughter, Boniwe,the plum job of deputydirector of investigationsin the Free State withouther having the rightqualifications. She was giventhe job over a candidate with22 years of experience. Whatfollowed was a witch-huntby Ipid, which suspendedmany officials it believedleaked the information toCity Press

When the SA Rugby Unionpicked a mostly white team forthe rugby World Cup in England

When President Zumafired Nhlanhla Neneas finance minister,replaced him with no-name-brand Des vanRooyen, only to replaceVan Rooyen with PravinGordhan – all in five days.No man. This is no way torun a country

We were horrified...

By the Cape Town fires  thatburnt houses and vast swathesof the city for a week. It’s stillnot known what started theblaze

At the unfolding jobs bloodbath this year, with AngloAmerican announcing it wasdowngrading its operations inSA at a cost of 50 000 jobs. CityPress reported in August that23 000 people had been givennotice that they were about to losetheir jobs between April and June

At the goings-on at SAA. First City Press reportedthat chairperson Dudu Myeni, in her capacityas the head of the Jacob Zuma Foundation, wasselling face time with the prez. And then therewas the R6 billion Airbus deal that Treasury saidwas unaffordable, which she wanted to go aheadwith anyway through some mystery companyplaying middleman. This is an airline, not a two-bitbusiness. Run it properly!

At the Syrian refugee crisis that sawhundreds of thousands of peopletrying to flee to Europe. What r eallyshocked us was the photographof three-year-old Aylan Kurdi’sbody washed up on a Turkish beach.He drowned trying to get to Greecealongside five-year-old brother Galipand their mother, Rehan

By the case of PeterFrederiksen, theDanish man who ison trial for allegedlymutilating women’sgenitals and keepingtheir body partsin his freezer inBloemfontein.

We said farewell to...

Formernational policecommissioner

Jackie Selebi, who succumbed tokidney failure early this year

We grieved...

When in January an estimated  2 000Nigerians were slaughtered  in the northerntown of Baga by Boko Haram militantsin a massacre eyewitnesses described as“indiscriminate killing going on and on”. Themilitants left the dead and injured lying in thestreets, and then burnt the town to the ground

When xenophobic attacks broke out in Soweto  and 120foreign-owned shops were looted in late January. Then,in April, Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini’s comments that“foreigners must go” ignited  a further wave of attackson foreigners in KwaZulu-Natal  and elsewhere inthe country. At least six foreigners were killed, includingMozambican father Emmanuel Sithole, who was knifed todeath in Alexandra. At least his killers were convicted

When much-loved Skwatta KamprapperNkululeko “Flabba”Habediwas murdered by his girlfriend,Sindisiwe Manqele, who stabbed himin the chest with a knife. She wasfound guilty of his murder by theSouth Gauteng High Court and will besentenced in March. For now, she isout on bail

When Top Billing presenterSimba Mhere was killed withhis friend, Kady Shay O’Brien,in a horror car accident onJohannesburg’s M1 highway,allegedly caused by a drunkendriver

When al-Shabaab militantskilled 148 students at the GarissaUniversity College in Kenya andinjured 79 in retribution for Kenya’smilitary presence in Somalia and the“mistreatment” of Muslims in thecountry

We laughed...

When Police Minister NkosinathiNhleko released his report into thewild overspending on supposedsecurity upgrades to PresidentZuma’s Nkandla home, which citedbeam-busting chickens as a securitythreat. What made us giggle the mostthough were his fire pool videosin which officials were at pains todemonstrate why the presidentialswimming pool wasn’t one. Then hetravelled the country trying to convinceeditors to believe his spin

At some of  SABC COO HlaudiMotsoeneng’s comments. One of hisgems this year was that if the mediareported on crime it would encouragepeople to commit crime. About his lackof a matric – which the Public Protectorfound he lied about – he said: “You havetwo kinds of people in this world. You havecertificated people and educated people.You can have many degrees, but also inthat you need a brain.” After an SABCdisciplinary hearing found him not guilty ofall charges, we are not laughing any more

At how DubeTradePort CEOSaxen van Collernot only faked herqualifications toclimb the corporateladder but onceduped one of SouthAfrica’s wealthiestmen, JohannRupert, into givingher a job

At the one about AlexMatsobane, a convictedcriminal, who pitched up atthe Seshego Police Station,told them he’d beensent “from national”, andproceeded to work therefor years without anyoneknowing what he was upto. He did such a good jobhe was even promoted tothe station’s detective unit.He’s now finally in jail

We were agog...

When we learnt that  rapper AKA and DJZinhle were madly in love and having ababy earlier this year … then many happyInstagrams later, they split days after thebaby was born because AKA was alleged tobe in a relationship with TV hottie BonangMatheba. We don’t know, hey?

At the goings-on in the Gigaba household. Neverfar from a headline,  Minister Malusi’s wife Nomacaused an unprecedented outbreak of gossipby taking on alleged nyatsi Buhle Mkhize. TheirInstagram war is now the stuff of legend. As forMinister Malusi, he is #DenyingEverything. Can’tsay we blame him

At the news that First LadyNompumelelo Ntuli-Zumawas allegedly behind a plot topoison her husband. She deniesthis, but iyoh!

We celebrated...

We werefascinated...

When the Ebola viruswas finally broughtunder control and theoutbreak ended in westAfrica after claimingmore than 6 000 lives.A vaccine was developed

that proved successful intrials

When Nigeria went to thepolls this year and powerwas handed peacefully toPresident MuhammaduBuhari from the outgoingGoodluck Jonathan. It wasthe first time there had

been a peaceful transferof power in Africa’s mostpopulous nation

When Trevor Noah  baggedthe top comic job of anchoron The Daily Show, giving ussomething – and someone –to be proud of

When Desmond andLeah Tutu celebratedtheir 60th weddinganniversary in July

When Wayde vanNiekerk won the400m gold medaland Anaso Jobodwanacame third in the200m, after superstarsUsain Bolt and Justin

Gatlin, at the IAAFWorld Championships

That President Zuma’s  guardswere still living in guesthousesin Eshowe because their securityvillage at the president’s privatehome in Nkandla was not furnished

That now National Directorof Public ProsecutionsShaun Abrahams wouldbe the one to take Nxasana’splace. We knew before heknew

Compiled by Nicki Güles   RUDI LOUW, Graphics24