Seven Charged in Brutal South Africa Gang Rape

The National Prosecuting Authority in South Africa says at least 14 men out of dozens arrested face rape charges in an attack on a group of women who were making a music video earlier this month.

A court on Wednesday charged seven men in connection with the gang rape, prosecuting authority spokeswoman Phindi Louw Mjonondwane told VOA, adding that seven more would face rape charges tomorrow.

They are all part of the 80 men initially arrested in a major police sweep following the incident, she confirmed.

The women had been making a music video two weeks earlier in the mining area of Krugersdorp outside Johannesburg when they were attacked by a group of masked, armed men.

Mjonondwane said all of those charged with rape were foreign nationals, including from Lesotho and Zimbabwe.

“Seven accused appeared at the Krugersdorp Magistrate’s Court facing charges ranging from multiple counts of rape, sexual assault, contravention of the immigration act, as well as robbery with aggravating circumstances,” she said.

Many of those arrested are believed to work as illegal miners, known here as zama-zamas. The incident has sparked anger in local communities, as well as xenophobia, with mobs attacking the zama-zamas.

Police had said they would use DNA kits to try to identify the alleged attackers from among those rounded up, as well as a police lineup. However, Mjonondwane would not comment on how those charged had been identified.

Despite having a very high rate of rape and gender-based violence, South Africa — which celebrated Women’s Day on Tuesday — was shocked by the brutal attack.

Police recorded more than 36,000 rapes in fiscal 2020-21.

Source: Voice of Americas

Sierra Leone Imposes Nationwide Curfew Amid Deadly Anti-Government Protests

At least two police officers and one civilian died after a day of anti-government protests in Sierra Leone’s capital, Freetown, staff at the city’s main mortuary said Wednesday.

Sierra Leone’s government previously said there had been deaths, but did not say how many, as protesters threw rocks and burned tires in the streets out of frustration at worsening economic hardship and other issues.

The West African country, which has been struggling with rising inflation and a fuel crisis, imposed a nationwide curfew from 3 p.m. local time in a bid to stem the violence.

“As a government, we have the responsibility to protect every citizen of Sierra Leone. What happened today was unfortunate and will be fully investigated,” President Julius Maada Bio said on Twitter.

In addition to the three bodies at the mortuary, a Reuters reporter saw another civilian body on a street in eastern Freetown.

The police chief and spokesman could not be reached for comment.

Videos on social media verified by Reuters showed large crowds of protesters and piles of burning tires in parts of the capital. Other footage showed a group of young men throwing rocks on a street filled with whitish smoke.

“People are upset about the country’s justice system, which is sickening, daily price rises and economic hardship,” said Daniel Alpha Kamara, a university student.

The violence started around 10:30 a.m. local time, he said, when he saw clouds of tear gas rising up outside his dormitory room.

“These unscrupulous individuals have embarked on a violent and unauthorized protest which has led to the loss of lives of innocent Sierra Leoneans, including security personnel,” Vice President Mohamed Juldeh Jalloh said in a video address.

“The government hereby declares a nationwide curfew,” he said. “The security sector has been authorized to fully enforce this directive.”

Regional political and economic bloc ECOWAS said it condemned the violence and called in a Twitter post for “all to obey law and order and for the perpetrators of the violence to be identified and brought before the law.”

Discontent has been boiling over for a number of reasons, including a perceived lack of government support for ordinary people who are struggling, said Augustine Sorie-Sengbe Marrah, a constitutional lawyer and governance activist.

“There has been little empathy from the central government to encourage folks that they see them suffering, and that they understand these are tough economic times,” he told Reuters.

Long-standing frustration has also been exacerbated by rising prices for basic goods in Sierra Leone, where more than half the population of around 8 million lives below the poverty line, according to the World Bank.

Earlier on Wednesday, internet observatory NetBlocks said Sierra Leone faced a near-total internet shutdown during the protests, with national connectivity at 5% of ordinary levels.

On Tuesday, the national security coordinator asked the armed forces to be prepared to back up the police through Friday, warning of a “potentially volatile security situation,” according to an internal letter shared widely online.

Source: Voice of Americas

42 Malian Soldiers Killed in Suspected Jihadi Attacks

Forty-two Malian soldiers died in a sophisticated weekend attack by suspected jihadis using drones and artillery, authorities said Wednesday, the latest violent incident to rock the troubled Sahel country.

The toll is one of the bloodiest in Mali’s decadelong insurgency, which has spread from the north of the country to the center and south and into neighboring Burkina Faso and Niger.

A document naming the dead was authenticated to AFP by several senior military officials, while the government later confirmed the toll in a statement that said 22 soldiers were injured and 37 “terrorists” were neutralized.

The attack occurred Sunday in the town of Tessit, in the troubled three-border region where the frontiers of the three nations converge.

On Monday, the army had said 17 soldiers and four civilians died. Relatives of the victims, speaking on condition of anonymity, said some of the civilians were elected officials.

Monday’s statement blamed the Islamic State in the Greater Sahara (ISGS), saying its members had deployed “drone and artillery support and [used] explosives and an explosives-laden vehicle.”

Previous attacks

The last time Mali’s armed forces sustained such losses was in a string of attacks in the same region in late 2019 and early 2020. Hundreds of soldiers were killed in assaults on nearly a dozen bases, typically carried out by highly mobile fighters on motorbikes.

The raids prompted the Malian, Nigerien and Burkinabe forces to fall back from forward bases and hunker down in better-defended locations.

In January 2020, France and its Sahel allies agreed on a push against the ISGS at a summit in Pau, southwestern France.

Several of its leaders were targeted and killed, including its founder, Abu Walid Al-Sahraoui, but local people say the group has continued to recruit and carry out its operations.

Tessit is one of the hot spots in the three-border area.

The ISGS is fighting for control of the strategic, gold-rich area against an al-Qaida-linked alliance, the Support Group for Islam and Muslims (GSIM).

In March 2021, 33 soldiers were killed in an ISGS-claimed ambush as units were being rotated, and in February this year, around 40 civilians, suspected by the ISGS of being in league with al-Qaida, were massacred.

Mobile phone connections to the area have been frequently cut over the last few years and physical access is hard, especially during the midyear rainy season.

Thousands have fled Tessit to the nearest large town, Gao, which is about 150 kilometers (90 miles) to the north.

Across the Sahel, the jihadi campaign has claimed thousands of lives and forced more than 2 million to flee their homes.

Sporadic cross-border attacks have also occurred in Ivory Coast, Togo and Benin to the south, amplifying fears of a jihadist push toward the Gulf of Guinea.

Source: Voice of Americas

Remarks by President Cyril Ramaphosa on the occasion of Women’s day 2022

Minister in the Presidency for Women, Youth and Persons with Disabilities, Ms Maite Nkoana-Mashabane,

Ministers and Deputy Ministers,

MECs and the leadership of the KwaZulu-Natal provincial government,

Amakhosi,

Izinduna,

Abaholi benkolo,

Abaholi bomphakathi,

Leaders of political parties and civil society formations,

Fellow South Africans,

Bonke abesimame eRichmond,

Sanibonani. Molweni. Dumelang. Goeie dag. Lotjhani. Ndi matsheloni.

Namhlanje sibingelela oNozala esizweni sakithi esikhulu, kwelikaMthaniya!

oGogo bethu, oMama bethu, oDadewethu Kanye namadodakazi wethu.

Izinsika emindeneni yethu nase zweni Lethe.

Namhlanje umgubho wabo bonke abesifazane baseMzansi Afrika.

Izimbokodo. Amaqhawekazi.

Today is a celebration of all the women of our great country, black and white, young, and old, urban, and rural, our mothers, our daughters, and our sisters.

Sixty-six years ago, more than 20,000 women marched to Pretoria to tell the apartheid Prime Minister that no, they would not carry the dompas.

They came as thousands of women from around the country, emabhasini, ezimotweni, ezitimeleni, ngisho nagezinyawo, bazincama babeletha izingane

emhlane.

Babekhona nababephuma KwaZulu-Natali, organised by our great women leaders, uMama Dorothy Nyembe, uMama Fatima Meer, uMama Florence Mkhize and others.

Some of the women travelling from KwaZulu-Natal were stopped by police and were forced to turn back.

But many did get to the Union Buildings, where they joined the march shouting their warning to the Prime Minister, “Strydom, Wathint Abafazi, wathint’ Imbokodo”.

Ngenxa yabesifazane bango 1956, because of their bravery and their sacrifices, the women of South Africa today have equal rights and opportunities that their grandmothers, great-grandmothers and great-great grandmothers were denied.

In South Africa today, girls learn alongside boys in our primary and secondary schools and receive equal education.

Last year, more females passed the matric exams and got more distinctions than their male counterparts.

There are currently more female students enrolled at institutions of higher learning than males.

Close to half of our Members of Parliament, judges and magistrates are women.

More than 60 per cent of public servants are women.

In South Africa today, women are champions.

Like our Banyana Banyana, who brought home their first Women’s Africa Cup of Nations trophy last week.

Just as the pioneers of the Women’s March of 1956 were role-models, the young women, and girls of today have no shortage of role models.

With the right support, they can become anything they want to be, from star soccer players to fighter pilots, judges, members of Parliament, businesswomen and entrepreneurs.

But for many young women, there are several obstacles they first need to overcome.

In South Africa, like many countries around the world, women bear the brunt of poverty.

Three-quarters of female-headed households live in poverty.

The slow growth of our economy and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic has been particularly hard on women, youth, and persons with disabilities.

Lapha, eRichmond, iphethewe abesifazane, nearly half of all households are female-headed.

Since the advent of democracy, we have implemented policies to address the impact of poverty on women.

Mothers and grandmothers have access to comprehensive social services, including child support grants.

To support poor families, especially those from single parent households, learners are exempted from paying school fees and receive meals at school.

Women are more likely to be unemployed than men.

Around half of all women in South Africa are unemployed, including those who have given up looking for work.

On average, women still earn far less than men.

This was thrown into the spotlight with the victory of Banyana, whose players still earn less than the men’s national soccer team.

Women do not get paid for caring for the elderly, children, and other family members.

And the time that women spend doing work in the home limits their ability to earn money through employment or run their own businesses.

Siyazi lapha eRichmond, abantu abaningi baphelelwe imisebenzi, ikati lilala eziko emindenini eminingi.

There are limited opportunities, especially for young people.

We also have the problem in this country of young girls being taken out of school early to perform household duties, to care for younger siblings and to look for work to support the family.

We need to change this so that young girls can finish school.

Government is working to enable women to participate in the economy.

Gender equality will not be achieved unless women are financially secure and independent.

Here in the Umgungundlovu District Municipality we are providing temporary work opportunities to women through the Community Works Programme, the Expanded Public Works Programme and by supporting community caregivers and community health workers.

Female entrepreneurs, especially small business owners, are supported through the province’s Rural and Township Economies Revitalisation Strategy.

The provincial government, through the Radical Agrarian Socio-Economic Transformation programme, is also helping women access land for farming and get their produce to market.

So far, it has assisted over 3,500 farmers, with the majority being women and youth from rural areas like uMgungundlovu.

Women entrepreneurs need companies, departments, and customers to buy their products and services.

Government has committed to set aside 40 per cent of public procurement spend to women-owned businesses.

We have been holding workshops countrywide to equip women with skills to do business with both government and the private sector.

Between September this year and January next year, we plan to reach all 11 districts in KwaZulu-Natal.

To ensure better access to finance, we want entities like the Industrial Development Corporation, Public Investment Corporation and National Empowerment Fund to make further resources available to women-owned businesses.

Fellow South Africans,

Gender-based violence is a stain on our celebrations today.

Hardly a day goes by in this country without a report of women being attacked, being violated, and being killed by men.

This cannot continue.

The women of South Africa have had enough of being afraid.

Afraid to go out after dark.

Afraid of being attacked in their own homes

Afraid of being preyed on in the classroom.

Afraid for the safety of their children, even from their own relatives.

Afraid of being a woman in South Africa.

We should not see this as a women’s problem, when it is in fact inkinga yamadoda, a men’s problem.

It is a problem of men with no respect for women, who feel they can do what they like with their girlfriends or partners because they buy them airtime or groceries.

It is a problem of men who lack the maturity to accept the end of a relationship and hunt down their ex-wives or ex-girlfriends.

It is a problem of men who think culture, custom and religion empowers them to hit their wives, sisters, and daughters and to deprive them of their rights.

It is a problem of men who hold positions of influence and authority who prey on women and take advantage of them.

Here, in Richmond, like in many places around the country, sexual assaults and other violent crimes are connected to alcohol abuse, and many take place in or around places where alcohol is sold, amathaveni, amashibhini.

This is not the South Africa for which the women of 1956 marched.

hey did not sacrifice to see the end of the slavery of the apartheid, only for today’s women to live in prisons of fear.

Earlier this year, we passed three important laws that will strengthen the fight against gender-based violence.

These laws give greater protection to victims of domestic violence.

The new laws empower the police to enter premises without a warrant and, if necessary, arrest a suspect.

Police can also remove dangerous weapons from a suspect. Complainants will be able to apply for protection orders online.

New provisions expand the scope of the National Register of Sex Offenders, and place a legal responsibility on us all to report any sexual offences committed against vulnerable persons.

There are now far stricter conditions under which a suspect may be granted bail.

Perpetrators will get harsher sentences.

Silence is no longer an option.

Asikwazi ukuthula. We have to break the silence.

Silence is the dark corner in which women and children are abused, beaten, raped, and killed.

Silence is the dark cloud under which men allow their friends to ill-treat women, children, and members of the LGBTQIA+ community as a display of their manliness.

Silence is the cancer that eats away at women who protect their husbands, sons, partners, and boyfriends who abuse them, their children, and other women because they are financially dependent.

On this Women’s Day I want to call on every South African to play their part in the fight against gender-based violence and femicide by speaking out.

In 2021, we introduced a 100-Day Challenge to pilot interventions to fast-track the provision of services to survivors of gender-based violence.

In the sites where the challenge has been implemented, sexual offences cases have been reduced by more than 42 per cent, case backlogs reduced by 80 per cent and survivors of gender-based violence are able to access legal and psycho-social support services more easily.

In November we will hold the second Presidential Summit on Gender-Based Violence and Femicide, where will do a detailed assessment of the implementation of our National Strategic Plan and chart the way forward.

Fellow South Africans,

We gather here today to mark Women’s Day deeply aware of the many challenges that the women of South Africa confront every day.

We gather here knowing that poverty, discrimination and violence continues to hold back the progress of the country’s women and girls.

But we also gather here to celebrate the achievements of many South African women, from all parts of the country, from all walks of life, who have overcome many obstacles to excel in their chosen fields.

We gather here to say that we will spare no effort to build a non-sexist society in which men and women have equal opportunities and prospects.

The women who marched on the Union Buildings 66 years ago demonstrated the power and resolve of the women of South Africa.

They were determined that women should take their rightful place in a free and democratic society.

As we honour their bravery, let us continue their struggle.

And let us achieve their vision.

I thank you.

Source: Presidency Republic of South Africa

President Ramaphosa to receive letters of credence by Foreign Heads of Mission to South Africa

President Cyril Ramaphosa will on Thursday, 11 August 2022, receive letters of credence from Heads of Mission-Designate at a Credentials Ceremony. The President will receive 14 Heads of Mission-Designate who have arrived in South Africa to serve in diplomatic missions in South Africa.

The Heads of Mission-Designate from the following countries will serve at missions in South Africa with the aim of advancing diplomatic relations:

• Kingdom of Thailand

• Kingdom of Spain

• Republic of Paraguay

• Slovak Republic

• State of Libya

• Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia

• Kingdom of Eswatini

• Republic of Chile

• Republic of Mali

• Republic of Sudan

• Republic of Uganda

• European Union

• United States of America

• Turkmenistan

Proceedings of the Credentials Ceremony can be followed on Presidency and government digital platforms.

Source: Presidency Republic of South Africa

Minister Mondli Gungubele and Minister Pravin Gordhan to conduct a Frontline Monitoring Programme in Sedibeng District Municipality, 10 August 2022

Minister in the Presidency, Mr Mondli Gungubele, together with Minister of Public Enterprises, Mr Pravin Gordhan will visit service delivery facilities in the Sedibeng District Municipality, Gauteng Province on 10 August 2022 as a build-up programme for the upcoming District Development Model (DDM) Presidential Imbizo on the 12th of August 2022 in Sedibeng District Municipality.

Minister Gungubele and Gordhan will use this opportunity to assess the quality of service delivery in Sedibeng District Municipality and ascertain progress in the implementation of the District Development One-Plan.

The visit will also focus on access and provision of government services and aim to give expression to the legacy tagline of this 6th Administration, “Leave no one behind” through mobilising the public to be part of Government’s effort in eradicating poverty, creating employment and reducing inequality.

Through this visit, the Ministers will engage with facility managers of the below identified facilities on planned initiatives to contribute towards the improvement of service delivery in the District and explore possible areas for collaboration.

Minister Gungubele and Gordhan will also interact and listen to the citizen’s views with regards to service delivery issues and gauge the public mood on government’s efforts in dealing with service delivery matters ahead of the DDM Presidential Imbizo.

Members of the media are invited as follows:

Programme details:

Part 1

Venue: Mafatsane Home Affairs in Evaton, Emfuleni Local Municipality

Time: 09:00 – 11:15

Part 2

Venue: Small Farm Clinic in Evaton, Emfuleni Local Municipality

Time: 11:30 – 13:45

Part 3

Venue: Sebokeng Zone 17 Clinic, Emfuleni Local Municipality

Time: 14:00 – 16:00

Part 4

Media door-stop

Venue: Sebokeng Zone 17 Clinic, Emfuleni Local Municipality

Time: 16:00 – 16:30

Source: Presidency Republic of South Africa

Cyclists in 5th Great African Cycling Safari flagged off in Tanzania

ARUSHA (Tanzania), The 5th edition of the Great African Cycling Safari (GACS) was flagged off at the East African Community (EAC) Headquarters in Arusha, Tanzania by the EAC Deputy Secretary General in charge of the Productive and Social Sectors, Christophe Bazivamo.

The GACS is an annual bicycle tour to showcase the East African Community in all its beauty, multiplicity, and reflecting the cultural diversity of the people living in the East African region.

Youths from across the EAC Partner States join this cycling event to take the EAC integration process from the level of abstract policy making in government offices to the people at the grassroots level to show that integration is alive and beneficial to all citizens.

This year’s safari started in Mombasa, Kenya, reaching Arusha in Northern Tanzania within just one week. During the tour, participants camp in villages in the evenings, eating meals together with the local communities, bringing the benefits of regional integration closer to the people and sharing the EAC experience and its opportunities with the citizens.

The tour of 2022 has three key aims: promoting the goals of the EAC; promoting trade and tourism across the Community, and; mitigating challenges posed by climate change.

Flagging off the cyclists, the Deputy Secretary General hailed the cyclists for their efforts in complementing initiatives by the Secretariat to create awareness on the integration process.

The DSG said that the Great African Cycling Safari was an excellent opportunity to market the EAC integration to its actual owners, the ordinary people of East Africa.

Bazivamo said that the tour is in tandem with the wishes of the Summit of EAC Heads of State who have been keen on taking the EAC to the people at the grassroots.

‘‘I am glad to note that the cyclists use the safari not only just to sensitize to the people along their route on regional integration, but to preach peace and unity, promote tourism and planting trees to mitigate effects of climate change,“ he said. He reaffirmed the Community’s support for the cycling iniative.

On her part, Joyce Kevin Abalo, representing Godje Bialluch, the programme manager of the EAC-German Programme ‘Support to the EAC Integration Process, hailed the cyclists saying that it would go a long way in promoting regional integration in East Africa.

“This commendable initiative of youths from different EAC Partner States shows that integration is lived by the people of East Africa,” said Abalo.

She said that GIZ supported Great Africa Cycling Safari at its early stage through the EAC-GIZ initiative Incubator for Integration and Development in East Africa (IIDEA).

“We are delighted to see that this undertaking has become sustainable thanks to the great diligence, inventiveness and enthusiasm of its protagonists, who go to great lengths to promote togetherness in East Africa,” said Abalo.

The next stop for the cyclists will be at Mwanga on the foot of the North Pare Mountains, and from there they will proceed to Dar es Salaam, Dodoma, Bujumbura, Kigali and Kampala before arriving in Nairobi for the Grand Finale on Sept 25.

Source: Nam News Network

South African Minister Accuses West of ‘Bullying’ On Ukraine

PRETORIA, SOUTH AFRICA — South African Minister of International Relations Naledi Pandor accused the West of sometimes taking a patronizing and bullying attitude toward Africa, as she hosted U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken on the first leg of his Africa visit. Pandor made it clear that South Africa has different views from the U.S. on Ukraine, China, and Israel and the Palestinians.

At a joint press conference in the South African capital, Blinken stressed he was not on his three-country tour of the continent in order to counter Moscow and Beijing’s growing influence in the region, as has been widely speculated, after Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov visited last month.

“Our commitment to a stronger partnership with Africa is not about trying to outdo anyone else,” Blinken said.

Blinken spoke, too, about U.S. support of Ukraine, saying Russia’s invasion was an aggression against the entire international order.

South Africa has remained neutral on the conflict with Russia, its partner in the BRICS group of countries, and abstained from any U.N. votes on the matter, though Pandor said the country “abhorred” war and would like to see an end to the conflict.

However, she said the different approaches by the international community to different conflicts sometimes “leads to cynicism about international bodies.” She referenced the plight of the Palestinians.

“Just as much as the people of Ukraine deserve their territory and freedom, the people of Palestine deserve their territory and freedom,” she said, “and we should be equally concerned at what is happening to the people of Palestine as we are with what is happening to the people of Ukraine. We’ve not seen an even-handed approach.”

Pandor added that while it didn’t come from Blinken, South Africa had experienced pressure from some in the West to align with its policy on Ukraine. She also appeared to criticize the U.S. bill passed in April, “Countering Malign Russian Activities in Africa Act,” which has been seen by some on the continent as a vehicle to punish African countries that have not toed the line on Ukraine.

“From some of our partners in Europe and elsewhere, there has been a sense of patronizing bullying — ‘You choose this or else.’ And the recent legislation passed in the United States of America by the House of Representatives, we found a most unfortunate bill.”

Bob Wekesa, director of the African Center for the Study of the United States, said Pandor’s candid remarks at the press conference showed the closed-door meeting between the U.S. and South African sides “must have been a very difficult one.”

“I think the U.S. is attempting to figure out how to get South Africa on to its side, but South Africa is not coming to the party,” Wekesa said.

Blinken was in Pretoria to launch the new U.S. Strategy for Sub-Saharan Africa, which focuses on areas such as climate change, trade, health and food insecurity.

During his remarks Monday, he also criticized Beijing for its strong reaction to House speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan.

Pandor would not comment specifically on Taiwan but did say South Africa did not want to be made party to a conflict between China and the U.S.

Source: Voice of America