Police search for murder suspect/s

LUSIKISIKI – SAPS Lusikisiki are investigating a case of murder following the death of a 20-year-old female student whose body was been found dumped in the Lwalweni river banks.

The incident occurred between 29 and 30 October between 21:00 and 07:00 at Mcobothini locality Dubhana A/A.

The deceased body was seen by local people who were crossing the river. She sustained stab wounds on the upper body. The motive for the murder is unknown at this stage.

No suspect has been arrested the matter is still under investigation.

Anyone with information can call Crime Stop on 08600 10111 or use the My SAPS App to submit a tip-off.

Source: South African Police Service

Six alleged stock thieves busted with suspected stolen stock

Nelspruit:  Six suspects aged between 20 and 38 appeared in Piet Retief Magistrates’ Court today, 03 November 2022, for possession of suspected stolen livestock carcases.

On 28 October 2022, the farmer reportedly had a routine check on his flock of sheep and to his surprise, discovered a deficit of 22. It is said that the farmer made his own enquiries and received information that his sheep were allegedly stolen and already slaughtered by suspects.

Members of the police from Piet Retief Stock Theft Unit were alerted about the matter and they were summoned to the scene. Upon arrival, an investigation was conducted where information was followed whereby four suspects were reportedly found in possession of the carcasses. In addition, sheep heads were also seized with brand marks suspected to be that of the complainant. The four suspects were immediately arrested. Further investigation led to the arrest of two more suspects that were allegedly found with ten sheep carcasses.

During their court appearance, the six were granted bail of R2000 each and they are expected back in court on 08 December 2022. Their names are Amos Sfiso Manana (28), Thabani Nkosi (24), Nkosinsiphile Mnisi (36), Nkosikhona Simelana (24), Thebelihle Floence Khumalo (28), and Siyabonga Samuel Shandu (20). The investigation continues.

The Provincial Commissioner of the SAPS in Mpumalanga, Lieutenant General Semakaleng Daphney Manamela has welcomed the arrest of the suspects hence their court appearance. The General further emphasised that the police will continue to tackle stock theft however, farmers should also continue to brand mark their livestock as this exercise assist in identification whenever the items are recovered. The public is discouraged from buying stolen goods.

Source: South African Police Service

Cease-Fire Declared in Ethiopia’s Tigray Conflict

Ethiopia’s government and leaders from the country’s Tigray region agreed to a cease-fire Wednesday after a week of peace talks in South Africa. The cease-fire, if it holds, would halt a two-year civil war that has devastated much of northern Ethiopia.

Former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, who mediated the talks led by the African Union, delivered the news Wednesday in the South African capital of Pretoria.

Obasanjo congratulated both parties for agreeing to the cessation of hostilities, disarmament, as well as restoring humanitarian access to the country’s northern region.

In New York, United Nations spokesman Stephane Dujarric said the ceasefire was a “welcome first step.” He said the U.N. hopes “it can bring some solace to the millions of Ethiopian civilians who have really suffered during this conflict.”

The U.N. and United States were observers in the talks that began last week.

History of conflict

The war between the Ethiopian government and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) began two years ago, with each party blaming the other for initiating the violence.

The roots of the dispute stretch back nearly three decades. The TPLF dominated the country’s ruling coalition until 2018 when it lost power on a national level. The current government led by Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has accused the TPLF of attempting to restore its national hold, while the TPLF accuses the government of trying to oppress Tigray, where the party retains a stronghold.

Neither side has confirmed casualty figures, but academics say the conflict has killed hundreds of thousands of people, many of them civilians.

Humanitarian aid has been largely blocked from reaching the region, and the U.N. estimates that upwards of 5.2 million people in Tigray are dealing with extreme food insecurity. They also lack access to medicine and other vital resources.

Agreement considered fresh start

A cease-fire was previously reached in March, but that agreement collapsed in August.

Since then, international pressure has been mounting for the warring parties to silence the guns.

Although a civil conflict, the effects have rippled throughout the Horn of Africa. Eritrean forces have entered Ethiopian territory to back the national government. Refugees fleeing the fighting spilled into neighboring countries like Sudan.

The agreement is only the beginning of the peace process, says Obasanjo, and it will allow the devastated region to begin to rebuild.

Source: Voice of America

US Says North Korea Is Secretly Supplying Russia With Artillery for Ukraine 

The White House said Wednesday that North Korea is secretly supplying Russia with artillery for the war in Ukraine, another worrying sign, analysts say, that this conflict is getting more complex and dangerous for Ukrainian civilians.

“Our information indicates that the DPRK is covertly supplying Russia’s war in Ukraine with a significant number of artillery shells, while obfuscating the real destination of the arms shipments by trying to make it appear as though they’re being sent to countries in the Middle East or North Africa,” John Kirby, spokesman for the National Security Council, told reporters.

Kirby added that the artillery shells North Korea is sending are “not going to change the course of the war,” and that U.S. security support for Ukraine will continue and adapt to new challenges.

Russia also has bought arms from Iran, in violation of a U.N. resolution that forbids weapons sales from the pariah nation, he said, adding that the U.S. would approach the U.N. to try to hold Russia accountable.

North Korea has denied sending weapons to Russia.

“We have never exported weapons or ammunition to Russia before, and we will not plan to export them,” an official at the North Korean Defense Ministry’s General Bureau of Equipment said in a statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency on September 21.

Defense analysts agreed with Kirby’s assessment that the new munitions won’t lead to a Russian victory, but say they are nevertheless a threat in the hands of an army accused of targeting Ukrainian civilians.

“What North Korea is providing to Russia is older, unguided artillery shells,” said Ian Williams, deputy director of the Missile Defense Project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “So, the kind that you essentially fire just based on the ballistic trajectory, and it will kind of land where it may. You need a lot of them to really have an impact. But if you’re just firing them indiscriminately into a civilian area, or you’re just trying to blanket a large area, it can suffice in certain circumstances.”

And, he said, the North Korean munitions aren’t as worrying as Iran’s decision to supply small, portable, hard-to-detect drones to Russia. Those were used last month to batter Kyiv, the capital.

“I’m actually more concerned with what the Iranians are doing than what the North Koreans are doing,” Williams said. “The Iranians are providing them with quite-long-range missiles and drones, and lots of them. And they are starting to really bear down using these things to really wear down Ukraine’s civil infrastructure, their electrical grid and water treatment plants, and the ability to deliver fresh water to urban areas. I have been somewhat alarmed by the persistence of the Russians in this effort.”

Kirby also said the transaction indicates that Russian President Vladimir Putin is struggling in the eight-month conflict. Analysts say the war is going poorly for Russia, with Ukraine’s government estimating that as many as 70,000 Russian soldiers have been killed.

“It’s a sign both of the isolation that he continues to feel economically,” Kirby said. “His own defense industrial base can’t keep up with the pace at which he is using armaments in Ukraine. But it’s also a sign of how much he’s doubling down on continuing this war, that he’s willing to go outside the lifelines, as it were, to find foreign suppliers.”

Williams added that it’s possible emotion is driving some of Russia’s military decisions.

“My belief is that Russia has lost this war, and they are just like the Germans in World War II, continuing to fire B1s and B2s at London,” he said. “By the end, it was not for any strategic purpose. It was just vengeance and trying to make the British people suffer.”

Putin has expressed his unhappiness about South Korea’s decision to support Ukraine. The two Koreas remain in a state of war, nearly 70 years after the formal cessation of hostilities.

On Wednesday, North Korea fired at least 23 missiles into the sea, some toward its southern neighbor.

“We have learned now that the Republic of Korea has decided to supply weapons and ammunition to Ukraine,” Putin said last week at a meeting of international policy experts in Moscow, using South Korea’s official name. “This will be destroying our relations. How would the Republic of Korea behave if we resumed cooperation with North Korea in this area? Would you feel happy about this?”

Source: Voice of America

South Africa: Time for action to end scourge of GBVF – Pres Ramaphosa

JOHANNESBURG— South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has challenged delegates attending the second Presidential Summit on Gender-Based Violence and Femicide (GBVF) to be focused on action and results toward ending violence against women and children.

“As a society, ending violence against women and children cannot be anything but our foremost priority,” Ramaphosa said.

The President made the call during the Presidential Summit on GBVF held at the Gallagher Convention Centre in Midrand on Tuesday.

Ramaphosa convened the second summit, which aims to reflect on the work undertaken since the first Presidential Summit on GBVF in November 2018, and also report on key successes and challenges, and outline clear strategies to overcome them.

Delivering his keynote address, the President noted that during the first summit, the participants collectively made a firm commitment to the nation to undertake a comprehensive, effective and united response to gender-based violence and femicide.

“We agreed to develop a National Strategic Plan (NSP) to guide our national response, to coordinate the various sectors involved in the fight against GBV, to strengthen the state’s response, and to align the efforts of government, the private sector and civil society.

These included a number of interventions to deal with the scourge of GBVF in the country, which started with the development of a GBVF Emergency Response Action Plan in 2019.

“I requested Parliament’s Presiding Officers to call a special joint sitting of both houses of Parliament to announce the action plan. The plan was embraced by members of Parliament representing all political parties.

“This was a significant moment in that GBVF was seen as a non-partisan matter on which all political parties demonstrated their preparedness to act together to address this scourge. This was followed by the release in April 2020 of the National Strategic Plan, which had been carefully drawn up together with civil society,” Ramaphosa highlighted.

The President told delegates attending that they must look at what is working, what is not, and what is needed to make a difference.

“This is an accountability summit. This second Presidential Summit is for us to assess progress in fulfilling the commitments we made at the first Summit in 2018 and in implementing the National Strategic Plan (NSP on GBVF).

“What we have stressed throughout this process is the importance of a collaborative and coordinated approach towards combating gender-based violence and femicide. We need to plan together, implement together and account together.

“The actions we take now will determine whether this crime forever remains a feature of our national life, or whether we can say we are the generation that ended it,” President Ramaphosa said.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

South Africa: Durban opens more beaches as water quality improves

DURBAN— The South African City of Durban announced on Tuesday that it has reopened more beaches following improved water quality.

This comes after many beaches had a high level of E.coli that eThekwini Municipality pointed the finger at the sewage infrastructure damage due to the April floods.

“The decision to open these beaches was taken after recent water tests conducted by experts confirmed that beach water is at an acceptable level for recreational activities,” the city said.  

Beaches that are open for swimming include Point, uShaka, Addington, South, Wedge, North, Bay of Plenty, Battery, Country Club, Brighton, Reunion, Pipeline, Toti Main, and Warner.

Meanwhile, some of the beaches remain closed until further notice. These include Westbrook, Bronze, Laguna, Thekwini, Umhlanga, Umdloti and Umgababa beaches.

“The municipality is continuously monitoring water quality at all beaches to ensure the safety of residents and visitors.”

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK