news friday may 23 2014 baby in cell with woman held over...

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8 NEWS FRIDAY MAY 23 2014 The Star JOYCE LEE [email protected] IN THE LAST days of his life, Nelson Mandela often drew his face into a pensive gaze as he thought back on his life, said Ndileka Mandela, his grand- daughter. She found that familiar look staring back at her inside Mandela – The Authorised Portrait: In Memoriam Edition, a 399-page autobiography that is filled with photos of Madiba’s journey, his personal letters, and interviews with loved ones and prominent politicians. The book was launched at the Nelson Mandela Centre of Mem- ory last night. In attendance were Ndileka, anti-apartheid activist and former political prisoner Ahmed Kath- rada, and partners of the Nelson Mandela Foundation. The documentary Countdown to Freedom was also screened. The In Memoriam Edition, pub- lished by Wild Dog Press in partnership with PQ Blackwell, contains a last chapter on Man- dela’s passing and photos from his funeral. The first edition, published in 2006, sold 23 000 copies within the first six months. “He was an amazing man, with his ability to bring people together,” said Sibongile Sibiya, founder of a non-profit organisa- tion in Freedom Park, Soweto, while flipping through the book on display at the centre. Nicky Allen, a representative from Wild Dog Press, said she hoped the autobiography would help older generations remember Madiba’s legacy and also be a learning tool for the born-frees. “Every library, every school in the country should have a copy of it,” she added. The documentary, which re- counted the days leading up to the elections in 1994, was bittersweet to watch, Ndileka said after the screening. “He’s really gone. I’ll never see him again. I miss his sense of humour,” she said. Guess where the ball is in the picture on the left and you can win the prize. All correct entries will go into a draw and one lucky reader will be chosen to win a R500 Spar voucher. How to enter: All you have to do, is mark the “circle” with a cross where you think the ball should be in the picture. Only ONE cross is permitted per entry. Next, fill in your personal details in the spaces provided on the entry form, cut out this advert and post it to: SPAR SPOT-THE-BALL COMPETITION No.7, PO Box 1014, Johannesburg 2000 or drop it off on the Ground Floor, The Star Building, 47 Sauer Street, Jhb. All entries must reach us by no later than 4pm on Monday, 9th June 2014. Only original entries will be accepted − no photocopies allowed. Terms and conditions apply. Should you wish to submit more than one entry, back copies of The Star can be bought at The Star Offices at 47 Sauer Street, Jhb. The winner must agree that his/her name and photo will be published in The Star. The winner together with the picture with the correct ball position will be published on Friday, 13th June. The picture above shows the correct position of the ball & on the right, our lucky winner, Amazon Tsule, who has scored a R500 Spar voucher in Spot-the-Ball Competion No.4 COMPETITION No.7 ENTRY FORM Please print your personal details clearly in the spaces provided below. Name: ___________________________________________ Surname:__________________________________________ Address: __________________________________________ _______________________________________________ ___________________________ Postal code: ____________ Tel (H): ________________ (W): _______________________ Cell: __________________ Email: ______________________ om/03/09661427 Police negotiator is labelled incompetent A POLICE officer negotiating with vio- lent strikers in Marikana in August 2012 had no pros- pects of success, the Farlam Commission of Inquiry heard yesterday. “Your negotiating was foreign to the people who were on strike. In order to be a successful negotiator, you have to give something back,” George Bizos SC, for the Legal Resources Centre, said during cross-examination in Pretoria. He asked Lieutenant- Colonel Stephen James Mc- Intosh, a hostage negotiator at Marikana, near Rustenburg, North West, in August 2012, what he had offered the strik- ers. McIntosh said he offered safety and security. “The briefing we received was to disarm the strikers. We were there to negotiate peace. We do not negotiate on behalf of employers or labour bro- kers,” McIntosh said. Bizos said the workers’ weapon was to withdraw their labour to bring about a just solution to their problem. “What did you offer them in relation to their main de- mand?” Bizos asked. McIntosh said po- lice had told the strik- ers they were not there to negotiate labour issues. Bizos said he would argue that McIntosh was incompe- tent as a chief negotiator. He asked McIntosh if he agreed that to be a good negotiator, one had to show independence. McIntosh agreed. Dali Mpofu SC, for the wounded and arrested miners, suggested McIntosh could not be an independent negotiator because he was working for the police, and that there was a dis- pute between the strikers and the police. “Would you agree that, from the strikers’ point of view, they did not feel unsafe?” he asked. McIntosh agreed, but said when the strikers moved away from the hill near the Lonmin mine, they were not safe as there had been attacks. – Sapa Baby in cell with woman held over internet scam TEBOGO MONAMA T HE SOUTH African woman arrested in con- nection with a multi- million-rand internet scam – who is due to be extradited to the US – has a two-month-old baby. New mother Rhulane Hlungwane was arrested ear- lier this week with 11 Nigeri- ans in connection with internet scams believed to be worth $300 million (R3 billion). Her two-month-old baby girl, who is still being breast- fed, is in a prison cell with the 23-year-old Hlungwane. The child is believed to have been fathered by the scam’s alleged kingpin, Rasaq Aderoju Raheem. The ring was bust through collaboration between the Hawks and the US Immigration and Customs’ Homeland Secu- rity Investigations. Hlungwane was arrested in Sunnyside, Pretoria, along with Raheem, Femi Alexandra Me- wase, Olufeni Obara Omoraka, Olandimenji Agelotan, Olesegin Segi Shanekan, Olasupu Ode- bunmi, Sesan Farin and Anou- luwapo Segun Adegbemigun. They are going to stay behind bars until the extradi- tion is concluded. They are accused of a transnational scam that in- cludes online-dating scams, credit card fraud, shipping fraud and identity theft. Some of their accomplices, mainly Nigerian, were arrested in the US and Canada. The group appeared at the Pretoria Magistrate’s Court earlier this week on charges of fraud and theft. They are to be extradited to the US. The Hawks and their US counterparts have been moni- toring the ring for months, even before Hlungwane was pregnant, and indicated they have a strong case against her. Hawks spokesman Captain Paul Ramaloko said: “The child is currently with her in the cells because it is her human right to breastfeed the child. “We have young children in prison cells, but they are released when they get older. It is up to her if she wants the child to go to the US with her.” Centre for Child Law direc- tor Anne Skelton said most countries allowed mothers to be in prison with their small children. “Normally, in an extradition or deportation case, the child is taken along with the mother. It would be appropriate that the mother and child not be separated. “In South Africa, mothers can keep their children until they are 2 years old or longer, depending on the circum- stances. Different countries have different rules, but most of them allow children in for a certain period.” Ramaloko said they were still trying to check if the 12 are linked to other crimes locally. Last year, the Department of Social Development repatri- ated at least 16 children with South African mothers who were held in foreign prisons. Earlier this month, a nine- month-old baby born to a drug trafficker in a Brazilian prison was brought to South Africa, the Social Development Depart- ment said. Investigations into the alleged crimes started after a Mississippi woman was sent a package by her suitor on an online dating site in 2011. The prospective lover then asked her to reship the package to Pretoria. Police found that the package had been bought with stolen personal informa- tion and a fraudulent credit card. According to police, once the reshipped packages arrived in Pretoria, they were then posted on the internet as being for sale. Two-month-old expected to accompany her when she is extradited to US with ring members Revised book on Madiba launched KIERAN LEGG THE LONG walk to freedom is paved with plastic bricks. At least that is what the creators of Legocy seem to think. The short tribute to Nelson Mandela, which hit YouTube yesterday, was cobbled together from the Lego bin to re-create portions of the icon’s life as described in his autobiography. During the clip, figurines are brought to life using stop motion, cutting between scenes of what Madiba’s life on Robben Island might have looked like if it had been more blocky. In one clip, he is lying on his bed in his cell, a tiny picture of Winnie Mandela on the wall. In another he is chipping away in the limestone quarry on the island. His famous speech on the Grand Parade in Cape Town following his release from prison in 1990 is played over scenes of protesters burning their pass books in barrels of Lego flames or holding up miniature scribbled posters as they confront the police. “We pulled an all-nighter to finish this,” said Fran Luckin, executive creative director of Quirk Joburg, the team that put together the short movie. Armed with borrowed and bought Lego sets, the team went to work constructing their props. It was an unusual activity for the ad agency, but it was for a good cause. Quirk had entered the YouTube Film Hack competition, a Google initiative in collaboration with the Nelson Mandela Foundation, that called on companies to create a campaign to inspire South Africans to follow in the footsteps of Mandela. “As is the nature of these hacks, you don’t have much time. Your options are really to quickly shoot your own stuff or use existing footage,” said Luckin. “That’s what we expected the other teams to do, so we settled on Lego to stand out from the crowd.” The short clips ends with the message: “You’re never too young to know the whole story. Help us keep the legacy alive.” The campaign has now taken on a life outside of the competition, said Luckin. “Now we are going to hand over a request to Lego on December 5 to release a Madiba Freedom Fighter set… I think it’s important that we keep his legacy alive so that the born-frees will never forget this country’s miracle.” Mandela Foundation spokeswoman Danielle Melville said that yesterday was the first chance to take a sneak peek at the competition’s entries. Three videos have been selected for the final round, and will be judged on Tuesday. CAMPAIGN: A Lego tribute to Nelson Mandela has gone viral. Unique Mandela Legocy Most SA bread does not carry GM notice MELANIE GOSLING LABORATORY tests have shown that almost all bread on South African shelves contains genetically modified organisms (GMOs). But most brands do not carry GM labels. This week, the African Cen- tre for Biosafety, an NGO which campaigns against the genetic engineering of food in the con- tinent, released results of tests, conducted for them by the Uni- versity of the Free State’s GMO testing facility, on eight popular brands of white bread. Seven contained GM soya, an ingredient of bread. These were from Checkers, Wool- worths, Spar, Premier Foods’ Blue Ribbon, Pick n Pay, Tiger Brands’ Albany Superior and Foodcorp’s Sunbake. The only brand to carry a GM label was the Woolworths bread, which said: “May be genetically modified”. Mariam Mayet, director of the African Centre for Bio- safety, said the law required food containing any GM prod- ucts to be labelled as such. Zakiyya Ismail of the African Centre for Biosafety said the companies tested had either failed to label GM bread or carried misleading and con- fusing labels. Some were also lobbying the government to weaken the GM labelling regu- lations under the Consumer Protection Act. The only bread that was vir- tually free of GM content was Pioneer Food’s Sasko white bread, in which the GM content was “so low as to be unquantifi- able”. Ironically, this brand was the only one that carried a GM label which said: “Produced using genetic modification”. Mayet said the law was that any food with a 5 percent or more GM content must be labelled as such. Andrew Nel of Pick n Pay and Sarita van Wyk of Checkers both said their bread contained less than 0.5 percent of soya. Lauren Wilson of Spar said soya content in their bread “premix” was between 3 and 5 percent. Premier Foods, Foodcorp and Tiger Brands had not replied by late yesterday. NOSTALGIC: Ndileka Mandela pages through Mandela – The Authorised Portrait: In Memoriam Edition at the book’s launch at the Nelson Mandela Centre of Memory in Houghton, Joburg, last night. PICTURE: MATTHEWS BALOYI

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Page 1: NEWS FRIDAY MAY 23 2014 Baby in cell with woman held over ...dvqlxo2m2q99q.cloudfront.net/000_clients/129863/file/book.pdf · The ring was bust through collaboration between the Hawks

8 NEWS FRIDAY MAY 23 2014 The Star

JOYCE [email protected]

IN THE LAST days of his life,Nelson Mandela often drew hisface into a pensive gaze as hethought back on his life, saidNdileka Mandela, his grand-daughter.

She found that familiar lookstaring back at her inside Mandela

– The Authorised Portrait: In

Memoriam Edition, a 399-pageautobiography that is filled withphotos of Madiba’s journey, hispersonal letters, and interviewswith loved ones and prominentpoliticians.

The book was launched at theNelson Mandela Centre of Mem-ory last night.

In attendance were Ndileka,anti-apartheid activist and formerpolitical prisoner Ahmed Kath-rada, and partners of the NelsonMandela Foundation.

The documentary Countdown

to Freedom was also screened.The In Memoriam Edition, pub-

lished by Wild Dog Press inpartnership with PQ Blackwell,contains a last chapter on Man-dela’s passing and photos from hisfuneral.

The first edition, published in2006, sold 23 000 copies within thefirst six months.

“He was an amazing man,with his ability to bring peopletogether,” said Sibongile Sibiya,founder of a non-profit organisa-tion in Freedom Park, Soweto,while flipping through the book on

display at the centre.Nicky Allen, a representative

from Wild Dog Press, said shehoped the autobiography wouldhelp older generations rememberMadiba’s legacy and also be a

learning tool for the born-frees. “Every library, every school in

the country should have a copy ofit,” she added.

The documentary, which re-counted the days leading up to the

elections in 1994, was bittersweetto watch, Ndileka said after thescreening.

“He’s really gone. I’ll never seehim again. I miss his sense ofhumour,” she said.

Guess where the ball is in the picture on the left and you can

win the prize. All correct entries will go into a draw and one

lucky reader will be chosen to win a R500 Spar voucher.

How to enter:

All you have to do, is mark the “circle” with a cross where you

think the ball should be in the picture. Only ONE cross is

permitted per entry. Next, fill in your personal details in the

spaces provided on the entry form, cut out this advert and

post it to: SPAR SPOT-THE-BALL COMPETITION No.7,

PO Box 1014, Johannesburg 2000 or drop it off on the

Ground Floor, The Star Building, 47 Sauer Street, Jhb.

All entries must reach us by no later than 4pm on Monday,

9th June 2014. Only original entries will be accepted − no

photocopies allowed. Terms and conditions apply.

Should you wish to submit more than one entry, back

copies of The Star can be bought at The Star Offices at

47 Sauer Street, Jhb.

The winner must agree that his/her name and photo will

be published in The Star. The winner together with the

picture with the correct ball position will be published on

Friday, 13th June.

The picture

above shows

the correct

position of

the ball & on

the right,

our lucky winner,

Amazon Tsule,

who has scored

a R500 Spar

voucher

in Spot-the-Ball

Competion No.4

COMPETITION No.7

ENTRY FORM

Please print your personal details clearly in the spaces provided below.

Name: ___________________________________________

Surname:__________________________________________

Address: __________________________________________

_______________________________________________

___________________________ Postal code: ____________

Tel (H): ________________ (W): _______________________

Cell: __________________ Email: ______________________

om/03/09661427

Police negotiator islabelled incompetentA POLICE officernegotiating with vio-lent strikers inMarikana in August2012 had no pros-pects of success, theFarlam Commissionof Inquiry heardyesterday.

“Your negotiatingwas foreign to the people whowere on strike. In order to be asuccessful negotiator, you haveto give something back,”George Bizos SC, for the LegalResources Centre, said duringcross-examination in Pretoria.

He asked Lieutenant-Colonel Stephen James Mc-Intosh, a hostage negotiator atMarikana, near Rustenburg,North West, in August 2012,what he had offered the strik-ers. McIntosh said he offeredsafety and security.

“The briefing we receivedwas to disarm the strikers. Wewere there to negotiate peace.We do not negotiate on behalfof employers or labour bro-kers,” McIntosh said.

Bizos said the workers’weapon was to withdraw theirlabour to bring about a just

solution to theirproblem.

“What did youoffer them in relationto their main de-mand?” Bizos asked.

McIntosh said po-lice had told the strik-ers they were notthere to negotiate

labour issues.Bizos said he would argue

that McIntosh was incompe-tent as a chief negotiator. Heasked McIntosh if he agreedthat to be a good negotiator, onehad to show independence.McIntosh agreed.

Dali Mpofu SC, for thewounded and arrested miners,suggested McIntosh could notbe an independent negotiatorbecause he was working for thepolice, and that there was a dis-pute between the strikers andthe police.

“Would you agree that, fromthe strikers’ point of view, theydid not feel unsafe?” he asked.

McIntosh agreed, but saidwhen the strikers moved awayfrom the hill near the Lonminmine, they were not safe asthere had been attacks. – Sapa

Baby in cell with woman held over internet scamTEBOGO MONAMA

THE SOUTH Africanwoman arrested in con-nection with a multi-

million-rand internet scam –who is due to be extradited tothe US – has a two-month-oldbaby.

New mother RhulaneHlungwane was arrested ear-lier this week with 11 Nigeri-ans in connection with internetscams believed to be worth$300 million (R3 billion).

Her two-month-old babygirl, who is still being breast-

fed, is in a prison cell with the23-year-old Hlungwane.

The child is believed to havebeen fathered by the scam’salleged kingpin, Rasaq AderojuRaheem.

The ring was bust throughcollaboration between theHawks and the US Immigrationand Customs’ Homeland Secu-rity Investigations.

Hlungwane was arrested inSunnyside, Pretoria, along withRaheem, Femi Alexandra Me-

wase, Olufeni Obara Omoraka,Olandimenji Agelotan, OleseginSegi Shanekan, Olasupu Ode-bunmi, Sesan Farin and Anou-luwapo Segun Adegbemigun.

They are going to staybehind bars until the extradi-tion is concluded.

They are accused of atransnational scam that in-cludes online-dating scams,credit card fraud, shippingfraud and identity theft. Someof their accomplices, mainly

Nigerian, were arrested in theUS and Canada.

The group appeared at thePretoria Magistrate’s Courtearlier this week on charges offraud and theft. They are to beextradited to the US.

The Hawks and their UScounterparts have been moni-toring the ring for months,even before Hlungwane waspregnant, and indicated theyhave a strong case against her.

Hawks spokesman Captain

Paul Ramaloko said: “The childis currently with her in thecells because it is her humanright to breastfeed the child.

“We have young children inprison cells, but they arereleased when they get older. Itis up to her if she wants thechild to go to the US with her.”

Centre for Child Law direc-tor Anne Skelton said mostcountries allowed mothers tobe in prison with their smallchildren.

“Normally, in an extraditionor deportation case, the childis taken along with the mother.It would be appropriate that themother and child not beseparated.

“In South Africa, motherscan keep their children untilthey are 2 years old or longer,depending on the circum-stances. Different countrieshave different rules, but most ofthem allow children in for acertain period.”

Ramaloko said they werestill trying to check if the 12 arelinked to other crimes locally.

Last year, the Department ofSocial Development repatri-ated at least 16 children withSouth African mothers whowere held in foreign prisons.

Earlier this month, a nine-month-old baby born to a drugtrafficker in a Brazilian prisonwas brought to South Africa,the Social Development Depart-ment said.

Investigations into thealleged crimes started after aMississippi woman was sent apackage by her suitor on anonline dating site in 2011.

The prospective lover thenasked her to reship the packageto Pretoria. Police found thatthe package had been boughtwith stolen personal informa-tion and a fraudulent creditcard.

According to police, oncethe reshipped packages arrivedin Pretoria, they were thenposted on the internet as beingfor sale.

Two-month-old expected to accompany her when she is extradited to US with ring members

Revised bookon Madibalaunched

KIERAN LEGG

THE LONG walk to freedom is paved withplastic bricks. At least that is what thecreators of Legocy seem to think.

The short tribute to Nelson Mandela,which hit YouTube yesterday, was cobbledtogether from the Lego bin to re-createportions of the icon’s life as described inhis autobiography.

During the clip, figurines are broughtto life using stop motion, cutting betweenscenes of what Madiba’s life on RobbenIsland might have looked like if it hadbeen more blocky.

In one clip, he is lying on his bed in hiscell, a tiny picture of Winnie Mandela onthe wall. In another he is chipping away inthe limestone quarry on the island.

His famous speech on the GrandParade in Cape Town following his releasefrom prison in 1990 is played over scenesof protesters burning their pass books inbarrels of Lego flames or holding upminiature scribbled posters as theyconfront the police.

“We pulled an all-nighter to finishthis,” said Fran Luckin, executive creativedirector of Quirk Joburg, the team thatput together the short movie.

Armed with borrowed and boughtLego sets, the team went to workconstructing their props. It was an unusualactivity for the ad agency, but it was for agood cause.

Quirk had entered the YouTube FilmHack competition, a Google initiative in

collaboration with the Nelson MandelaFoundation, that called on companies tocreate a campaign to inspire SouthAfricans to follow in the footsteps ofMandela.

“As is the nature of these hacks, youdon’t have much time. Your options arereally to quickly shoot your own stuff oruse existing footage,” said Luckin. “That’swhat we expected the other teams to do,so we settled on Lego to stand out fromthe crowd.”

The short clips ends with the message:“You’re never too young to know thewhole story. Help us keep the legacyalive.”

The campaign has now taken on a lifeoutside of the competition, said Luckin.

“Now we are going to hand over arequest to Lego on December 5 to releasea Madiba Freedom Fighter set… I think it’simportant that we keep his legacy alive sothat the born-frees will never forget thiscountry’s miracle.”

Mandela Foundation spokeswomanDanielle Melville said that yesterday wasthe first chance to take a sneak peek atthe competition’s entries.

Three videos have been selected forthe final round, and will be judged onTuesday.

CAMPAIGN: A Lego tribute to NelsonMandela has gone viral.

UniqueMandelaLegocy

Most SA bread doesnot carry GM noticeMELANIE GOSLING

LABORATORY tests haveshown that almost all bread onSouth African shelves containsgenetically modified organisms(GMOs).

But most brands do notcarry GM labels.

This week, the African Cen-tre for Biosafety, an NGO whichcampaigns against the geneticengineering of food in the con-tinent, released results of tests,conducted for them by the Uni-versity of the Free State’s GMOtesting facility, on eight popularbrands of white bread.

Seven contained GM soya,an ingredient of bread. Thesewere from Checkers, Wool-worths, Spar, Premier Foods’Blue Ribbon, Pick n Pay, TigerBrands’ Albany Superior andFoodcorp’s Sunbake.

The only brand to carry aGM label was the Woolworthsbread, which said: “May begenetically modified”.

Mariam Mayet, director ofthe African Centre for Bio-safety, said the law requiredfood containing any GM prod-ucts to be labelled as such.

Zakiyya Ismail of theAfrican Centre for Biosafetysaid the companies tested hadeither failed to label GM breador carried misleading and con-fusing labels. Some were alsolobbying the government toweaken the GM labelling regu-lations under the ConsumerProtection Act.

The only bread that was vir-tually free of GM content wasPioneer Food’s Sasko whitebread, in which the GM contentwas “so low as to be unquantifi-able”. Ironically, this brand wasthe only one that carried a GMlabel which said: “Producedusing genetic modification”.

Mayet said the law was thatany food with a 5 percent ormore GM content must belabelled as such.

Andrew Nel of Pick n Payand Sarita van Wyk of Checkersboth said their bread containedless than 0.5 percent of soya.

Lauren Wilson of Spar saidsoya content in their bread“premix” was between 3 and5 percent.

Premier Foods, Foodcorpand Tiger Brands had notreplied by late yesterday.

NOSTALGIC: Ndileka Mandela pages through Mandela – The Authorised Portrait: In Memoriam Edition at the book’s launch atthe Nelson Mandela Centre of Memory in Houghton, Joburg, last night. PICTURE: MATTHEWS BALOYI