India lost to South Africa by 48 runs through Duckworth and Lewis (D/L) method in the rain-interrupted fourth one day international here Friday, with the five-match series now levelled 2-2. India were 137 for six in 31.3 overs and needed another 129 runs for victory when rain stopped play. At resumption, the revised target required [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Cape Town’
India lose by 48 runs through D/L; series levelled
Evangelical Christians: Heaven and earth
An intra-Christian gap has closed a little
FOUR decades ago, global Christian bodies were riven by rows over where their main duty lay—changing the world or saving souls. The Geneva-based World Council of Churches (WCC), dominated by liberal Protestants and Orthodox churches from communist lands, stressed “liberation” and social justice. That was one reason why America’s Billy Graham and other top evangelicals went to Lausanne in 1974 to set up a new body that would focus more on winning the 2.7 billion people who, by its calculation, had yet to hear the Christian message.
The so-called Lausanne movement remains ebullient. Its gathering of 4,000 evangelicals from 200 countries, which ended in Cape Town on October 25th, was billed as the biggest and broadest Christian meeting in history. But coming from a body that stresses the spiritual, parts of the meeting’s final statement were quite earthly. Humanity must “repent of our part in the destruction, waste and pollution of the Earth’s resources, and our collusion in the toxic idolatry of consumerism,” it said. Also, the WCC’s new head, Olav Fykse Tveit of Norway, was invited to Cape Town, despite his roots in liberal Nordic Lutheranism. …
Morgan Freeman honours Mandela on 92nd b’day with charity road trip
American actor Morgan Freeman paid tribute to former South African president Nelson Mandela on his 92nd birthday by joining a group of bikers for a charity road trip across the country. Mandela celebrated his 92nd birthday on 18th July 2010. His fans all over world devoted 67 minutes to mark the 67 years Mandela spent [...]
Leonardo DiCaprioâ€s vuvuzela irritates Mick Jagger
Rolling Stones lead singer Mick Jagger was recently left irritated with American actor Leonardo DiCaprio”s vuvuzela noise. The 66-year-old singer came to watch the Germany vs Argentina quarterfinal of the FIFA World Cup with his son Lucas in Cape Town. The father-son duo was in front of DiCaprio who had a bright red vuvuzela. As [...]
World Cup: Spain knock out Portugal
Spain beat Portugal 1-0 in a close-fought game in Cape Town on Tuesday. Vincente del Bosque’s side goes on to a quarterfinal date with Paraguay, who beat Japan in a penalty shootout earlier in the day.
Four Dreams of Prince Harry
If you happen o be a prince the standard set of your dreams should contain: to become a ruler of your country, find a princess of your heart and marry her and spend your whole life living happily in a palace. Prince Harry is a real exclusion here. The list of his aspirations includes: to [...]
Soccer WC declared open
SOWETO (South Africa) (AFP) – South Africa began the Soccer World Cup party Thursday with revellers flocking to a star-studded concert and fan festivals on the eve of Africa’s first staging of the biggest show on earth.
“This is the real kick-off,” FIFA president Sepp Blatter told tens of thousands packed into Soweto’s historic Orlando stadium to watch artists including Shakira and the Black Eyed Peas.
“Football is not only a game. Football is connecting people.”
South African President Jacob Zuma told the crowds that Africa was showing that it was capable of handling events of any size.
“Africa is hosting this tournament. South Africa is the stage,” said Zuma, 65. “South Africa is rocking. South Africa is cool.”
But in Cape Town, a police officer suffered a broken leg and two women broke their ankles during in a crush at the entrance to a World Cup party attended by thousands.
“Excess people wanted to get in and started pushing,” said police spokesman Frederick van Wyk. “People at the back kept moving forward and a crush ensued.”
The Soweto concert began with a performance from veteran South African trumpeter Hugh Masekela in a township synonomous with the fight against whites-only rule and the countryÂ’s first black president Nelson Mandela.
And at the other end of the country, more than 15,000 people crammed into a fan park to watch local bands and a light show at the same spot from Mandela addressed his nation 20 years ago immediately after walking free from prison.
During the apartheid years, South Africa was subjected to an international sporting and cultural boycott.
But now the one-time global pariah has the honour of hosting some 300,000 foreign fans, the worldÂ’s finest footballers and some of the biggest stars in world music.
“We are excited. It’s exactly what we were hoping for. The infrastructure is improved. Africans always love to have visitors,” said Angie Bopape, who had travelled to the concert from Rustenburg, two hours’ north of Johannesburg.
Vendors packed the sidewalk around the stadium, doing a brisk business in flags and vuvuzelas — the ear-splitting plastic horns which are turning into the tournament’s must-have accessory.
“I am amazed with the amount of love and kindness from everyone,” said Vicky Becerra, a visitor from Mexico whose team play South Africa in Friday’s opening match. “I expected more insecurity to be honest. I want to come back.”
The sense of anticipation has been increased by the unexpected upswing in form of the Bafana Bafana (the Boys) national side who go into FridayÂ’s opening match against Mexico off the back of a 12-match unbeaten run.
After tens of thousands of people cheered on the team on Wednesday as they paraded through Johannesburg in an open-top bus, it was the turn of Cape Town to show its support on Thursday.
“We came here to feel the vibe with the rest of Africa. Just to be here — it’s like an experience of a lifetime,” said Marks Louw, 23, as he watched performers at the fan fest.
The front-page of the Citizen proclaimed “Bafana Mania!” while an editorial in the same paper said the outbreak of patriotism in a country still struggling to escape a history of racial segregation could only be a force for good.
“The 2010 World Cup is more than just a simple game,” Mandela, the country’s first black president, said in a message to football’s governing body FIFA.
“It symbolises the power of football to bring people together regardless of their language, colour of their skin, their politics or religion.”
Ever since it became the first African nation to win the right to stage the tournament six years ago, South Africa has had to fend off claims that its high crime rate, lack of infrastructure and rudimentary public transport rendered it an unsuitable choice.
Work at the 10 host stadiums finished on time while World Cup infrastructure projects are up and running, including AfricaÂ’s first high-speed rail link.
But a labour dispute by pubic sector workers was looming after salary talks between unions representing some 1.3 million state employees and the government reached a deadlock.
And the spectre of crime continued to stalk visitors, with a Chinese TV crew among the latest victims robbed at gunpoint and a spokesman for Greece revealing 1,500 euros in cash had been stolen at the team hotel.
Meanwhile, three people, including a police officer, were injured in a crush at the entrance to a World Cup party in Cape Town on Thursday where thousands were celebrating ahead of the tournamentÂ’s kick-off.
“Excess people wanted to get in and started pushing,” said police spokesman Frederick van Wyk.
Two women broke their ankles and a metro police officer broke a leg after police told the crowd to move to nearby areas with large screens as the fan park was full.
“People at the back kept moving forward and a crush ensued,” said van Wkyk.
FIFA World Cup 2010 Schedule in Indian Time
The FIFA World Cup 2010 is the 19th FIFA World Cup, the premier international football tournament. The tournament which is being hosted by South Africa is scheduled to take place between 11 June and 11 July 2010.
There are 32 teams in this World Cup, which are categorized into 8 groups, each group contains 4 teams. [...]
Know how Prince Harry and Prince William will Spend their Summer holidays
In just a couple of weeks, the handsome princes, Harry and William, will be out for their first overseas tour together.
The two young princes are bound to South Africa. Their tour starts from the 14th of June. However, the trip would only last for 5 days. On the 19th of June, the brothers will go [...]
Kingfisher Calendar Model 2010 wins place in prestigious calendar
Venkatsamy, 26, and her sister, Terushka, 29, entered The Hunt for Kingfisher Calendar Model 2010 in October last year, in which 12 beauties from around the world competed.
The Kingfisher calendar is one of the most sought-after in the world. Bollywood actresses like Katrina Kaif and Deepika Padukone have appeared in it.
The TV show was shot [...]
Race quota at the heart of Arthur quitting as South Africa cricket coach
Cape Town, Jan.27 (ANI): Mickey Arthur, among the most successful international cricket coaches of modern times, quit mentoring the South African cricket team because of the pressure that was being put on him to include more black players.
South African cricket is in turmoil again because of racial issues in selection. Arthur left the job he [...]
Coaches cautious as 2010 managerial mind games begin
Belgrade, world’s “party capital”
A survey conducted by the Lonely Planet website has dubbed Serbia’s capital city “the world’s top destination” when it comes to having a good time. Montreal, Buenos Aires, Dubai, Thessaloniki, La Paz, Cape Town, Baku, Oakland and Tel Aviv also found their place on the top ten list.
Letting a thousand flowers wither
The world will not halt the rate of reduction of biodiversity by 2010
SEEKING to alleviate poverty, reduce world hunger and protect biodiversity sounds, to your correspondent’s ears, like something a Miss World hopeful might have pledged in the 1980s. In fact, it was what a professor of soil quality at a lesser-known university in the Netherlands promised to a scientific conference that concluded on October 16th.
Addressing hundreds of biologists, ecologists and social scientists who were meeting in Cape Town under the auspices of Diversitas, an interdisciplinary group of researchers, Lijbert Brussaard of Wageningen University outlined progress made towards the Millennium Development Goals agreed by members of the United Nations in 2001. One of the targets was to achieve, by 2010, a significant reduction in the rate of loss of biodiversity. That has not happened. Neither will it do so next year. …
Rogue waves: Monsters of the deep
Huge, freak waves may not be as rare as once thought
ON JULY 26th 1909 the SS Waratah, en route to London from Melbourne, left Durban with 211 passengers and crew. She was due in Cape Town three days later but never arrived. The steamship was last sighted along the east coast of South Africa—known to sailors as the “wild coast” for its violent weather—struggling through a stormy sea with waves more than nine metres (30 feet) high. No trace of the vessel has ever been found.
A theory which might explain her disappearance, and that of some other vessels, is that they were struck by rogue waves—which begin with a deep trough followed by a wall of water the size of an eight- or nine-storey building. For many years oceanographers dismissed sailors’ reports of rogue waves much as they did stories of mermaids. But in 1995 an oil rig in the North Sea recorded a 25.6-metre wave. Then in 2000 a British oceanographic vessel recorded a 29-metre wave off the coast of Scotland. In 2004 scientists using three weeks of radar images from European Space Agency satellites found ten rogue waves, each 25 metres or more high. …
Aug. 12, 1883: Quagga’s Extinction a Nasty Surprise
1883: The quagga goes extinct when the last of these South African zebras dies at the Amsterdam Zoo.
It was not immediately recognized, as the mare expired, that she was the last of her kind. Although the name quagga refers specifically to an animal that looked like a common zebra that had run out of stripes [...]
Hard road
By Brian Hungwe
Harare
Human smugglers are running a complex multi-million dollar network, fleecing distressed Somalis seeking a way out of their war-torn country and desperate Ethiopians caught up in vicious cycles of hunger, floods and political repression.

Thousands of people leave their countries every year, trekking thousands of miles through eight countries from the Horn of Africa, via East Africa down to South Africa.
Bribes oil their journeys across the region by air, overland and sea.
And immigration and police are complicit. The state of the airports and the corruption that goes on there mirrors the body politic of the countries involved. And this has security implications for the countries involved.
"The next five to 10 years, Somalia will have nobody there"
Ismail, Somali truck driver in Malawi
In a recent report on smuggling in the region, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) noted that "guardians of national border integrity… are deeply compromised, creating a threat to national security".
It says their complicity is keeping the smuggling business afloat and that they "should be considered part of the illegal and abusive enterprise" where "cupidity appears to be the foremost and only visible motivation".
Huge sums
IOM’s Tal Raviv, based in Nairobi, acknowledges that the smuggling ring is "sophisticated."

"Tens of thousands of people are able to move from Somalia and Ethiopia, all the way down to South Africa, and they arrive successfully," she said.
"All the borders are porous, it’s just that," points out Mokotedi Mpshe, who heads South Africa’s National Prosecuting Authority.
Mr Mpshe knows the extent to which corruption has permeated his society.
"Some government officials can let you down. We may try to fight human trafficking, but at the same time there may be elements amongst ourselves that are working against us," he said.
Cash-strapped governments can’t match the huge sums smugglers pay immigration and police officers to ease the path of illegal immigrants en route to South Africa.
Expanding business
I found that immigrants pay smugglers on average $1,500 – $2,000 before the journey begins.

The IOM also estimates the smuggling business generates annual revenue of about $40m. Along the way the immigrants lose much more to robberies.
And rape and other abuse is common.
Over the years, the flow of Somalis has been growing, and thus, according to the IOM, "providing smugglers an expanding and lucrative business opportunity".
"The next five to 10 years, Somalia will have nobody there," said Ismail, a Somali truck driver living in Malawi.
"There is no peace which is coming, there is nobody who is fighting for Somalia."
Lions and snakes
Salma left Somalia with her son Nasir, 3, six years ago, when she was 23. She left her mother and brother behind, and has no clue where they are.
"Sometimes [smugglers] ask the women to sleep with them. You sleep with them, otherwise they leave you behind"
Salma, Somali migrant
From her flat in Cape Town, South Africa, she says that everyone in Somalia is trying to flee the fighting there.
She says she walked on foot for 24 days during the journey.
In Kenya, Salma met Amina, a smuggler linked into a network that carried her across several countries.
Nairobi’s Eastleigh district is, according to IOM, the smuggling hub of the region.
It is a little Mogadishu in the heart of Nairobi, whose life runs 24 hours, hosting a close-knit Somali community that keeps itself to itself.
Money transfers are done with ease, and anything goes. Vehicles with tinted windows are a common sight, and haulage trucks move goods in and out every hour.
It is here that Salma gave $1,000 to the smuggler, Amina, who accompanied her and a small party of migrants on the first half of their journey.
Police bribed
In Tanzania, six members of the party were arrested.
Salma says the smuggler bribed the police to secure their freedom.
She says they had similar experiences in Zambia and Zimbabwe.
"[Smuggler] paid some money and we came out."

Six years later, Salma’s journey is still vivid for her, as she recounts how she was terrified of lions and snakes as she trudged through the bush.
"Sometimes [smugglers], they ask the women to sleep with them," Salma remembers.
"You sleep with them, otherwise they leave you behind… they do that."
The IOM’s Tal Raviv confirmed that almost all smuggled women get raped, and her organisation has also received reports of the same thing happening to men.
Salma’s journey was even tougher than usual because she was travelling with a child, so the smugglers told her they could not give her accommodation.
"I was struggling too much," she remembers.
Nasir, now nine, vividly recalls sleeping in the forest, his mother walking long distances, and sometimes going for days without food.
"I never ever, I don’t want to do again that journey."
To listen to Brian Hungwe’s full investigation, tune in to African Perspectiveon the BBC World Service.The program is first broadcast on Saturday 1 August at 1106 GMT. It will be available online from 2106 GMT, for one week.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Cable fault cuts off West Africa

Large parts of West Africa are struggling to get back online following damage to an undersea cable.
The fault has caused severe problems in Benin, Togo, Niger and Nigeria.
The blackout is thought to have been caused by damage to the SAT-3 cable which runs from Portugal and Spain to South Africa, via West Africa.
Around 70% of Nigeria’s bandwidth was cut, causing severe problems for its banking sector, government and mobile phone networks.
"SAT-3 is currently the only fibre optic cable serving West Africa," explained Ladi Okuneye, chief marketing officer of Suburban Telecoms, which provides the majority of Nigeria’s bandwidth.
"So all West African countries have to use it."
Companies were being forced to use alternatives – such as using satellite links – to maintain connections to the rest of the world, he said.
Telkom South Africa, one of the shareholders of SAT-3, has not said what caused the problems but said it was aware of "a cable fault on the Benin branch that is being investigated".
The 15,000km (9,300mile) SAT-3 cable lands in eight West African countries as it winds its way between Europe and South Africa.
"The rest of the system is unaffected by this fault," a Telkom South Africa representative said.
Nigeria has been badly hit because around 70% of its bandwidth is routed through neighbouring Benin.
The network, run by Suburban Telecom, was set up to bypass Nigeria’s principal telecoms operator Nitel which runs the SAT-3 branch cable which lands in Nigeria.
The SAT-3 consortium is in the process of sending a ship from Cape Town in South Africa to the area to investigate the fault.
Mr Okuneye said that by the time the relevant paperwork was done, it was likely to be "two weeks" before the ship arrived off the coast.
Meanwhile, Benin has been able to reroute its net traffic through neighbouring countries to get back online.
Mr Okuneye said his company was hoping to do the same but said the process would be slower because its bandwidth requirements were so much larger than those of the small republic.
Togo and Niger, which are not part of the SAT-3 consortium, remain offline.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
‘Power’ of rape

By Nikki Jecks
BBC News
The trial of three of the men accused of the rape and murder of one of South Africa’s leading sportswomen, the openly gay football star Eudy Simalane, resumes in South Africa on Wednesday.
Thirty-one lesbian women have been reported raped and murdered in homophobic attacks in South Africa since 1998.
But according to Triangle – a gay rights organisation – only two cases of "corrective rape" have ever made it to the courts; there has been only one conviction.
"This is a sad fact in this country generally, women are very reluctant to come forward," says Sharon Cox from Triangle.
"If we do get sentences in these cases it will be a great step forward "
Sharon Cox, Triangle
"Corrective rape" is the term used to describe the rape of a lesbian woman by a man to either punish her, or "correct" her behaviour.
Ms Cox says rape is power is South Africa.
"The thinking is, all it takes is one good man to cure you of being a lesbian," she told the BBC’s Newshour programme.
Triangle says it deals with up to 10 new cases of corrective rape every week.
Support groups claim an increasingly aggressive and macho political environment is contributing to the inaction of the police over attacks on lesbians and is part of a growing cultural lethargy towards the high levels of gender-based violence in South Africa.
But with the possibility of convictions in the Eudy Simalane case, and another case ongoing in Cape Town, Ms Cox is hopeful of change.
"If we do get sentences in these cases it will be a great step forward for human rights, for women’s rights and for gay and lesbian rights."
Gang rape
South Africa has one of the highest rates of sexual violence in the world.
RAPE IN SOUTH AFRICA- South Africa has the highest incidence of rape amongst Interpol states
- 1 in 4 men admit to rape
- Nearly 150 women are raped every day
- More than 54,000 cases of rape were reported in 2006
Based on reports by the Medical Research Council, Interpol
More than 54,000 cases are reported to the police each year.
Among men in their early 20s, it has become almost a game.
There is even a term for the man who leads the process – he is know as the "marhasimani".
"A marhasimani is someone who goes to the club, buys a woman a few beers, then with his friends, he would take that woman and go away and have sex with her," one young man told the BBC on the understanding of anonymity.
Another of the group sitting in a bar in the city of Kempton Park, north-east of Johannesburg explains how it works.
He says the friends hide under the bed until the first man is finished and has left the room, then they take turns having sex with the woman, pretending to be first man.
"The room is dark and the girl is not even going to notice if it’s the second guy sleeping with her," explains another friend in the group.
When they are challenged to admit that what they are doing constitutes gang rape, they all deny it.
FROM BBC WORLD SERVICE"It’s not about her, we bought her drinks, you know"
More from BBC World Service"It’s not about her, we bought her drinks, you know how drinks are expensive," says one of them.
"We can’t say it’s gang rape because, OK, I know sometimes we have to drug the girl and everything, but it does not happen all the time," says another.
"Most of the time when it does happen, the girl is taking some drinks, but she is quite aware of what is happening."
At the heart of these different manifestations of rape are deep-rooted cultural stereotypes – that men have ownership over women, and are of greater importance.
These are views based on traditional values and gender roles that have been enforced in homes and villages in the past and have been largely unchallenged.
Sense of entitlement
Dumisani Rebombo is a former rapist who now speaks openly and with great remorse about his crime.
"If you have silence in communities, I think that silence is very loud"
Dumisani Rebombo
South African rapist: ‘Forgive me’
He was just 15 when he raped a young woman in his village with two of his friends.
He admits to giving into peer pressure: "I did it to prove that I was a boy but also wanting to be accepted."
"It’s not something that I enjoyed… immediately I was engulfed with guilt and fear."
Mr Rebombo now works for the Olive Leaf Foundation, an NGO working with men to prevent rape.
He believes that the problem is partly societal – that boys are raised with a sense of entitlement, and the belief that they can to do whatever they want with women.
"Boys are socialised to be tough, to be macho."
The other problem he says is the lack of willingness for anyone to challenge these assumptions.
"You could have as many good men as bad, but if you have silence in communities, I think that silence is very loud."</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.



