India’s pace spearhead Zaheer Khan has been forced out of next month’s Champions Trophy in South Africa after undergoing shoulder surgery, local media said on Friday. Zaheer, 30, underwent surgery in Johannesburg in July after injuring his left shoulder while playing for Mumbai Indians
Posts Tagged ‘Johannesburg’
‘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.
Police fire at S Africa rioters

South African police have fired rubber bullets to disperse about 200 protesters at an informal settlement outside Johannesburg.
Residents barricaded a road with burning tyres during a protest against poor living conditions in the area.
The crowd stoned a local municipal office after realising it was closed due to the municipal workers’ strike, which has entered its second day.
The protests and strike are seen as President Jacob Zuma’s main challenges.
Some township residents are angry that they do not have permanent housing, running water or electricity 15 years after the African National Congress came to power.
Police say most of the protesters in the Thokoza township were unemployed youths.
Cars have been prevented from driving through the area.
Policeman injured
Meanwhile, a policeman was injured in the northern Mpumalanga Province when protesters went on the rampage in Simile township during a service delivery protest.
Police say residents burnt down a library and set fire to municipal vehicles including a fire engine.

"Police had to use rubber bullets to disperse the violent crowd. A police officer was seriously injured when a stone was thrown at him during their protest," Mpumalanga police spokesman Superintendent Abie Khoabane said, reports the South African Press Association.
There has been a spate of similar protests across the country in recent weeks.
Some 200 people have been arrested in demonstrations, which revived memories of the deadly xenophobic attacks on foreigners last year.
Mr Zuma has condemned the violent protests and attacks against foreign nationals.
"There can be no justification for violence, looting and destruction of property or attacks on foreign nationals residing in our country," he said.
He has promised to deliver better services, such as water and housing, in a bid to end the protests.
But his ability to increase spending has been cut since South Africa went into recession since he was inaugurated in May. </p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
House where Gandhi used to live in South Africa up for sale

A house in South Africa where Indian leader Mahatma Gandhi lived in the early 1900s has been put up for sale.
The house’s owner says she has failed to find an institution interested in preserving the building’s legacy, so she is selling it on the open market.
Gandhi is thought to have lived there for three years from 1907 – when he began to formulate his philosophy of non-violent resistance.
He lived in South Africa for 21 years, working as a lawyer and activist.
He fought for the right of Indians in the country to be treated as citizens – a feat he eventually achieved before returning to his homeland.
GANDHI IN SOUTH AFRICA- 1893 Arrives in South Africa
- 1894 Natal Indian Congress is established
- 1903 Weekly newspaper Indian Opinion starts
- 1907 Non-violent resistance against compulsory registration of Asians
- 1914 Returns to India
American artist Nancy Ball has lived in Gandhi’s Johannesburg house for 25 years, but is now moving away.
She told South African paper the Times that Indians who had visited the house had always found it an interesting experience.
"We believe he left a lot of his peace here. It’s a very special place," she said.
She attempted to drum up interest in the house among academics and the Indian community in South Africa, but says she has failed and will now sell on the private market.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Zuma vows help for SA townships

South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma has promised to deliver better services, such as water and housing, in a bid to end township protests this month.
But he warned that there could be no justification for violence.
Mr Zuma also urged understanding from council and other workers threatening to strike for higher wages.
Some 200 people have been arrested in the demonstrations, which revived memories of the deadly xenophobic attacks on foreigners last year.
Fifteen years after the African National Congress won its first election, more than one million South Africans still live in shacks, many without access to electricity or running water.
The BBC’s Jonah Fisher in Johannesburg says most of the anger has been directed towards local officials and not Mr Zuma, who has only been in power for two months.
"Our constitution allows our people the right of freedom of assembly and expression and to protest where they feel they need to, but this must be done within the ambit of the law," Mr Zuma said.
"There can be no justification for violence, looting and destruction of property or attacks on foreign nationals residing in our country," he said.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
South Africa vows to stop riots
South Africa’s government has vowed to crack down on riots in townships where residents are demanding better basic services, such as water and housing.
"We are not going to allow anybody to use illegal means to achieve their objective," a local government minister said on South African radio.
The warning came as the leader of unemployed protesters in Durban said the anger "was the tip of the iceberg."
The riots are being seen as a major challenge for new President Jacob Zuma.
"This is just the tip of the iceberg and I myself cannot stop the people because they are angry"
SAUPM’s Nozipho Mteshane
Township reports Foreigners live in fear Zuma’s challenges as president ‘One house, one vote’He promised to improve services when he came to power in May, and said fighting poverty was his priority.
"We are saying this is a government that is legitimate, has been elected democratically," Co-operative Governance Minister Sicelo Shiceka said on Talk Radio 702.
"Anything that is to be done, must be done within the law and the constitution," he said.
On Wednesday, police fired rubber bullets at demonstrators in Johannesburg, the Western Cape and the north-eastern region of Mpumalanga.
In Durban, 94 members of the South African Unemployed People’s Movement (SAUPM) were arrested after raiding two supermarkets in the city centre and helping themselves to food without paying.
"They were angry and some of them even ate the fried chicken and pies," a woman at one supermarket told South Africa’s Witness newspaper.
Another eyewitness told the paper that the looters were shouting that they did not have food to eat.
"This is just the tip of the iceberg and I myself cannot stop the people because they are angry," SAUPM’s chairwoman Nozipho Mteshane told South Africa’s Star newspaper.

"We want the government to provide the unemployed people of this country with a 1,500 rand ($195) basic income grant," she said.
South Africa announced in June that it was facing its worst recession in 17 years.
Fifteen years after the African National Congress won its first election, more than one million South Africans still live in shacks, many without access to electricity or running water.
The provision of housing has long been controversial – nearly three million have been built, but the allocation has been prone to nepotism and corruption, correspondents say.
The rising tensions in the townships have revived memories of xenophobic attacks on foreigners last year in which more than 60 people died.
Have you witnessed or taken part in the protests If you would be willing to speak about your experiences, please contact us using the postform below. Your details will not be published.
If you have any photographs and video of the protests please send them to yourpics@bbc.co.uk or text them to +44 7725 100 100. If you have a large file you can upload here.
At no time should you endanger yourself or others, take any unnecessary risks or infringe any laws.
<p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Letter from Africa: post-apartheid theatre
Anger at ANC record boils over in townships
• Protests over lack of basic services turn violent
• Police fight back with rubber bullets and teargas
Jacob Zuma faced the first critical test of his presidency today as violent protests at a lack of basic services spread in South Africa’s townships.
Residents hurled bottles and stones at police, who responded by firing rubber bullets and teargas. Smoke from burning tyres filled the air as thousands marched in a show of anger at poor services in townships in Johannesburg, Western Cape and the north-eastern region of Mpumalanga.
Immigrants said they feared for their lives and sought police protection as there were reports of foreign-owned businesses being looted in Mpumalanga. Last year 62 people died in xenophobic attacks.
The unrest comes as frustrations boil over at the government’s record, 15 years after apartheid, at providing townships with basic services such as electricity, running water, housing and sanitation.
Koos Bezuidenhout, chief executive of the workers’ interest group the United Association of SA, warned that “dissatisfaction with poor service delivery or the complete lack thereof at municipal level is now spreading like a veld fire through South Africa”.
More than 100 people have been arrested during the last week. Protesters pelted cars with stones and blocked a highway near Johannesburg yesterday. At Siyathemba township, 55 miles south-east of the city, protesters demanding jobs and better schools clashed with police and threatened the local mayor.
Residents in Meyerton, south of Johannesburg, occupied farmland in invasions similar to those in neighbouring Zimbabwe. They were protesting at being evicted from their temporary settlement. Demonstrations also turned violent for a second day in Thokoza township, where residents want better housing and services. Thirty-five residents are due in court.
Eljah Ngobese from Thokoza told the Citizen newspaper: “We are tired of empty promises. All this government want from us is a vote, nothing else. They are treating us as monkeys. How can they shoot us while we are protesting for our rights?”
Bongani Mazibuko, who has been unemployed for years, added: “This government is rotten to the core.”
Cars and houses were burnt in the Diepsloot township last week, in protest at plans to tear down makeshift shacks to make way for a sewage pipe.
Zuma put service delivery at the heart of his election campaign this year, pledging to root out corruption and incompetence. But along with South Africa’s worst recession in 17 years, his first months have been hit by strikes involving doctors, miners, teachers and construction workers building facilities for the 2010 World Cup.
The township protests reflect growing impatience among the poor, said William Gumede, author of Thabo Mbeki and the Battle for the Soul of the ANC. “Zuma has less of a honeymoon than his predecessors, Nelson Mandela and Thabo Mbkei,” he said. “People are at the end of their patience and are giving the African National Congress one more chance to deliver.
“During the election campaign people’s expectations of what Zuma could deliver were really worked up. People were given the sense that if they voted for the ANC one more time, there would be delivery immediately.”
He added: “This is now going to snowball and get bigger and bigger.”
Fifteen years after the ANC won its first election, more than 1 million South Africans still live in shacks, many without access to electricity or running water. The gap between rich and poor is also growing. Nearly 3m houses have been built, but the allocation has been prone to nepotism and corruption.
Nic Borain, an independent analyst, said: “This was always going to be a problem for Jacob Zuma, a pro-poor government coming to power at the height of the global recession. I don’t think it is a crisis for the Jacob Zuma government, but I think it is a challenge.”
Riots in South Africa spread

Violence in South Africa’s townships has spread as residents protest about what they say is a lack of basic services, such as water and housing.
Police have fired rubber bullets at demonstrators in Johannesburg, the Western Cape and the north-eastern region of Mpumalanga.
More than 100 people have been arrested during the past week.
In Mpumalanga, there were reports of foreign-owned businesses being looted as foreigners sought police protection.
The rising tensions in the townships have revived memories of xenophobic attacks on foreigners last year in which more than 60 people died, says the BBC’s Jonah Fisher in Johannesburg.
Poverty pledge
On Tuesday, police cars were stoned in Thokoza near Johannesburg during a demonstration about living conditions that turned violent.
Township reports Foreigners live in fear Zuma’s challenges as president
Nearby township Diepsloot saw cars and houses being burnt last week in protest at plans to tear down makeshift shacks to make way for a sewage pipe.
President Jacob Zuma promised to improve service delivery when he came to power in May, and said fighting poverty was his priority.
South Africa announced in June that it was facing its worst recession in 17 years.
The recession and job losses have added fuel to long-standing grievances over the government’s failure to deliver basic services, and the protests are the most direct challenge to President Zuma since he came to power, our correspondent adds.
Fifteen years after the African National Congress won its first election, over a million South Africans still live in shacks, many without access to electricity or running water.
The slow provision of replacement housing has long been controversial – nearly three million have been built, but the allocation has been prone to nepotism and corruption.
Have you witnessed or taken part in the protests If you would be willing to speak about your experiences, please contact us using the postform below. Your details will not be published.
If you have any photographs and video of the protests please send them to yourpics@bbc.co.uk or text them to +44 7725 100 100. If you have a large file you can upload here.
At no time should you endanger yourself or others, take any unnecessary risks or infringe any laws.
<p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
S Africa mine collapse kills nine

Nine South African miners have been killed after a shaft collapsed, trapping them hundreds of metres below ground, a mining company has confirmed.
Impala Platinum said the accident happened on Monday at the Rustenburg mine, north-west of Johannesburg.
The firm said the bodies of those who died had now been recovered.
Accidents are common in South Africa’s mines, which are some of the deepest in the world. A fire at an illegal mine last month killed more than 60 people.
Impala Platinum said in a statement they were informing the families of those who died.
"We have set aside Friday as a day of mourning across our operations," the firm said.
Impala’s boss, David Brown, said earlier he was "devastated" by the "major tragedy".
"Our thoughts are with the families and friends of our employees at this time," he said.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Letter from Africa: post-apartheid theatre
Kim Kardashian almost got stranded in South Africa after misplacing passport
Kim Kardashian almost got stranded in South Africa after she misplaced her passport.
She is grateful to her NFL player beau Reggie Bush who was there to save the day.
“They wouldn”t let me out of customs line,” People magazine quoted her as telling about the ordeal after flying from Botswana to Johannesburg, South Africa. [...]
Kim Kardashian Lost Passport In Africa
INFphoto.com
Kim Kardashian was nearly stranded in the Motherland after she misplaced her passport during a flight between from Botswana and Johannesburg, South Africa on Wednesday.
The buxom brunette was detained at customs when she couldn’t produce the essential document upon her arrival in the South African capital.
“I left my passport on the plane!” she explains.
“They [...]
John Lundberg: Maya Angelou’s Elegy For Michael Jackson
Among the many notable moments at Michael Jackson’s funeral was Queen Latifah’s reading of the Maya Angelou poem “We Had Him.” The popular poetess wrote…






