Friday, 24 June 2016

ANC MEETING LEFT MEN DEAD

A man shot outside an ANC event in Pretoria West on Sunday has died in hospital.
Simon Modihe (38) succumbed to his wounds the same evening, police spokesperson Captain Bonginkosi Msimango said.
Modihe was twice shot in the legs in chaos at the Tshwane events centre where an the ANC announced mayoral candidates for the local poll.
“The motive behind his killing is unknown at this stage but we are busy with investigations. No arrests have been named and a murder docket has been opened.”
Msimango could not say whether Modihe was a member of the ANC.
Pretoria West Sector 1 CPF chairperson Eric Cordier said an armed man fired shots at a group of people just after 16:00, wounding a man in the legs.
“The shooter ran into a shop, Steve’s CafĂ©, on the corner of President Burger and WF Nkomo streets chased by a group of people,” Cordier said.
“Inside the shop, he found a female worker, who then shut the doors as she noticed a mob of people trying to follow him.”
Cordier said the armed man escaped by jumping over the wall at the back of the shop.

Tuesday, 21 June 2016

Violence strike in Hammanskraal

More public violence continues in  Stinkwater Hamanskraal After new Tshwane mayoral cadinate was annouced .

The mob which is belived to be an ANC members has  burnt bus and vandelised  many cars last night on  major high way Road known as molefe makinta, even today the road is blocked with stones , rubles  and damaged Road signs .

Atleats no one was reported dead although many were injured  , the police continues to investigate those who were involved.

More new (click on our link)

 belhttp://stiwawamedia.blogspot.co.za/2016/06/anc-members-causes-public-violence.html?m=1oved are the members of Anc in ward 95 ,

Anc members causes public violence

Pretoria - ANC members are protesting in various townships in Tshwane to force the party to change its decision to name Thoko Didiza as its mayoral candidate and push aside Kgosientso Ramokgopa.
At least ten buses were set alight on Monday night and City of Tshwane teams had to be withdrawn from the areas for their safety. Protests continued on Tuesday morning.
A branch leader who asked not to be named told News24 on Monday that protests had spread to Mamelodi, Hammanskraal, Winterveldt, and Soshanguve.
“A lot of protests are expected,” he said.
“We as ANC branches wanted to convene a press briefing to communicate the impact today’s announcement, but unfortunately before we could even do that the communities started to revolt.
“We are trying to go back to the branches so that we can calm the situation down. There are already tyres all over the streets in Tshwane.”
Tensions had been simmering in the townships since it was suspected that Ramokgopa would be replaced after the August 3 local government elections.
The ANC on Monday announced Didiza, an ANC national executive committee member, as mayoral candidate for Tshwane. The provincial executive committee (PEC) had rejected the initial names that were submitted. The party announced the names of all its mayoral candidates on Saturday, except for Tshwane.
Since then, there had been sporadic violence. A party member was shot and killed on Sunday night. On Monday afternoon, disgruntled members overturned a Tshwane Metro Police car during a protest in central Pretoria.
The branch leader said they had tried to communicate with the party on the impact of Ramokgopa's removal, before violence broke out.
‘They never listened to us’
“The ANC did not listen to the community. The current sitting mayor is loved by the people and that is a reality. He is not only loved by the ANC members. That decision to bring in somebody from somewhere is hurting them inside because Kgosientso was a people’s mayor; he was able to communicate directly to the people. They feel betrayed. We tried to communicate this yesterday at the Showgrounds, but they never listened to us, the branches,” he said.
ANC deputy secretary general Jessie Duarte told reporters on Monday that Ramokgopa was not among the list of three names the ANC regional executive committee sent to the PEC.
“The decision of the PEC is final and we are respecting it,” she said.
Duarte acknowledged that the process of nominating a mayoral candidate for Tshwane had left the region divided.
"The intensity of the competition in Tshwane had led to a breakdown of relationships between two key individuals. They will still be the regional leadership. We want to give them the opportunity to focus their minds on building the ANC structurally and making sure they go back to the branch and work hard to unify the ANC," she said.
The branch leader said they were supposed to have met party leaders after the meeting where Didiza was endorsed, but that never happened.
ANC Gauteng spokesperson Motalatale Modiba referred all queries to the regional spokesperson Teboho Joala, who was in a meeting at the time.