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Ngaka Modiri Molema District
2 PROFILE: NGAKA MODIRI MOLEMA DISTRICT PROFILE: NGAKA MODIRI MOLEMA DISTRICT 3 CONTENT 1. Executive Summary .......................................................................................................... 4 2. Introduction: Brief Overview ........................................................................................... 7 2.1. Historical Perspective .............................................................................................. 7 2.3. Spatial Status .......................................................................................................... 9 3. Social Development Profile .......................................................................................... 10 3.1. Key Social Demographics ..................................................................................... 10 3.1.1. Population .......................................................................................................... 10 3.1.2. Gender, Age and Race ....................................................................................... 11 3.1.3. Households ........................................................................................................ 12 3.2. Health Profile ......................................................................................................... 12 3.3. COVID - 19............................................................................................................ 13 3.4. Poverty Dimensions ............................................................................................. -
North-West Province
© Lonely Planet Publications 509 North-West Province From safaris to slots, the pursuit of pleasure is paramount in the North-West Province. And with the top three reasons to visit less than a six-hour drive from Johannesburg, this region is more than fun. It’s convenient. Gambling is the name of the game here, although not always in the traditional sense. Place your luck in a knowledgeable ranger’s hands at Madikwe Game Reserve and bet on how many lions he’ll spot on the sunrise wildlife drive. You have to stay to play at this exclusive reserve on the edge of the Kalahari, and the lodges here will be a splurge for many. But for that once-in-a-lifetime, romantic Out of Africa–style safari experience, South Africa’s fourth-largest reserve can’t be beat. If you’d rather spot the Big Five without professional help, do a self-drive safari in Pi- lanesberg National Park. The most accessible park in the country is cheaper than Madikwe, and still has 7000 animals packed into its extinct volcano confines. Plus it’s less than three hours’ drive from Jo’burg. When you’ve had your fill betting on finding rhino, switch to cards at the opulent Sun City casino complex down the road. The final component of the province’s big attraction trifecta is the southern hemisphere’s answer to Las Vegas: a shame- lessly gaudy, unabashedly kitsch and downright delicious place to pass an afternoon. Madikwe, Pilanesberg and Sun City may be the North-West Province’s heavyweight at- tractions, but there are more here than the province’s ‘Big Three’. -
Provincial Gazette Provinsiale Koerant
NORTH WEST NOORDWES PROVINCIAL GAZETTE PROVINSIALE KOERANT MAHIKENG Vol. 260 4 JULY 2017 No. 7778 4 JULIE 2017 We oil Irawm he power to pment kiIDc AIDS HElPl1NE 0800 012 322 DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH Prevention is the cure ISSN 1682-4532 N.B. The Government Printing Works will 07778 not be held responsible for the quality of “Hard Copies” or “Electronic Files” submitted for publication purposes 9 771682 453002 2 No. 7778 PROVINCIAL GAZETTE, 4 JULY 2017 IMPORTANT NOTICE: THE GOVERNMENT PRINTING WORKS WILL NOT BE HELD RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY ERRORS THAT MIGHT OCCUR DUE TO THE SUBMISSION OF INCOMPLETE / INCORRECT / ILLEGIBLE COPY. NO FUTURE QUERIES WILL BE HANDLED IN CONNECTION WITH THE ABOVE. CONTENTS Gazette Page No. No. GENERAL NOTICES • ALGEMENE KENNISGEWINGS 75 Rustenburg Local Municipality Spatial Planning and Land Use Management By-Law, 2015: Erf 7352, Freedom Park Extension 4 ................................................................................................................................. 7778 12 75 Rustenburg Plaaslike Munisipaliteit Ruimtelike Beplanning en Grondgebruikbestuur Verordening, 2015: Erf 7352, Freedom Park Uitbreiding 4 ...................................................................................................................... 7778 12 76 Rustenburg Local Municipality Spatial Planning and Land Use Management By-Law, 2015: Portion 57 (a portion of Portion 51), of the farm Oorzaak, No. 335 Registration Division J.Q., North West Province ............. 7778 13 76 Rustenburg Plaaslike Munisipaliteit Ruimtelike -
English / French
World Heritage 38 COM WHC-14/38.COM/8B Paris, 30 April 2014 Original: English / French UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION CONVENTION CONCERNING THE PROTECTION OF THE WORLD CULTURAL AND NATURAL HERITAGE WORLD HERITAGE COMMITTEE Thirty-eighth session Doha, Qatar 15 – 25 June 2014 Item 8 of the Provisional Agenda: Establishment of the World Heritage List and of the List of World Heritage in Danger 8B. Nominations to the World Heritage List SUMMARY This document presents the nominations to be examined by the Committee at its 38th session (Doha, 2014). It is divided into four sections: I Changes to names of properties inscribed on the World Heritage List II Examination of nominations of natural, mixed and cultural properties to the World Heritage List III Statements of Outstanding Universal Value of the three properties inscribed at the 37th session (Phnom Penh, 2013) and not adopted by the World Heritage Committee IV Record of the physical attributes of each property being discussed at the 38th session The document presents for each nomination the proposed Draft Decision based on the recommendations of the appropriate Advisory Body(ies) as included in WHC-14/38.COM/INF.8B1 and WHC-14/38.COM/INF.8B2 and it provides a record of the physical attributes of each property being discussed at the 38th session. The information is presented in two parts: • a table of the total surface area of each property and any buffer zone proposed, together with the geographic coordinates of each site's approximate centre point; and • a set of separate tables presenting the component parts of each of the 16 proposed serial properties. -
Protest May 2021
National Crime Assist (NCA) REG NO 2018/355789/08 K2018355789 (NPC) PROTEST MAY 2021 www.nca247.org.za Fighting crime is what we do! 01 May 2021 MP - Secunda WC - Cape Town * CBD (peaceful march) GP - Kliprivier/Heidelberg, R59, Petrol Tanker set alight 02 May 2021 KZN - Durban * Warwick/Old Dutch rd (Taxi blockade) GP - Pretoria *Dr Swanepoel/ Dr vd Merwe str (road blocked with stones) 03 May 2021 KZN - Greytown > Mooiriver * TRP, Dwarsriver mine (all entrances blocked) GP - Midrand * c/o Klipriver dri/ Booysens rd GP – Vosloosrus * N3 LP - Vaalwater *R33, various locations (stone throwing, vehicle taken, violence, closing shops) (protestors tried to enter Police Station) EC - East London * Various roads closed (stone throwing, burning tyres) EC- Mdantsane * All entrys closed (burning tyres) KZN - Louwsburg / Vryheid, R69 * road closed (with rocks and branches) NC - Jan Kempdorp (town closed off) KZN – Richards Bay * N2, Closed (truck blocking road) KZN - Nseleni * N2, blocked at Zenith Estates NW - Brits * van Velden str (court protest) WC- Mitchels Plain * 10th Ave/ Charlie str GP - Bronkhorstspruit *Diamond Hill Plaza * N4 Bridge (Stone throwing) KZN - Durban * Broad str (Eff march, firing shots) * West str KZN - Eshowe * R66 LP Steelpoort * Minning Area MP Bethal/Morgenzon * R35, truck set alight, by ADTF protesters driver shot, luckily not serious. 04 May 2021 KZN - Eshowe * R66, 10km before Eshowe (burning tyres) WC – Cape Town * R300/N1 (7 taxi blocked road) *Botlary Rd (Paarl taxis blocking road) *c/o N7 / Malibongwe dr * M17, -
The Quality of Migration Services Delivery in South Africa
Wilfrid Laurier University Scholars Commons @ Laurier Southern African Migration Programme Reports and Papers 2005 No. 41: The Quality of Migration Services Delivery in South Africa Yul Derek Davids Southern African Migration Programme Kate Lefko-Everett Vincent Williams Southern African Migration Programme Follow this and additional works at: https://scholars.wlu.ca/samp Part of the African Studies Commons, Economics Commons, and the Migration Studies Commons Recommended Citation Davids, Y.D., Lefko-Everett, K. & Williams, V. (2005). The Quality of Migration Services Delivery in South Africa (rep., pp. i-64). Waterloo, ON: Southern African Migration Programme. SAMP Migration Policy Series No. 41. This Migration Policy Series is brought to you for free and open access by the Reports and Papers at Scholars Commons @ Laurier. It has been accepted for inclusion in Southern African Migration Programme by an authorized administrator of Scholars Commons @ Laurier. For more information, please contact [email protected]. kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkTHE SOUTHERN AFRICAN MIGRATION PROJECT THE QUALITY OF MIGRATION SERVICES DELIVERY IN SOUTH AFRICA kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkMIGRATION POLICY SERIES NO. 41 PUBLISHED BY: SOUTHERN AFRICAN MIGRATION PROJECT 6 Spin Street Church Square Cape Town 8001 and SOUTHERN AFRICAN RESEARCH CENTRE Queen’s University Kingston Canada PARTNERS: Queen’s University (Canada) Idasa (South Africa) Sechaba Consultants (Lesotho) University of Zimbabwe University of Namibia University of Botswana University of Swaziland Wits University Eduardo Mondlane University University of Malawi This project is funded by the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) and the UK Department for International Development (DFID) THE QUA L I T Y OF MIG R A TI O N SER VI C E S DEL I V E R Y IN SOU T H AFRI C A YUL DEREK DAVIDS, KATE LEFKO-EVERETT AND VINCENT WILLIAMS SERIES EDITOR: PROF. -
Declaration of Existing Provincial Road P16 Section 1 As
STAATSKOERANT, 28 SEPTEMBER 2012 No. 35719 3 GOVERNMENT NOTICE DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORT No. 784 28 September 2012 THE SOUTH AFRICAN NATIONAL ROADS AGENCY SOC LIMITED Registration No: 98/09584/06 A. DECLARATION OF EXISTING PROVINCIAL ROAD- PROVINCIAL ROAD P16 SECTION 1 AS NATIONAL ROAD R24- DISTRICT OF RUSTENBURG, IN THE NORTH-WEST PROVINCE By virtue of Section 40(1 )(a) of The South African National Road Agency Limited and National Roads Act 1998 (Act No. 7 of 1998), I hereby declare the Section of Route R24, also known as Provincial Road P16 Section 1, as declared by all Administrator's Notices which might be relevant to this section of road, commencing from its junction with Provincial District Road 0108, at Rustenburg, from where it proceeds in a general easterly direction along the existing Provincial Road P16 Section 1 up to the junction with the North-West!Gauteng Provincial Border, where it terminates as a National Road. (National Road R24: Rustenburg - North-West/Gauteng Provincial Border, a distance of approximately 31.4km) B. DECLARATION OF EXISTING PROVINCIAL ROADS- (I) PROVINCIAL ROAD P32 SECTION 2 , (II) PROVINCIAL ROAD P32 SECTION 1 AND (Ill) PROVINCIAL ROAD P20 SECTION 3 AS NATIONAL ROAD R30- DISTRICTS OF KLERKSDORP, VENTERSDORP, KOSTER AND RUSTENBURG, IN THE NORTH-WEST PROVINCE By virtue of Section 40(1 )(a) of The South African National Road Agency Limited and National Roads Act 1998 (Act No. 7 of 1998), I hereby declare: I) The Section of Route R30, also known as Provincial Road P32 Section 2, as declared by all Administrator's -
We Continue to Deliver More with Less in Ngaka Modiri Molema District
dpwr Department: Public Works and Roads North West Provincial Government Republic of South Africa We continue to deliver more with less in Ngaka Modiri Molema District More than R166m towards light never realised and or implemented. ONGOING ROAD MAINTENANCE PROJECTS IN NGAKA MODIRI rehabilitation and re-gravelling Since the invocation of Section 100 MOLEMA DISTRICT intervention, an alternative plan known as of 14 roads in the district the Roads Maintenance Recovery Plan Project Description Kms (RMRP) was developed and implemented The North West Provincial Government as an intervention strategy to address the Sectional Resurfacing of road D3551 from Kraaipan (Mine) to Khunwana 10 through the Department is managing a maintenance of roads in the province. approximately 10km route network of 19783 km. Only 5083 km In Ngaka Modiri Molema Districts alone, is surfaced (tarred) leaving a serious 20 road projects with a combined length of Sectional Re- gravelling of D433 from N18 to Madiba a Ga Kubu 18.16 backlog of 14700 km of gravel road 289 kms areongoing, with two completed approximately 16km network. already. Intersection improvement, light Rehab. Reseal, Fogspray, Pothole 17 This network carries a great value not The Department has been able to Patching, Road Signs, Road Marking and Road Reserve Clearance of road only to the North West Province but also implement Phases I and II of the RMRP D414 from Disaneng to Makgobistad of approximately 17 Km creates direct economic links and benefits from November 2018 which targeted the with its Provincial corridors to the implementation of sixty (60) roads projects Intersection improvement (between Road P34/2 and Road P47/3), Light 7 neighboring Provinces such as Gauteng, in all four districts, Ngaka Modiri Molema Rehab, Reseal, Fogspray, Pothole Patching, Road Signs, Road Markings Northern Cape, Free State, Mpumalanga included. -
37809 11-7 Roadcarrierp
Government Gazette Staatskoerant REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA REPUBLIEK VAN SUID-AFRIKA July Vol. 589 Pretoria, 11 2014 Julie No. 37809 PART 1 OF 4 N.B. The Government Printing Works will not be held responsible for the quality of “Hard Copies” or “Electronic Files” submitted for publication purposes AIDS HELPLINE: 0800-0123-22 Prevention is the cure 402615—A 37809—1 2 No. 37809 GOVERNMENT GAZETTE, 11 JULY 2014 IMPORTANT NOTICE The Government Printing Works will not be held responsible for faxed documents not received due to errors on the fax machine or faxes received which are unclear or incomplete. Please be advised that an “OK” slip, received from a fax machine, will not be accepted as proof that documents were received by the GPW for printing. If documents are faxed to the GPW it will be the sender’s respon- sibility to phone and confirm that the documents were received in good order. Furthermore the Government Printing Works will also not be held responsible for cancellations and amendments which have not been done on original documents received from clients. CONTENTS INHOUD Page Gazette Bladsy Koerant No. No. No. No. No. No. Transport, Department of Vervoer, Departement van Cross Border Road Transport Agency: Oorgrenspadvervoeragentskap aansoek- Applications for permits:.......................... permitte: .................................................. Menlyn..................................................... 3 37809 Menlyn..................................................... 3 37809 Applications concerning Operating Aansoeke -
Gaborone Transfer and Recycling Station (GTARS)
Environmental Change Department of Thematic Studies Linköping University Material Flow Analysis in the long and short term – Gaborone Transfer and Recycling Station (GTARS) Simas Dunauskas Master’s programme Science for Sustainable Development Master’s Thesis, 30 ECTS credits ISRN: LIU-TEMAM/MPSSD-A--15/001--SE Linköpings Universitet Environmental Change Department of Thematic Studies Linköping University Material Flow Analysis in the long and short term – Gaborone Transfer and Recycling Station (GTARS) Simas Dunauskas Master’s programme Science for Sustainable Development Master’s Thesis, 30 ECTS credits Supervisors: Wisdom Kanda, Joakim Krook, Mattias Lindahl 2014 Upphovsrätt Detta dokument hålls tillgängligt på Internet – eller dess framtida ersättare – under 25 år från publiceringsdatum under förutsättning att inga extraordinära omständigheter uppstår. Tillgång till dokumentet innebär tillstånd för var och en att läsa, ladda ner, skriva ut enstaka kopior för enskilt bruk och att använda det oförändrat för ickekommersiell forskning och för undervisning. Överföring av upphovsrätten vid en senare tidpunkt kan inte upphäva detta tillstånd. All annan användning av dokumentet kräver upphovsmannens medgivande. För att garantera äktheten, säkerheten och tillgängligheten finns lösningar av teknisk och administrativ art. Upphovsmannens ideella rätt innefattar rätt att bli nämnd som upphovsman i den omfattning som god sed kräver vid användning av dokumentet på ovan beskrivna sätt samt skydd mot att dokumentet ändras eller presenteras i sådan form eller i sådant sammanhang som är kränkande för upphovsmannens litterära eller konstnärliga anseende eller egenart. För ytterligare information om Linköping University Electronic Press se förlagets hemsida http://www.ep.liu.se/. Copyright The publishers will keep this document online on the Internet – or its possible replacement – for a period of 25 years starting from the date of publication barring exceptional circumstances. -
DC37 Bojanala Platinum
BOJANALA PLATINUM DISTRICT MUNICIPALITY 2009/2010 REVIEWED INTEGRATED DEVELOPMENT PLAN TABLE OF CONTENTS SECTION A: EXECUTIVE SUMMARY .......................................................................................5 Introduction and overview of Bojanala District Municipality........................................................5 Demographics ..........................................................................................................................5 Population Growth Rates in the Bojanala Platinum District........................................................6 Literacy levels ..........................................................................................................................8 Affordability ..............................................................................................................................9 Unemployment .......................................................................................................................11 Powers and functions of the municipality ................................................................................15 The 2009/10 Review Process .................................................................................................16 Policy framework and strategies informing the review process .............................................16 Role players in the review process........................................................................................20 Table 5: Roles and responsibilities of various key role players .............................................20 -
Is Roadside Grass Suitable for Use As Livestock Forage in Botswana?
Vol. 5(10), pp. 265-268, November, 2013 DOI: 10.5897/JECE2013.0297 Journal of Environmental Chemistry and ISSN 2141-226X ©2013 Academic Journals Ecotoxicology http://www.academicjournals.org/JECE Full Length Research Paper Is roadside grass suitable for use as livestock forage in Botswana? Samuel Mosweu1* and Moagi Letshwenyo2 1Department of Geography and Environmental Science, University of Fort Hare, Alice, South Africa. 2Department of Biological Science, University of Botswana, Gaborone, Botswana. Accepted 6 November, 2013 The aim of this research was to assess the suitability of roadside grass for use as livestock feed to combat lack of forage resources in Botswana. Fifty grass samples were collected along the roadside in the A1 Highway corridor running between the Ramatlabama and Ramokgwebana border gates (629 Km), and analysed for Ni, Cu, Pb, Zn and Cd. The maximum content levels detected in grass samples for Ni, Cu, Pb, Zn and Cd were 0.432, 0.187, 0.180, 0.154 and 0.03 mg/kg respectively. Assessment of the results against international maximum allowable limits of undesirable substances in animal feed showed that the content levels of heavy metal contaminants in grass resources found along the roadsides in the A1 Highway corridor in Botswana were far below maximum allowable limits. Therefore, this study supported the use of roadside grass for production of forage to combat scarcity of livestock feed in the country. However, the study recommended the establishment of an environmental management and monitoring approach to facilitate continued monitoring of the quality of forage produced from roadside grass and ensure protection of human and animal health.