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Bushbuckridge Local Municipality
BUSHBUCKRIDGE LOCAL MUNICIPALITY WATER PROJECTS Period Project Project Budget Source of Implementing Project ID Project Location Project Objective Name Beneficiaries KEY Performance 2008/2009 Funding Agency Indicator R BLMW001 Installation of BBR regions All regions Provision of Water Access of water 5,848,200 MIG BLM meters BLMW002 Construction Acornhoek Acornhoek Provision of Water Access of water 394,302 MIG BLM of Line command, to existing reservoir BLMW003 Construction Acornhoek Acornhoek Provision of Water Access of water 54,421 MIG BLM of Line command, to existing reservoir BLMW004 Reticulation Acornhoek Brenda Provision of Water Access of water 1,000,000 MIG BLM and yard meter connection BLMW005 Reticulation Acornhoek Ceko Provision of Water Access of water 1,500,000 MIG BLM and yard meter connection BLMW009 Construction Acornhoek Dingleydale Provision of Water Access of water 342,958 MIG BLM of 100kl Concrete Reservoir BLMW010 Construction Acornhoek Dingleydale Provision of Water Access of water 2,537,263 MIG BLM of branch pipeline from booster pump station to new reservoir BLMW011 Construction Acornhoek Moloro Provision of Water Access of water 571,596 MIG BLM of 200kl Reservoir 1 BUSHBUCKRIDGE LOCAL MUNICIPALITY WATER PROJECTS Period Project Project Budget Source of Implementing Project ID Project Location Project Objective Name Beneficiaries KEY Performance 2008/2009 Funding Agency Indicator R BLMW012 Construction Acornhoek Moloro Provision of Water Access of water 2,721,030 MIG BLM Branch pipe from Brooklyn to Moloro BLMW013 -
11010329.Pdf
THE RISE, CONSOLIDATION AND DISINTEGRATION OF DLAMINI POWER IN SWAZILAND BETWEEN 1820 AND 1889. A study in the relationship of foreign affairs to internal political development. Philip Lewis Bonner. ProQuest Number: 11010329 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a com plete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. uest ProQuest 11010329 Published by ProQuest LLC(2018). Copyright of the Dissertation is held by the Author. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States C ode Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. ProQuest LLC. 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106- 1346 ABSTRACT The Swazi kingdom grew out of the pressures associated with competition for trade and for the rich resources of Shiselweni. While centred on this area it acquired some of its characteristic features - notably a regimental system, and the dominance of a Dlamini aristocracy. Around 1815 the Swazi came under pressure from the South, and were forced to colonise the land lying north of the Lusutfu. Here they remained for some years a nation under arms, as they plundered local peoples, and were themselves swept about by the currents of the Mfecane. In time a more settled administration emerged, as the aristocracy spread out from the royal centres at Ezulwini, and this process accelerated under Mswati as he subdued recalcitrant chiefdoms, and restructured the regiments. -
RIES 7 2 – SE RY to EC IR D ES IC V R E S a T G R O N PP U S La a a M Mpu
Statistics for Mpumalanga Province 014 RIES 7 2 – SE RY TO EC IR D ES IC V R E S a T g R O n PP U S la A a m Mpu CONTACT INFORMATION: Facebook: Struland Office Park Foundation for Professional (East Block) Development 173 Mary Street The Willows Twitter: Pretoria, 0184 @FPD_SA PO Box 75324 LinkedIn: Lynnwood Ridge, 0040 Foundation for Professional South Africa Development (FPD) Introducing info4africa info4Africa is a self-funded Centre of the School of Applied Human Sciences, College of Humanities, University of KwaZulu-Natal. Established in 2001, we were formerly known as the Centre for HIV/AIDS Networking (HIVAN). info4africa has a long history of working in the field of HIV, AIDS and TB. Our focus has expanded and matured over the past decade such that our database, wider networking and capacity building activities broadly reflect service provision in health, wellbeing and development in South Africa. info4africa’s defining strength is our ability to collate, maintain and quality assure data. We are currently engaged in data collection projects for a variety of local, national and international agencies. We believe in collating and sharing information for public good. In addition to data collection and directory production, we facilitate free networking and capacity building forums for the faith-based, social welfare, non-government and wider practitioner community in KwaZulu-Natal. info4africa has representation on the following nationally-relevant committees: • Executive Committee of the NGO Sector of the South Africa National AIDS Council (SANAC) • Member of the Health and Wellbeing Technical Task Team of SANAC • Management Committee Representative, National Social Welfare Forum • Sector Working Group Member for Goals 4, 5 and 6, Millenium Development Goal (MDG) Country Report (Statistics SA) • Civil Society representative on the KZN Provincial Council on AIDS (PCA) We have worked with international agencies, national, provincial and local community stakeholders in all sectors on data collection, data cleaning and directory production projects. -
Mpumalanga Presentation
STATE OF THE PROVINCE: MPUMALANGA Briefing the Portfolio Committee on Home Affairs: 8 SEPTEMBER 2015 Presented by the Acting Provincial Manager: Ms ME Makatu TABLE OF CONTENT Provincial Overview 12 - 31 Capacity Information 32 - 38 Human Resources 39 - 49 Counter Corruption, Security Services and Labour Relations 50 -54 Finance and Budget 55 - 62 Operations 63 - 74 Ports of Entry 75 - 78 Challenges and Achievement 79 - 80 2 SOCIO-ECONOMIC REVIEW AND OUTLOOK OF MPUMALANGA - DECEMBER 2014 KEY FINDINGS • Mpumalanga’s percentage share of the national population of 54.0 million was 7.8 per cent, or 4.2 million, in 2014. • In total over the last year, Mpumalanga recorded 14 000 less jobs, however, the province registered an increase of 8 000 jobs in the third quarter of 2014. • Mpumalanga (29.3 per cent), recorded the fourth highest strict unemployment rate among the nine provinces. The expanded unemployment rate was 42.0 per cent in the third quarter of 2014. • The male unemployment rate was 25.7 per cent, the female unemployment was 33.6 per cent and the youth (15-34 years) unemployment rate was 41.8 per cent. • By 2013, 10.8 per cent of the people 20 years and older had not received any schooling. • In 2013, the Mpumalanga’s Grade 12 pass rate (77.6 per cent) was the fifth highest/lowest. • In 2012, the HIV prevalence rate of the female population aged 15–49 in Mpumalanga was 35.6 per cent – the second highest after KwaZulu-Natal. • In 2013, Mpumalanga recorded a HDI (The Human development index is a composite, relative index that attempts to quantify the extent of human development of a community. -
SANDF Control of the Northern and Eastern Border Areas of South Africa Ettienne Hennop, Arms Management Programme, Institute for Security Studies
SANDF Control of the Northern and Eastern Border Areas of South Africa Ettienne Hennop, Arms Management Programme, Institute for Security Studies Occasional Paper No 52 - August 2001 INTRODUCTION Borderline control and security were historically the responsibility of the South African Police (SAP) until the withdrawal of the counterinsurgency units at the end of 1990. The Army has maintained a presence on the borders in significant numbers since the 1970s. In the Interim Constitution of 1993, borderline functions were again allocated to the South African Police Service (SAPS). However, with the sharp rise in crime in the country and the subsequent extra burden this placed on the police, the South African National Defence Force (SANDF) was placed in service by the president to assist and support the SAPS with crime prevention, including assistance in borderline security. As a result, the SANDF had a strong presence with 28 infantry companies and five aircraft deployed on the international borders of South Africa at the time.1 An agreement was signed on 10 June 1998 between the SANDF and the SAPS that designated the responsibility for borderline protection to the SANDF. In terms of this agreement, as contained in a cabinet memorandum, the SANDF has formally been requested to patrol the borders of South Africa. This is to ensure that the integrity of borders is maintained by preventing the unfettered movement of people and goods across the South African borderline between border posts. The role of the SANDF has been defined technically as one of support to the SAPS and other departments to combat crime as requested.2 In practice, however, the SANDF patrols without the direct support of the other departments. -
A Farm Survey of Small-Scale Sugarcane Growers in Nkomazi, Mpumalanga Province, South Africa
Global A farm survey of Development small-scale Institute sugarcane growers in Nkomazi, Working Paper Series Mpumalanga 2017-018 province, South December 2017 Africa 1 Philip Woodhouse 1 Professor of Environment and Development, Global Development Institute, The University of Manchester, United Kingdom. Email: [email protected] Paul James2 2 Global Development Institute, The University of Manchester, United Kingdom. ISBN: 978-1-909336-41-4 Cite this paper as: Woodhouse, Phil and James, Paul (2017). A farm survey of small-scale sugarcane growers in Nkomazi, Mpumalanga province, South Africa. GDI Working Paper 2017- 018. Manchester: The University of Manchester. www.gdi.manchester.ac.uk This paper is part of a research project “Farm scale and viability: an assessment of black economic empowerment in sugar production in Mpumalanga Province, South Africa”, funded by the UK government ESRC-DFID Joint Programme on Poverty Alleviation. Grant no. ES/1034242/1 Abstract Against a context of declining sugar output in South Africa as a whole, the sugar industry in the Nkomazi Municipality of Mpumalanga Province has increased its share of the South African market. It has achieved this despite the transfer of at least 25 per cent of land growing sugarcane into black community ownership through South Africa’s land reform programme. The industry now claims that the majority of land used for sugar cane in Nkomazi is owned by the beneficiaries of land reform. This paper describes a survey of small-scale sugar-cane growers. It presents quantitative data that shows, on the one hand, a process of land concentration and ‘accumulation from below’, visible in the emergence of medium-scale growers, and, on the other hand, a move by the sugar milling company to take more direct control of sugarcane growing through rental agreements with small-scale land-owners. -
Vegetation Units Prince Edward Islands
24° 25° 26° 27° 28° 29° 30° 31° 32° 33° 37°54'0"E 37°57'0"E 38°0'0"E PONTDRIF AZa7 AZa7 SVmp1 SVmp2 VAALKOP 22° BEIT BRIDGE Prince Edward Island MAPUNGUBWE SVmp2 NATIONAL PARK 46°36'0"S 46°36'0"S MOEDER-EN-KIND SVmp2 SVmp2 PO MUSINA LIMPO SVmp2 Prince Edward SVmp1 SVmp2 EPSILON VAN ZINDEREN SVmp2 KOP BAKKER PEAK BOGGEL FOa1 SVmp4 WOLKBERG SVmp1 SVmp1 SVmp1 PAFURI KENT CRATER e Islands l l e SVmp1 RSA Point zhe SVl1 N AZa7 FOz9 Cave Bay SVmp2 BROMBEEK FOz9 0 5 10 km AZa7 SVmp2 HOEDBERG TSHIPISE SVcb19 SVl1 SVmp3 SVl1 McNish Bay ALLDAYS 46°39'0"S Scale 1:150 000 46°39'0"S Biome Units of SVcb22 Luvuvhu MAASSTROOM SVmp2 SVmp1 le South Cape uta M FOz8 FOz9 SVmp4 South Africa, AZa7 SVcb19 SVcb21 SVl2 RADITSHABA Nzhelele SVcb21 FOa1 ´ 37°54'0"E 37°57'0"E 38°0'0"E SVmp1 Dam PUNDA MARIA SWARTWATER SVl1 Lesotho and Swaziland SVmp3 SVcb19 SVl1 37°36'0"E 37°39'0"E 37°42'0"E 37°45'0"E 37°48'0"E 37°51'0"E 37°54'0"E FOa1 SVcb20 SVcb21 SVl15 AZa7 WATERPOORT Mph TOLWE AZi11 o ngo Gm28 lo SVcb21 THOHOYANDOU SVl3 Cape Davis SVcb19 Gm28 FOz4 SVcb21 SVcb19 SVmp5 Gm28 SVmp5 FOz4 Storm Petrel Bay TOM BURKE SVcb18 FOz4 Marion Island VIVO KRUGER NATIONAL PARK MAKHADO FOz4 King Penguin Bay MARNITZ FOz4 BLOUBERG REPETTO'S HILL O Albasini Dam SVmp4 P O SVcb20 SHINGWEDZI P SVl8 46°51'0"S Glen Alpine Dam t SVl3 M d ELIM I GA-SELEKA SVl1 u Ship's Cove LONG RIDGE 46°51'0"S L SVcb18 n SVmp6 o a SVl7 SVcb19 H Sh S ing wed Trigaardt Bay BALTIMORE zi AZa7 BOCHUM AZORELLA KOP SKUA RIDGE 23° SVl3 Mixed Pickle Cove SVcb21 SVcb20 Hudson Ntsanwisi SVl8 Middle Letaba Dam Dam -
Portfolio Committee on Public Works Oversight Visit Mpumalanga Province
PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC WORKS OVERSIGHT VISIT MPUMALANGA PROVINCE PRESENTATION: 13 SEPTEMBER 2016 DATE: 19 -23 SEPTEMBER 2016 OUTLINE OF PREPARATIONS a) Delegations from Departments and IDT b) Identified Projects c) Proposed programme d) Projects Profile Brief 2 DELEGATIONS FROM DEPARTMENTS AND IDT The following Departments and Entity confirmed representation: National Department of Public Works (DPW) • ADDG Projects • Chief Director Projects • Chief Director EPWP • Regional Head of Projects • Project Managers Provincial Department of Public Works, Roads and Transport (Mpumalanga) • DDG projects • Chief Directors • Project Managers Independent Development Trust (IDT) • Programme Manager • Regional Manager • Project Managers 3 IDENTIFIED PROJECTS • Mpumalanga High Court, Nelspruit (IDT) • Barberton Prison Security Fencing(IDT) • 4 EPWP projects per sector, infrastructure, environment and culture, NGO and social within 120 km radius • Barberton Magistrate Office, Installation of facilities for people with disabilities (DPW) • Jepees Reef Border Post, Repairs and Maintenance, (DPW) • Mananga Border Post, (Malelana), Repairs and Maintenance, (DPW) • Bushbuckridge Traffic College (Mpumalanga Department of Public Works, Roads and Transport) • Swartfontein Treatment Centre, White River (Mpumalanga Department of Public Works, Roads and Transport) • Tekwane North School, Between Nelspruit and Kanyamazane (Mpumalanga Department of Public Works, Roads and Transport) • Rob Ferreira Hospital, Nelspruit (Mpumalanga Department of Public Works, -
Mpumalanga No Fee Schools 2017
MPUMALANGA NO FEE SCHOOLS 2017 NATIONAL NAME OF SCHOOL SCHOOL PHASE ADDRESS OF SCHOOL EDUCATION DISTRICT QUINTILE LEARNER EMIS 2017 NUMBERS NUMBER 2017 800035522 ACORN - OAKS COMPREHENSIVE HIGH SCHOOL Secondary BOHLABELA 1 476 800034879 ALFRED MATSHINE COMMERCIAL SCHOOL Secondary STAND 7B CASTEEL TRUST BUSHBUCKRIDGE BOHLABELA 1 673 800030445 AMADLELO ALUHLAZA SECONDARY SCHOOL Secondary PHILA MYENI AVENUE ETHANDAKUKHANYA PIET RETIEF GERT SIBANDE 1 1386 800005058 AMALUMGELO PRIMARY SCHOOL Primary DWARS IN DIE WEG MORGENZON GERT SIBANDE 1 9 800000158 AMANZAMAHLE PRIMARY SCHOOL Primary PO BOX 1822 ERMELO ERMELO GERT SIBANDE 1 66 800000166 AMANZI PRIMARY SCHOOL Primary VYGEBOOM DAM BADPLAAS BADPLAAS GERT SIBANDE 1 104 800035381 AMON NKOSI PRIMARY SCHOOL Primary STAND NO. 6099 EXTENTION 12 BARBERTON EHLANZENI 1 727 800000240 ANDISA PRIMARY SCHOOL Primary STAND NO 3050 MABUYENI SIYABUSWA NKANGALA 1 286 800034906 ANDOVER PRIMARY SCHOOL Primary OKKERNOOTBOOM TRUST ACORNHOEK ACORNHOEK BOHLABELA 1 259 800034851 APLOS CHILOANE PRIMARY SCHOOL Primary KAZITHA TRUST ARTHURSEAT ACORNHOEK BOHLABELA 1 325 VLAKVARKFONTEIN 800000307 ARBOR PRIMARY SCHOOL Primary ARBOR DELMAS NKANGALA 1 351 FARM 800034852 ARTHURSEAT PRIMARY SCHOOL Primary ARTHURSEAT I ACORNHOEK ACORNHOEK BOHLABELA 1 236 800000406 BAADJIESBULT PRIMARY SCHOOL Combined APPELDOORN FARM CAROLINA CAROLINA GERT SIBANDE 1 184 800035179 BABATI PRIMARY SCHOOL Primary JUSTICIA TRUST JUSTICIA TRUST XIMHUNGWE BOHLABELA 1 500 800034907 BABINATAU SENIOR SECONDARY SCHOOL Secondary DINGLEDALE "B" ACORNHOEK -
Senekal a WELTEVREDEN 382 333 ROODE No
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Marikana: a View from the Mountain and a Case to Answer
Marikana MARIKANA A View from the Mountain and a Case to Answer Peter Alexander Luke Sinwell Thapelo Lekgowa Botsang Mmope and Bongani Xezwi Cover photograph: A view from the mountain. Photograph taken from the top of the Contents mountain on 15 August 2012. The area with trees is the hillock. Nkaneng informal About the authors settlement lies beyond, on the right near the top of the photograph. The pylons carry electricity to Lonmin, but none of this goes to the settlement. The area between the 6 hillock and Nkaneng is the killing field, where the first deaths occurred on 16 August. Acknowledgements The following photographs are acknowledged and credited: 7 Greg Marinovich: front cover and p33 Maps of the area Peter Alexander: pp17 and 41 Reuters/The Bigger Picture: p37, bottom photo, and p149 8 Amandla magazine: p37, top and middle photos 1 Introduction: Encounters in Marikana Thapelo Lekgowa: pp49, 59, 63, 141 and 145 13 Asanda Benya: p55 Joseph Mathunjwa: p137 2 The massacre: A narrative account based on workers’ testimonies 23 3 Background interviews 46 First published by Jacana Media (Pty) Ltd in 2012 Revised edition 2013 4 Speeches 61 10 Orange Street 5 Interviews with mineworkers Sunnyside Auckland Park 2092 71 South Africa 6 Analysis and conclusion +2711 628 3200 131 www.jacana.co.za They died at Marikana © Peter Alexander, Thapelo Lekgowa, 157 Botsang Mmope, Luke Sinwell and Bongani Xezwi, 2012 © Front cover photograph: Greg Marinovich © Maps: by John McCann All rights reserved. ISBN 978-1-4314-0733-0 Cover design Maggie Davey and Shawn Paikin Set in Garamond 9.5/12.9pt Printed by Ultra Litho (Pty) Ltd, Johannesburg Job No. -
Continuity Or Rupture? the Shaping of the Rural Political Order Through Contestations of Land, Community, and Mining in the Bapo Ba Mogale Traditional Authority Area
Continuity or Rupture? The shaping of the rural political order through contestations of land, community, and mining in the Bapo ba Mogale traditional authority area. Stanley Malindi A research project submitted at the University of the Witwatersrand, Department of Political Studies, School of Social Sciences, in fulfilment of the Master of Arts (Research) Degree. Supervised by: Dr Julian Brown and Dr Gavin Capps. March 2016 1 Declaration I (Student number: ) am a Student registered for the degree of in the academic year . I hereby declare the following: • I am aware that plagiarism (the use of someone else’s work without their permission and/or without acknowledging the original source) is wrong • I confirm that the work submitted for assessment for the above degree is my own unaided work except where I have explicitly indicated otherwise. • I have followed the required conventions in referencing the thoughts and ideas of others. • I understand that the University of the Witwatersrand may take disciplinary action against me if there is a belief that this is not my own unaided work or that I have failed to acknowledge the source of the ideas in my writing. Signature: Date: 2 Abstract South Africa’s countryside’s are rich in ‘new’ high-demand metal and energy minerals, like platinum and uranium, as well as vast, untapped reserves of industrial staples, above all coal. Yet, these are also characterised by deep rural poverty and legally insecure systems of ‘customary’ tenure, under the local administrative control of traditional authorities. Here, new mining activity is setting in motion significant processes dispossession and Immiseration that are at once tracing, reconfiguring and widening the class, gender and other social divisions that define these rural settings.