Features
'SA doesn't have time or money for new nuclear plant'
According to energy analyst professor Hartmut Winkler, adding more nuclear power to South Africa's under-pressure grid will not solve the country's energy...
While preparations are under way to mark the 10th anniversary of the Marikana Massacre, residents have hit out at the lack of transformation in the small mining town in the North West.
In this special report, Eyewitness News speaks to adults and children who were yet to come of age when the events unfolded, changing their lives forever.
Nokuthula Zibambele said that her life and that of their 10 children had changed for the worst since that fateful day on 16 August 10 years ago.
Ten years after her husband was killed during a wage strike at Marikana, Nokuthula Zibambele, relives the fraught final conversations she had with him before his death.
Social scientist Dr Crispen Chinguno and political economist Khwezi Mabasa weigh in on lessons learned from Marikana.
Thirty-four miners were shot dead by police and another 10 people were killed, but 10 years on, justice is still to be done.
The union's president Joseph Mathunjwa spoke to Eyewitness News on the sidelines of their 10th anniversary commemoration of the Marikana Massacre in Johannesburg on Wednesday.
Apart from the miners that were brutally murdered by police at Marikana on 16 August 2012, the state has been dealing with claims from 48 miners who were either unlawfully detained or injured.
Historians have opened up about how the culmination of the strike in a massacre was chillingly reminiscent of the mass killings of protesting black people by the apartheid police in many areas, including Sharpeville in 1960.
August marks 10 years since the Marikana Massacre where 34 miners in the North West were killed at the Wonderkop Koppie outside Rustenburg.
In our Connect Us special focus, CapeTalk, 702, and Eyewitness News bring you all the information you need to make life easier.
Refilwe Moloto speaks to Democratic Alliance MP Kevin Mileham about Eskom's proposed 32.7% tariff price hike to Nersa.
Eskom has been placed under severe pressure due to its inability to produce power for South African households and businesses.
Amid increasing load shedding and mounting pressure on SA's power grid, here's all the information you need to make life easier.
Refilwe Moloto interviews Primaresearch’s Shamil Ismail, author of “Shedding light on Eskom”.