Agrizzi to undergo further medical tests to determine fitness to stand trial
The R1.8 billion Bosasa fraud case is back before the Pretoria high court on Monday.
The R1.8 billion Bosasa fraud case is back before the Pretoria high court on Monday.
Former chief operating officer Angelo Agrizzi and his co-accused - who include former correctional services commissioner Linda Mti and chief financial officer Patrick Gillingham - are facing a string of graft charges.
The Gauteng Health Department said the blaze was put out by hospital staff using the fire extinguishers on site.
The latest data from the Central Energy Fund points to an increase of between R2.27 cents and R2. 36 cents per litre.
Solomon Shandu and his colleague Simphiwe Cele went missing last Saturday night when their car was swept away by KwaZulu-Natal storms.
Hundreds of families from various informal settlements in and around Durban were relocated to the camp in 2009 for what was supposed to be a few months while new permanent homes were built for them.
Shandu and his colleague, Simphiwe Cele, both local municipal workers, went missing while they were on their way back home from a funeral in Harrismith on Saturday night.
Among those which have been affected both by the April floods and those that occurred last weekend is the Dakota Creche, a donor-funded facility that serves the impoverished community of the Dakota informal settlement in the Isipingo area, south of Durban.
Those living there know this isn’t the last they’ll see of this kind of disaster and are terrified the next one could claim their lives.
Just weeks after last month's floods, more violent storms hit the province this past weekend leaving hundreds of people displaced.
Solomon Shandu and Simphiwe Cele were on their way back home from a colleague’s funeral in Harrismith on Saturday night, when their car was swept away as they were trying to cross the swollen river.
Last month’s floods saw two massive crevices open in the residential area below the development.
Just as the province was recovering from last month's deadly floods, it is now suffering another setback from inclement weather.
Scores of homes some of which had stood for decades until now were washed away and several families had to be evacuated.
Six weeks after the devastating floods which left hundreds dead and scores missing last month, heavy rains on Saturday and Sunday ravaged the province once more, resulting in massive damage to infrastructure once again.
The mother of a 26-year-old man who was killed by a drunk driver in 2017 says she can finally begin to find closure now that the perpetrator has been convicted.
Plans are in the works to introduce a new app in Gauteng where the public will be able to report potholes as well as other road maintenance issues.
The Constitutional Court will on Tuesday hear a last-ditch attempt by Ledla Structural Development to try and overturn a Special Tribunal ruling that millions of rands the company scored from a massive government PPE contract, be finally forfeited to the state.