CGE calls for urgent action on water shortages in Makhanda

Source: Government of South Africa

CGE calls for urgent action on water shortages in Makhanda

The Commission for Gender Equality (CGE) has called for urgent collaboration among stakeholders to address recurring water shortages in the Makana Local Municipality, amid ongoing water challenges in Makhanda, Eastern Cape.

The call follows public concern over water access at Settlers Hospital. 

In response, the Commission conducted an oversight visit to the facility, where it engaged with the hospital’s acting Chief Executive Officer and matron to assess the impact of water disruptions on healthcare services. 

At the time of the visit, the hospital’s water supply was stable. 

At the recent meeting, hospital management informed the Commission that recurring water disruptions are linked to longstanding infrastructure challenges, including ageing systems and outdated water mapping. 

During broader outages affecting the town, the hospital relies on municipal water tank support.

“The CGE observed three boreholes on the premises, although additional pumping capacity is required to optimise supply. The Commission also observed acceptable standards of cleanliness across key units, including maternity, neonatal, nursery, and theatre sections,” CGE spokesperson Javu Baloyi said.

Baloyi added that regular water quality testing is conducted. 

The Commission was informed that a recent incident involving women carrying water within the hospital occurred during a temporary disruption over a long weekend.

“The hospital responded immediately after being alerted, while mothers in the paediatric section reportedly fetched water from a borehole-connected tap during the disruption,” Baloyi said.

In engagements with the CGE, Baloyi said the municipality highlighted worsening drought conditions in Makhanda and indicated that interventions are underway, including plans to expand dam capacity.

While acknowledging the historical and infrastructural nature of the crisis, the Commission expressed concern that communities, healthcare institutions, and, in particular, women continue to bear the burden of ongoing systemic failures in service delivery.

“Persistent water insecurity undermines the constitutional rights to dignity, equality, healthcare, and access to sufficient water,” Baloyi said.

Due to extended engagements, the Commission was unable to proceed with a planned visit to a local university.

The CGE said it will continue to monitor developments related to water access and service delivery challenges in Makhanda and surrounding areas. – SAnews.gov.za
 

GabiK

7

Rewriting Traditions with Women Peacebuilders in Southern Malawi

Source: APO – Report:

Early in 2025, in a quiet Malawian village, 16‑year‑old girl named Amaluwasa* was pulled out of school and forced into marriage, a single moment that captures the collision of tradition, inequality, and lost potential. To some families facing poverty, this practice is perceived as a way to lighten the burden of daily survival. But for Amaluwasa it meant the end of her education and the loss of her childhood. Her case is not unusual; Malawi has one of the highest rates of child marriage in sub-Saharan Africa, with 42% of girls married before the age of 18. In a village several kilometres away from Amaluwa’s home, 14-year old Nohakhelha* parents were in a years long disagreement about allowing her to go to school with her mobility disability. In the next village, neighbours were in conflict over a piece of land. 

In Phalombe and Machinga districts, persistent harmful practices such as gender-based violence, early child marriages, forced initiation rites, land disputes, property and inheritance grabbing, and child abuse are widespread. These practices drive school dropouts, teenage pregnancies, and economic dependency, leaving many people trapped in cycles of poverty and abusive relationships.

The context was clear: women in these communities often felt silenced. They were afraid to speak to male chiefs about sensitive issues like intimate partner violence. Decisions were frequently biased, with men favouring fellow men, leaving women and girls without justice or protection. Leadership was seen as a male domain, and women were expected to remain in the background. For years, women were often sidelined in matters of peace and community leadership, their voices drowned out by traditional structures. 

The Sustaining Community Women Movement for Peacebuilding and Humanitarian Response project, implemented by Youth Net and Counselling (YONECO) with support from the Women’s Peace and Humanitarian Fund (WPHF) through UN Women, has begun to rewrite that narrative. YONECO trained women chiefs and spouses of chiefs in conflict resolution, mediation, and peacebuilding. “I never thought I could stand in front of a crowd and speak with confidence,” admitted Mercy Msolomba from Mizinga in Machinga, one of the 30 women leaders who completed training in leadership, conflict analysis, advocacy, negotiation, and public speaking. “Now, I can negotiate, I can mediate, and people listen.” She said. Her words reflect a broader shift. Women, including chief’s wives, formed forums where mothers and girls feel safe to share their concerns. “At first we thought leadership was only for our husbands,” recalls Josephine Mbalika, Fumukazi Muthumpwa from Mkhumba in Phalombe. “But after training, we saw that we too are leaders.” She added. Armed with new skills, the women peacebuilders began to intervene in cases that previously went unheard. 

The result was transformative. When Amaluwasa’s case was reported to the women chiefs’ forum by her teacher, the forum visited her home, spoke with her parents, and explained the dangers of early marriage. The marriage was dissolved, and Amaluwasa returned to school. Nohakhelha has also returned to school following the intervention of a women peace circle. In another case, a 15-year-old girl impregnated by a 16-year-old schoolboy was sent to live with him. The women chiefs wrote to both families, mediated discussions, and ensured both children went back to school in Stola area in Machinga. Mercy Muhowa, a chief’s wife in Phalombe, has resolved nine cases since October 2025, ranging from child abuse to marital disputes, showing how women leaders are now trusted mediators in their communities. When cases are too complicated, the women’s forums refer the cases to the police and social welfare office.

Women peacebuilders are making a difference in their communities; they are raising awareness, changing norms, and proving that leadership is not defined by gender but by fairness and courage. Most importantly, women and girls feel freer to speak up, knowing there are leaders who will listen. Data from the program showed that more than 108 women across the two districts were trained, with chiefs’ spouses forming a significant portion of participants. In Phalombe, community-led interventions contributed to the dissolution of 65 child marriages, with 51 girls returning to school, reinforcing the protective environment for women and girls.


*Not real name

– on behalf of UN Women – Africa.

Media files

.

President Museveni Appoints New Deputy Chief Justice and Chief Registrar

Source: APO


.

The Presidential Press Unit (PPU) would like to inform the general public that the President of the Republic of Uganda, H.E Yoweri Kaguta Museveni has appointed Justice Moses Kazibwe Kawumi as the new Deputy Chief Justice.

President Museveni has also appointed Her Worship, Agnes Alum as the new Chief Registrar.

The name of the new Deputy Chief Justice has been sent to Parliament, awaiting approval.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of State House Uganda.

Investment pledges could create 230 000 jobs, says President Ramaphosa

Source: Government of South Africa

Investment pledges could create 230 000 jobs, says President Ramaphosa

President Cyril Ramaphosa says investment commitments secured through the South Africa Investment Conference (SAIC) are projected to create around 230 000 direct permanent jobs over time, as government intensifies efforts to tackle the country’s structural unemployment crisis. 

Responding to oral questions in the National Assembly on Thursday, President Ramaphosa said the 6th South Africa Investment Conference, held in March, secured a total of R890 billion in investment commitments.

According to the President, around R415 billion of the total came from private sector companies, while the remainder was pledged by development finance institutions and multilateral development banks.

“Of the 81 confirmed private sector investments, 53 companies submitted employment declarations at the time of signing.

“These 53 investments are projected by the companies to create approximately 230 000 direct permanent jobs,” President Ramaphosa said. 

The President noted, however, that not all investments generate employment at the same rate, with labour-intensive sectors producing more jobs than capital-intensive industries. 

“Labour-intensive investments in global business services and financial services generate approximately 3 900 jobs per R1 billion invested.

“However, capital-intensive sectors, such as renewable energy infrastructure and data centres, generate between 13 and 248 jobs per R1 billion investments,” he said. 

President Ramaphosa said several of the largest commitments, including investments by Sasol, MTN, Vodacom and Coca-Cola Beverages Africa, involve expansions of existing operations, helping sustain current jobs, while gradually increasing employment.

He said all investment pledges are being monitored through a quarterly implementation tracker to ensure projects move from commitments to execution.

The President acknowledged that South Africa’s unemployment challenge is deeply structural and cannot be resolved through investment attraction alone.

“The structural unemployment problem is rooted in skills mismatches, spatial economic concentration, slow growth of the formal private sector and barriers to small business formation,” he said.

President Ramaphosa said government’s broader economic strategy includes infrastructure investment, industrial policy reforms, skills development and efforts to remove barriers facing small businesses.

He also announced that government now aims to raise R3 trillion in new investment commitments over the next five years.

Flood victims remembered

The President took time to extend condolences to families affected by recent severe flooding across parts of the country.

“At least 10 lives have been lost and thousands of people have been displaced.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with the families mourning their loved ones, with those who have lost all they had and with the owners of businesses that have been destroyed.” 

He also thanked emergency personnel, disaster relief teams and community organisations assisting affected communities. – SAnews.gov.za 

DikelediM

13

President Ramaphosa extends Khampepe Commission term to December 2026

Source: Government of South Africa

President Ramaphosa extends Khampepe Commission term to December 2026

President Cyril Ramaphosa has extended the term of the judicial commission of inquiry investigating alleged attempts to block the investigation and prosecution of apartheid-era crimes. 

The Presidency announced on Thursday that the commission will now continue its work until 18 December 2026.

“President Cyril Ramaphosa has extended, until 18 December 2026, the term of the judicial commission of inquiry probing alleged attempts to prevent the investigation and prosecution of apartheid-era crimes,” the Presidency said. 

The commission, chaired by former Constitutional Court Justice Sisi Khampepe, was established by President Ramaphosa in May 2025.

According to the Presidency, the inquiry was formed to investigate “allegations regarding efforts or attempts having been made to stop the investigation or prosecution of Truth and Reconciliation Commission cases.”

The establishment of the commission followed settlement discussions in a court application brought by families of victims of apartheid-era crimes.

“The establishment of the commission of inquiry is part of an agreement reached in settlement discussions in a court application brought by families of victims of apartheid-era crimes,” the statement read. 

The commission is tasked with examining whether there were deliberate attempts to interfere with or delay investigations and prosecutions linked to cases emerging from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission process.

Commission requested more time

The Presidency said the commission recently approached the President requesting an extension in order to complete its work and submit a final report.

After considering submissions both supporting and opposing the extension, President Ramaphosa approved the request.

“Having considered the Commission’s request as well as submissions opposing and supporting the extension, President Ramaphosa has given the Commission until 18 December 2026 to submit its final report,” the Presidency said. – SAnews.gov.za

DikelediM

0

South Africa’s citrus industry becomes world’s top exporter

Source: Government of South Africa

South Africa’s citrus industry becomes world’s top exporter

Agriculture Minister John Steenhuisen has congratulated the country’s agricultural sector, following South Africa’s milestone achievement of becoming the world’s largest citrus exporter by volume.

According to the department, the country exported 2.9 million tons of citrus in 2025, surpassing long-standing leader Spain.

“This great achievement is one that should be celebrated by all South Africans. To overtake a citrus export giant like Spain, even by a small margin, is no easy feat. We are known for our world-class quality fruit and strict compliance with international plant health standards,” the Minister said in a statement on Thursday.

The Minister noted, however, that the figures reflect a unique set of global dynamics. While South Africa now leads in export volume, countries including China, Brazil and Spain continue to dominate in terms of total production, focusing heavily on their domestic markets.

He also pointed out that Spain’s export performance in 2025 was affected by increasingly complex climatic challenges, which contributed to the shift in global rankings.

Steenhuisen emphasised that South Africa and Spain play complementary roles in the international citrus market. Spain supplies fruit during the Northern Hemisphere season, while South Africa ensures continuity during the summer months.

This seasonal coordination ensures that consumers worldwide have year-round access to fresh citrus, thereby maintaining category stability and shelf presence.

The Minister also commended the Citrus Growers Association (CGA) for its strategic leadership in navigating a period of significant volatility.

He reaffirmed the Department of Agriculture’s commitment to expanding market access and reducing the trade costs.

“Our production growth must be met with intensified diplomacy and infrastructure support. We are continuously looking for new market opportunities while working to ensure that we expand our current markets,” Steenhuisen said. – SAnews.gov.za
 

 

GabiK

0

Government orders urgent evacuation of overwintering team at Marion Island

Source: Government of South Africa

Government orders urgent evacuation of overwintering team at Marion Island

The Minister of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment, Willie Aucamp, has ordered the urgent evacuation of the overwintering team at Marion Island, following the delayed departure of the SA Agulhas II relief voyage to Marion Island. 

With the weather in Cape Town having cleared, the helicopters that will evacuate the overwintering team were able to land on the vessel, which is now ready to sail. 

“The voyage delays were caused by the unavailability of crucial fuel products that are mixed with normal diesel and are used to create the special polar diesel required to keep the base running within extremely low outside temperatures that would crystallise normal diesel,” Aucamp said on Thursday.

He added that, due to uncertainty about when these fuel products would be available, the government could not wait any longer at the expense of the team’s well-being. 

“Our people’s lives come first,” the Minister said.

The team comprises experts from various disciplines, including meteorology, engineering, medicine, and communications. Each member plays a crucial role in ensuring the success of South Africa’s Antarctic research programme. 

After the Minister’s evacuation order, the vessel will now depart on 14 May 2026 and is expected to reach Marion Island on Monday, 18 May 2026. 

The crew is expected to be at the base for about three to five days before embarking on the voyage back to South Africa. 

They are expected to return to South Africa on 28 May 2026. The entire duration of the operation is highly dependent on weather conditions experienced at sea as well as at the base.

The Minister has assured the public, especially the overwintering team on base and their loved ones, that he and his department are working around the clock to ensure their safe return. 

To this end, the Minister has instructed that he must be updated regularly and he must also be debriefed by the overwintering team upon their return. 

Their valuable experience will assist the department in improving the overall experience of overwintering teams at all three South African bases located in remote areas.

The department will issue another update in due course. –SAnews.gov.za

nosihle

0

Gauteng Health warns against use of unregulated substances

Source: Government of South Africa

Gauteng Health warns against use of unregulated substances

The Gauteng Health Department has warned members of the public against using “unverified and unregulated injectable substances for body enhancement and sexual performance purposes”. 

This follows two serious cases of severe health complications reported at a health facility in Ekurhuleni.

“The cases, currently under investigation, involve two individuals who presented at a public health facility with severe complications, including organ failure, following the use of unregulated substances obtained through informal channels.

“These substances were reportedly administered for body enhancement purposes, including practices commonly referred to as ‘BBL’ procedures, as well as for sexual performance enhancement,” the department said in a statement.

The substances were allegedly “accessed outside regulated healthcare environments and, in some instances, are supplied directly to individuals together with equipment for self-administration”.

“The department reiterates that such products are not approved for human use and their composition remains unknown, posing significant risks to public health and safety.

“The department is working in collaboration with relevant regulatory and law enforcement authorities to trace the source and distribution of these substances and to ensure appropriate compliance and enforcement action is taken to prevent further incidents.

“Members of the public are urged to exercise caution and to avoid any injectable product that has not been prescribed and administered by a qualified healthcare professional,” the statement read.

Report the sale or distribution of unregistered medicines and related products to the South African Health Products Regulatory Authority (SAHPRA) at enquiries@sahpra.org.za or by calling 012 501 0300.

“The department is concerned about misleading claims associated with such products, including the notion that pain, swelling or burning following injection indicates effectiveness.

“These symptoms are, in fact, often indicative of serious underlying complications,” the statement warned. – SAnews.gov.za

NeoB

0

Government explores youth skills and student debt interventions

Source: Government of South Africa

Government explores youth skills and student debt interventions

President Cyril Ramaphosa says government is expanding youth skills development and workplace exposure programmes through the public service and the South African National Defence Force (SANDF), while also working on long-term solutions to the growing student debt crisis.

Replying to oral questions in the National Assembly on Thursday, President Ramaphosa said government departments are already implementing several programmes aimed at improving youth employability.

“These include learnerships, internships, apprenticeships, graduate recruitment schemes and workplace-based learning opportunities,” the President said.

He said the public service remains an important platform for youth development, with government considering additional initiatives to strengthen workplace exposure.

“Consideration is being given, for example, to strengthening workplace exposure opportunities by assigning youth participants to senior managers as adopted trainees,” he said.

President Ramaphosa said the Department of Public Service and Administration has launched exploratory programmes linked to the African Peer Review Mechanism, while the National School of Government is conducting training programmes for unemployed youth involved in special projects.

The President also highlighted the role of the SANDF in youth development initiatives.

“The SANDF supports the National Rural Youth Service Corps (NARYSEC), which aims to reduce unemployment among young people in rural communities through skills development, leadership training and community service,” he said.

He added that the South African National Service Institute is focused on assisting young people who are not in employment, education or training.

According to the President, 584 matriculants participated in a character-building programme in 2025, with 200 currently enrolled in an artisans programme sponsored by the Manufacturing, Engineering and Related Services Sector Education and Training Authority (MerSETA).

“The remaining students will be commencing with Health Promotion Officers training in three months,” he said.

Government working on student debt solutions

Meanwhile, President Ramaphosa acknowledged growing concern over student debt at universities, revealing that debt in the sector reached approximately R23 billion in the 2024 academic year.

He said government had previously intervened to provide debt relief for NSFAS-qualifying students, including a R967 million intervention in 2019.

“The National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS) supports close to 900 000 students a year from low-income and working-class families in accessing higher education,” the President said.

However, he noted that student debt remains a major challenge, particularly for the so-called “missing middle” students, who do not qualify for NSFAS but still struggle to afford tertiary education.

“This debt is not held by the government, but by public universities themselves,” he said.

President Ramaphosa said work is continuing on a comprehensive student funding model and a possible fee regulatory framework aimed at ensuring affordable and transparent tuition fees across the higher education sector.

The President said government is working with universities to better understand the extent of student debt in order to develop appropriate interventions. – SAnews.gov.za

DikelediM

0

North West drug accused 11 to appear in court 

Source: Government of South Africa

North West drug accused 11 to appear in court 

Eleven suspects arrested earlier this week in connection with the discovery of a multimillion-rand drug manufacturing laboratory on a farm in Swartruggens in the North West will make their first court appearance today.

“Eleven suspects are expected to make their first appearance before the Swartruggens Magistrate’s Court, this morning, on 15 May 2026, facing charges related to drug manufacturing, illegal possession of precious metals, illegal possession of hazardous materials and contravention of the Immigration Act,” the Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation (Hawks) said on Friday.

Their arrest follows an intelligence-driven operation conducted by Crime Intelligence Head Office, Organized Crime Head Office, and the Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation’s (DPCI) South African Narcotics Enforcement Bureau (SANEB) based at Head Office and other stakeholders.

The 11, who are made up of five Mexican nationals, two Mozambican nationals, one Zimbabwean national, and three South African citizens were nabbed on Wednesday, 13 May.

READ | 11 suspects arrested in major North West drug lab bust

“The operation led to the discovery of a large-scale illegal drug manufacturing facility believed to be involved in the production of methamphetamine. During the operation, law enforcement officers seized tons of equipment and chemicals used in the manufacturing of illegal drugs, as well as three firearms.

“Forensic experts are still processing the crime scene; however, approximately 481 kilograms of methamphetamine with an estimated street value amounting to millions of rands has thus far been confiscated. It is anticipated that the quantity may increase once the entire scene has been thoroughly processed. The estimated value of the illicit drug laboratory exceeds R1 billion,” said the Hawks in a statement.

Preliminary investigations indicate that the discovered laboratory is the fourth drug laboratory in South Africa with alleged Mexican links.

“At this stage, the owners of the property have not yet been located. However, the owner’s son and other relatives were among those arrested. The owners are currently required for questioning as investigations continue.”

The Hawks said that due to the sensitive nature of the ongoing investigation, certain information cannot be divulged at this stage and will be communicated in due course.

“Investigations remain ongoing,” said the Hawks. – SAnews.gov.za

Neo

5