17ᵉ Assemblée générale de l’Union Africaine de Radiodiffusion (UAR) & 20ème anniversaire de l’Union (14 – 17 avril 2026 à Banjul, Gambie)

Source: Africa Press Organisation – French

La 17ᵉ Assemblée générale de l’Union Africaine de Radiodiffusion (UAR) (https://www.UAR-AUB.org) qui coïncide cette année avec la célébration de son 20ème anniversaire , se tiendra du 14 au 17 avril 2026 à Banjul, en Gambie sous le thème : « UAR, 20 ans au service des médias africains : héritage, innovation et transformation », une réflexion stratégique sur le présent et l’avenir de l’écosystème médiatique du continent.

Dans un contexte mondial marqué par des transformations technologiques rapides, de nouveaux modes de consommation et des défis croissants pour les médias de service public et privés, l’UAR juge essentiel de promouvoir un espace de dialogue qui valorise l’héritage des diffuseurs africains, stimule l’innovation et renforce les transformations institutionnelles nécessaires pour répondre aux exigences du 21ᵉ siècle.

Cette rencontre de haut niveau réunira des Directeurs généraux de médias, des représentants de l’industrie de la radiodiffusion, des télédiffuseurs, des autorités gouvernementales, des confédérations sportives, des experts, des universitaires, des créateurs de contenus provenant de tout le continent et d’ailleurs, ainsi que des représentants d’unions sœurs, partenaires et autres acteurs stratégiques.

Cette rencontre de haut niveau sera l’occasion d’examiner en profondeur les questions majeures qui structurent l’avenir de la radiodiffusion africaine, notamment :

  • Le bilan des 20 ans de l’UAR,
  • La problématique des coûts exorbitants des droits sportifs,
  • L’identification de nouvelles sources de financement pour nos médias,
  • Les innovations et les transformations technologiques enregistrées  au sein des médias africains.

L’Assemblée générale culminera avec la grande soirée de gala des AUB MEDIA AWARDS, un rendez-vous d’une portée exceptionnelle devenu incontournable sur la scène continentale. Au cours de cet événement, nous célèbrerons avec faste non seulement les 20 ans d’existence de l’Union Africaine de Radiodiffusion, mais aussi l’excellence et la créativité des professionnels de l’audiovisuel. Plus qu’une simple célébration, ce gala sera l’occasion d’une collecte de fonds décisive pour soutenir la Fondation AFAC, notre entité dédiée à la lutte contre le cancer par les médias.

L’Union Africaine de Radiodiffusion, forte de ses 85 membres, est la plus grande organisation de médias de radiodiffusion en Afrique. Elle regroupe des diffuseurs publics et privés d’Afrique et d’ailleurs. Sa mission est de développer l’ensemble des segments de l’industrie télévisuelle et radiophonique sur le continent africain. L’UAR œuvre activement à la promotion de contenus authentiquement africains grâce à sa plateforme de distribution, AUBVision et l’ensemble de son réseau numérique.

Grégoire NDJAKA
Directeur Général 

Distribué par APO Group pour African Union of Broadcasting (AUB).

Contact presse :
contact@uar-aub.org
+221 33 821 16 25

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17ª Assembleia Geral da União Africana de Radiodifusão (UAR) e 20º Aniversário da União (14 a 17 de abril de 2026 em Banjul, Gâmbia)

Source: Africa Press Organisation – Portuguese –

A 17ª Assembleia Geral da União Africana de Radiodifusão (UAR) (https://www.UAR-AUB.org), que coincide este ano com a celebração do seu 20º aniversário, realizar-se-á de 14 a 17 de abril de 2026 em Banjul, Gâmbia, sob o tema: “UAR, 20 Anos ao Serviço dos Media Africanos: Herança, Inovação e Transformação”, uma reflexão estratégica sobre o presente e o futuro do ecossistema dos media no continente.

Num contexto global marcado por rápidas transformações tecnológicas, novos padrões de consumo e crescentes desafios para os meios de comunicação de serviço público e privado, a União Africana de Radiodifusão (UAR) considera essencial promover um espaço de diá. que valorize o legado das emissoras africanas, estimule a inovação e fortaleça as transformações institucionais necessárias para responder às exigências do século XXI.

Este encontro de alto nível reunirá executivos dos meios de comunicação social, representantes da indústria da radiodifusão, estações de televisão, autoridades governamentais, confederações desportivas, especialistas, académicos, criadores de conteúdos de todo o continente e de outros continentes, bem como representantes de sindicatos parceiros, parceiros e outras partes interessadas estratégicas.

Este encontro de alto nível proporcionará uma oportunidade para examinar em profundidade as principais questões que moldam o futuro da radiodifusão africana, incluindo:

  • Uma retrospectiva dos 20 anos de existência da UAR,
  • O problema dos custos exorbitantes dos direitos desportivos,
  • A identificação de novas fontes de financiamento para os nossos veículos de comunicação,
  • As inovações e transformações tecnológicas em curso nos media africanos.

A Assembleia Geral culminará na grande gala dos AUB MEDIA AWARDS, um evento de proporções excecionais que se tornou imperdível no panorama continental. Durante este evento, celebraremos não só o 20º aniversário da União Africana de Radiodifusão (UAR), mas também a excelência e a criatividade dos profissionais do audiovisual. Mais do que uma simples celebração, esta gala será um evento crucial de angariação de fundos para apoiar a Fundação AFAC, a nossa entidade dedicada à luta contra o cancro através dos meios de comunicação social.

A União Africana de Radiodifusão (UAR), com os seus 85 membros, é a maior organização de comunicação social de radiodifusão em África. Reúne emissoras públicas e privadas de África e de outros continentes. A sua missão é desenvolver todos os segmentos da indústria da televisão e da rádio em todo o continente africano. A UAR promove ativamente conteúdos genuinamente africanos através da sua plataforma de distribuição, AUBVision, e de toda a sua rede digital.

Grégoire NDJAKA
Director Geral

Distribuído pelo Grupo APO para African Union of Broadcasting (AUB).

Contacto para a imprensa:
contact@uar-aub.org
+221 33 821 16 25

Media files

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Plant-powered plates: Emirates shifts focus for vegan cuisine to meet customers’ desire for minimally processed food

Source: APO

As global consumers increasingly focus on nutrition, health and wellbeing with a back-to-basics approach of consuming minimally processed food, this Veganuary Emirates (www.Emirates.com) confirms new concepts are in development to celebrate real, whole, and farm-to-fork plant foods. The current development project sees a team of chefs create dishes that feel authentic, vibrant and rooted in culinary tradition, without replacing typical proteins with engineered plant-based meats and substitutes. The new dishes are set to be onboard for customers in 2027.

Emirates Vice President of Food & Beverage Design, Doxis Bekris, confirms the philosophy;

‘Our focus now is on legumes, grains, nuts, seeds, and seasonal vegetables as the heroes of the plate. These ingredients offer natural depth of flavour, texture, and nutrition without relying on ultra-processed alternatives. Instead of replicating meat, we want to draw from cuisines that have always been plant-forward like Mediterranean mezze, Levantine grain salads, Asian noodle bowls, and African stews such as South African chakalaka, Kenyan sukuma wiki, Ugandan groundnut stew, Tunisian lablabi, Senegalese thieboudienne, Ivorian attiéké with vegetables, Guinean peanut stew, , Egyptian koshari, and Tanzanian mchicha. In our view, this approach feels genuine and culturally rich.

‘Although there are many commendable lab-based alternatives available, real food aligns with our sustainability goals and guest expectations for health-conscious choices. It’s about transparency for our customers who want to know what they’re eating, as well as have confidence that it’s good for them and the planet. We want to shift from substitutes to a celebration of plants, where it’s not about what’s missing – but instead what is gained in authenticity, flavour, and creativity.’

Emirates serves half a million vegan meals each year across Africa and globally

Emirates now has 488 vegan recipes in rotation across 140 destinations, representing a 60% increase in total recipes from 2024 and showing dedication to vegan customers.

Emirates currently serves half a million vegan meals each year. Vegan meal consumption grows in line with passenger volume increases, and last year the top destinations with customers ordering vegan meals were London in first place, followed by Sydney, Bangkok, Melbourne, Frankfurt, Manchester, Mumbai, Bali and Singapore. Emirates attributes some of the demand to non-vegan customers opting for vegan cuisine when flying, as a lighter option often considered easier to digest. Across its African markets, Emirates notes growing demand for vegan meals in South Africa, Kenya, Uganda, Tunisia, Senegal, Côte d’Ivoire, Guinea, , Egypt and Tanzania, reflecting increased interest in plant-based cuisine across the continent.

Vegan options are available to order and pre-order onboard, as well as in Emirates Lounges. Customers can request vegan meals on all Emirates flights and across all classes of travel up to 24 hours before departure. However, on high-demand routes, plant-based meals are also provided as part of the main menu options.

Emirates’ vegan cuisine in every class

Highlighting its commitment to culinary excellence for all customers, Emirates offers vegan meals across all classes, as well as complementary products like vegan milk. Supporting the farm-to-fork philosophy, Emirates incorporates fresh produce from Bustanica – the world’s largest hydroponic vertical farm. The farm is a joint venture with Emirates Flight Catering that delivers pesticide and chemical-free leafy greens like lettuce, arugula, mixed salad greens, and spinach, directly to Emirates’ catering facilities.

In Economy class, Emirates customers can enjoy dishes like pumpkin frittata with sautéed mushrooms and tomato concassé, or spinach cannelloni served with tomato basil sauce, toasted crumbs and parsley, and desserts like vegan chocolate mousse cake drizzled in chocolate sauce and biscuit crumbs, or carrot cake dashed with coconut cream.

In Premium Economy class, customers choosing vegan cuisine will be served dishes like kimchi fried rice served with roasted pumpkin and sautéed oyster mushrooms, followed by desserts like coconut cake with pineapple compote and pistachios.

In Business class, a range of creatively curated dishes is offered, including braised mushrooms with vegetables in five-spice soy sauce, served with steamed jasmine rice and blanched pak choi. Customers who have room for dessert can feast on coconut panna cotta with raspberry mousse with fresh berries or chocolate tofu cheesecake.

In First class, customers will be treated to elevated vegan cuisine like pumpkin and barley risotto served with rocket, caramelised walnuts, vinaigrette and vegan cheese. Dishes offering a burst of flavours include quinoa salad with grilled aubergine, courgette, sautéed Swiss chard and red pepper coulis. Decadent desserts include strawberry tart with vanilla custard and pistachios, served with berry compote, or a tempting sticky date pudding served with salted caramel sauce, vegan cream cheese, candied pecans and almond butter.

Crafted vegan options in Emirates’ Lounges Dubai

At Dubai International Airport, Emirates has 7 lounges located in its flagship Terminal 3 – 3 for First Class and 3 for Business Class customers, as well as the Emirates’ Lounge catering to all premium customers. The lounges offer a wide array of vegan options, from Baharat and turmeric-spiced kofta in coconut gravy at the buffet area, to an à la carte breakfast of warm amaranth porridge with compressed green apples, red grapes, raspberries and walnuts in the First-Class Lounge, amongst many others. In addition to an array of popular vegan salads, the most in-demand vegan dish in the lounges is the Emirates Green Burger – a soya and flaxseed green burger, with a signature sauce and pickled cucumbers.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of The Emirates Group.

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17th General Assembly of the African Union of Broadcasting (AUB) & 20th Anniversary of the Union (14-17 April 2026 in Banjul, The Gambia)

Source: APO

The 17th General Assembly of the African Union of Broadcasting (AUB) (https://www.UAR-AUB.org), coinciding this year with its 20th anniversary, will be held from April 14 to 17, 2026, in Banjul, The Gambia, under the theme: “AUB, 20 Years Serving African Media: Heritage, Innovation and Transformation,” a strategic reflection on the present and future of the continent’s media ecosystem.

In a global context marked by rapid technological transformations, new consumption patterns, and growing challenges for public and private service media, the AUB considers it essential to promote a space for dialogue that values ​​the heritage of African broadcasters, stimulates innovation, and strengthens the institutional transformation necessary to meet the demands of the 21st century.

This high-level meeting will bring together media executives, representatives from the broadcast industry, government authorities, sports confederations, experts, academics, content creators from across the continent and beyond, as well as representatives from sister unions, partners and other strategic stakeholders.

This high-level meeting will provide an opportunity to examine in depth the major issues shaping the future of African broadcasting including:

  • Review of the AUB’s 20 years of existence,
  • Challenge of exorbitant cost of sports rights,
  • Identifying new sources of funding for our media outlets,
  • Innovation and technological transformation in the African media.

The General Assembly will culminate in the grand AUB MEDIA AWARDS gala, an event of exceptional scope that has become a must-attend on the continental stage. During this event, AUB will celebrate the 20th anniversary of the African Broadcasting Union, and the excellence and creativity of audiovisual professionals. More than just a celebration, this gala will be a crucial fundraising event to support the AUB Foundation Against Cancer (AFAC), which is dedicated to fighting cancer through media.

The African Union of Broadcasting (ABU), with its 85 members, is the largest broadcasting media organization in Africa. It brings together public and private broadcasters from Africa and beyond. Its mission is to develop all segments of the television and radio industry across the African continent. The AUB actively promotes authentic African content through its distribution platform, AUBVision, and its entire digital network.

Grégoire NDJAKA
Director General

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Union of Broadcasting (AUB).

Media Contact:
contact@uar-aub.org
+221 33 821 16 25

Media files

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Address by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the 2026 Basic Education Sector Lekgotla, Birchwood Hotel and Conference Centre, Ekurhuleni, Gauteng

Source: President of South Africa –

Programme Director,
Minister of Basic Education, Ms Siviwe Gwarube,
Deputy Minister of Basic Education, Dr Reginah Mhaule,
Minister of Higher Education and Training, Mr Buti Manamela,
Deputy Minister of Science and Innovation, Dr Nomalungelo Gina,
Director-General of Basic Education, Mr Mathanzima Mweli,
Director-General for Higher Education and Training, Dr Nkosinathi Sishi,
President of Education International, Dr Mugwena Maluleke,
MECs and Members of Parliament,
Representatives of Teacher Unions,
Representatives of SGB Associations,
Representatives of COSAS,
Representatives of higher education institutions, education organisations, civil society and business,
Ladies and gentlemen,

Ndi matsheloni. Molweni. Avuxeni. 

As we gather here, our nation is consumed by sorrow.

Two days ago, 14 children lost their lives on their way to school in a most horrific accident.

We mourn this loss deeply and extend our condolences to the families, teachers and classmates of the children who lost their lives. We wish those who were injured in the crash a speedy recovery.

We cannot accept that young lives are put at risk as they seek the growth and enrichment that an education provides.

We cannot let this tragedy pass. We need to act now and we need to act together to ensure that scholar transport is safe and reliable.

I ask that we stand to observe a moment’s silence in memory of the young lives lost.

I am deeply honoured to once again be part of the Basic Education Sector Lekgotla. 

Education is the engine of development.

Through education we lift our people out of poverty and we overcome inequality. 

The National Development Plan (NDP) envisages an education system in which all learners are equipped with strong foundational skills in literacy, numeracy and science.

This enables them to succeed in later years of schooling and to participate meaningfully in the economy and in society. 

As a country, our commitment to a resilient and capable education system must begin where it matters most: in the early grades, where the foundations for all future learning are laid. 

Strengthening early grade reading and numeracy is a national priority and moral imperative. 

When children do not learn to read for meaning or to work confidently with numbers by the end of the Foundation Phase, the cost is borne by the entire education system.

Unless we get it right at the outset, learners spend the rest of their school careers trying to catch up. 

We see this in repetition, dropout, weak progression and the tragic loss of human potential. 

For this reason, we are intensifying our focus on evidence-based teaching of literacy and numeracy. 

We are working to ensure that every classroom is supported by a coherent curriculum and well-trained teachers.

And that every classroom has high-quality, age-appropriate, grade-specific and culturally relevant learning and teaching support materials.

By investing in foundational learning, we are building a resilient education system that can sustain learning, adapt to shocks and equip every child with the skills needed to thrive in a rapidly changing world. 

There is much we can learn and achieve through collaboration with other countries.

We are delighted to be part of the Head of States Network on Foundational Learning, which was formed during the recent G20 Education meetings, and brings together India, Brazil and South Africa. 

We also stand to benefit immensely from the lessons of our BRICS partners, enabling us to confront shared challenges and advance our common mission to strengthen foundational learning. 

The National Senior Certificate results of 2025 reinforce our view that without strong foundations in the early years, inequality re-emerges later in the schooling system. 

Over the past 30 years, the Department has achieved a remarkable turnaround. 

Three decades ago, only around half of learners obtained a matric certificate.

Last year, 88 percent of learners attained the National Senior Certificate. 

Even more encouraging is that over the past decade the education sector has doubled the number of learners qualifying for admission to Bachelor Studies.

Perhaps the most profound achievement of the Class of 2025 is what I would describe as a silent revolution. Over 66 percent of learners who qualified for admission to bachelor studies came from no-fee schools. 

This means we are making great advances in our struggle against poverty. 

It means that over 200,000 learners from the poorest households now have access to higher education and the possibilities it presents. 

Over half a million learners who are social grant recipients attained the National Senior Certification. Of these, 250,000 qualified for admission to Bachelor Studies.

We are encouraged by the fact that 90 percent of learners with special education needs passed matric and 52 percent achieved bachelor passes, both higher than the national average.

This underscores the importance of sustaining Government’s commitment to supporting marginalised learners and creating equal opportunities for success.

While we applaud these achievements, we must be concerned about the slow pace of growth in vocational and occupational education. 

Vocational and occupational education plays a vital role in preparing people, especially the youth, for the world of work, enhancing economic growth and promoting social equity. 

By focusing on practical skills the economy needs, it contributes to building capable and adaptable workers who meet the demands of a rapidly changing economy.

Our economy urgently needs these skills to drive our country’s growth. 

Basic education must play a stronger role in preparing learners for a skills revolution . 

We must intensify our efforts to partner with various sectors of the economy to strengthen our collective contribution to vocational education. 

As we strive to improve the quality of our matric results, we must work harder to ensure that more children complete their schooling.

It is distressing that nearly half a million children who entered grade one in 2014 left school before reaching their matric year in 2025. 

Most of these learners dropped out between grades 10 and 12.

We call on the department, teachers, parents and communities to counsel learners who are contemplating leaving and to work together to ensure that learners complete their schooling.

We need to pay attention to the reasons learners drop out – from financial pressure to poor academic performance to increasing domestic responsibilities – and provide psychosocial support to those facing challenges in their home situation. 

While there is much focus on matric results, solid foundations in early learning – from birth to nine years – is essential. 

It provides the foundational knowledge, skills and attitudes required for successful onward learning and for lifelong development.

Early learning must be firmly anchored at the core of our education system. 

Early learning lays the groundwork for cognitive, social and emotional development. Children who receive quality early education are better prepared for future learning experiences.

Establishing early learning as a core component of the education system is essential for nurturing well-rounded, capable young people who can thrive academically, socially and economically. 

By investing in early childhood education, our country can foster stronger communities, support equitable access to education and promote lifelong success for all children.

We must prioritise real-time programmes on reading and literacy so that we do not wait five years to understand whether we are making progress. 

This demands a bold shift in approach: to rethink and reimagine early learning, to embed it within the basic education system, and to ensure that early childhood development is treated as a core pillar of educational success.

If we invest early, we invest wisely. 

And so today, I call on all partners – Government, civil society, the private sector and communities – to join hands in this mission. 

Let us make foundational learning the heartbeat of our education system. 

Together, we can ensure that every child in South Africa is ready for the future.

Quality education is impossible without safe and healthy learning environments. 

Schools must be free of violence. They must be nurturing and supportive. 

We must invest in safety, health, nutrition and psychosocial support. 

We must build on the success of the National School Nutrition Programme. 

Today, it nourishes the minds and bodies of close to 10 million learners across our country. 

Good nutrition strengthens punctuality, attendance, concentration, resilience and overall well-being.

We must work to ensure that no child’s learning is compromised by preventable illness, hunger or neglect of their well-being.

In line with the commitments made during the 2025 State of the Nation Address, we gather here to reaffirm our collective resolve to quality and inclusive education. 

Central to this mission is the strengthening of foundational learning through the continued and expanded rollout of Mother Tongue-Based Bilingual Education across all provinces.

Globally, strong literacy and numeracy outcomes are rooted in learners’ mother tongues. 

Our own data confirms the historical advantage that this approach has afforded English and Afrikaans learners. 

Since 1996, our Constitution has enshrined multilingualism as a social, educational and economic norm.

By the end of 2025, nearly 12,000 schools had access to Mother Tongue-Based Bilingual Education. 

The Department is working to expand teacher training in appropriate methodologies, ensuring curriculum and assessment alignment, and integrating language development across literacy and numeracy.

Mother Tongue-Based Bilingual Education faces many challenges, from resource constraints to negative attitudes to African languages.

But these can be overcome through sustained advocacy and mobilisation across society.

Underpinning our quest for quality education is the central role of teachers. 

We must do more to prepare and support our teachers to work effectively in an evolving school environment, while at the same time safeguarding their well-being and professional dignity.

We must plan with teachers. Support them to deliver.

Teachers must have access to high-quality professional development that equips them for a rapidly changing world.

In that way, we can ensure that there is a competent teacher in front of every learner.

The education portfolio is vast, complex and diverse. 

No single institution or department can succeed alone. 

Partnership and collaboration are essential.

We must seek out partners that can guide, challenge and support us in delivering the quality and impact that our nation expects.

The Department of Basic Education must continue to mobilise resources through government channels and strategic partnerships to ensure sustainable implementation from early childhood development through the entire schooling system.

By confronting the literacy crisis, restoring the dignity and value of all home languages, strengthening foundational learning, and investing in teachers and enabling environments, we are laying a firmer foundation for learner success.

In doing so, we are not only transforming education. 

We are building a resilient, inclusive and future-ready education system worthy of all the children of South Africa.

I thank you.

Booysens court shooting condemned

Source: Government of South Africa

Booysens court shooting condemned

The Gauteng Provincial Legislature’s Portfolio Committee on Community Safety has condemned the fatal shooting outside the Booysens Magistrate’s Court on Tuesday.

The incident claimed the lives of at least two people while three others were left injured.

The committee called for accountability from security officials that were present at the court.

“The committee is deeply disturbed that armed suspects were able to approach and unleash gunfire at the entrance of a magistrate’s court, a national key point and a legally designated gun-free zone.

“Such a grave lapse raises urgent questions about security protocols and the performance of the contracted private security company responsible for safeguarding the premises.

“These failures are not minor oversights, they are costly and, in this case, they have cost lives. The committee insists that the security company be held fully accountable for its role in this breach,” a committee said in a statement.

This is the latest in several incidents at judicial facilities, with similar incidents occurring at the Athlone, Mitchells Plain and Wynberg Magistrate’s Courts in the Western Cape and another incident at Melmoth Court in KwaZulu-Natal – all in the span of last year.

“This reckless act of violence represents a direct attack on the rule of law and public safety, demonstrating a growing boldness among criminals who show no regard for human life or the authority of state institutions.

“The incident also reinforces the committee’s long-standing concern about the proliferation of illegal firearms in Gauteng.

“The ease with which firearms are accessed and used to commit violent crimes strengthens our call for decisive, coordinated action toward achieving a gun free Gauteng, supported by stronger intelligence-led policing and tighter firearm controls,” said the committee.

Law enforcement is called upon to ensure that the perpetrators are apprehended.

“Those who terrorise communities and undermine the justice system must learn that the law will prevail.

“The committee further urges members of the public with any information that may assist in the investigation to come forward. Community cooperation remains essential in the fight against violent crime.

“We extend our deepest condolences to the families of the deceased and wish a full and speedy recovery to those injured in this senseless attack,” the statement read. – SAnews.gov.za

 

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Government intensifies work to review scholar transport

Source: Government of South Africa

Government intensifies work to review scholar transport

Government is working on reviewing legislation governing scholar transport with a view to make the sector safer and more secure for learners.

This according to Gauteng Premier Panyaza Lesufi who held a media briefing on Tuesday afternoon in the wake of a horrific accident which claimed the lives of 12 children on Monday.

The taxi transporting the children were in crashed into an oncoming truck while they were on their way to school.

“An incident of this magnitude calls for a review of some of our legislation, regulations and the support system in this sector. The MEC responsible for transport and the MEC of education have been assigned to come with proposals that will assist us to ensure that we eliminate this kind of behaviour within the transport sector.

“Once more, our sincere condolences to the families and speedy recovery for those that are still within our hospitals,” Gauteng Premier Panyaza Lesufi said.

Basic Education Minister Siviwe Gwarube – who was also at the media briefing – noted that daily, hundreds of thousands of children are transported to school by government sanctioned scholar transport.

She added that the Department of Basic Education and the Department of Transport have been working to “collaborate to see how best we can regulate this sector”.

“Over 700 000 children in the basic education sector are transported by scholar transport. So, while we may be able to do checks on the carriers of learners, the reality is that there are private arrangements that we don’t know about. That’s why it’s become important that we work not only with the provinces, but with the Department of Transport that has already come on board.

“It’s very important that we note that while we want to review a lot of some of the policy regulations around scholar transport, over 80% of the incidents that happen on our road are due to driver error.

“It is because of motorists who are not behaving well on the roads. Who are not adhering to the rules of the road. We can’t keep coming to families and sending condolences and saying we are deeply sorry,” the Minister said.

Government, the local community and private sector have come together to support the bereaved families.

“We are a sector in absolute mourning. We are mourning the loss of innocent lives of our young ones. I want to assure South Africans that government, from a local level, provincial level and national level, will ensure that all families are supported. Psycho-social support has already been activated so that we can make sure that families are supported.

“This psycho-social support is also extended to the schools, learners and educators of those children. That’s important to understand that even our schooling community is in mourning.

“This has been a community in mourning but this has also been a community that has rallied around these families,” Gwarube said.

Meanwhile, the 22-year-old driver of the taxi which caused the accident has been arrested and was found to have been driving with an expired professional driving permit (PDP) at the time of the accident.

According to police, the suspect will appear in the Vanderbijlpark Magistrate’s Court soon.

“He was arrested after he was discharged from hospital. He is…facing charges of 12 counts of culpable homicide and reckless and negligent driving.

“After the police visited the hospitals and the mortuary to verify the number of fatalities and injuries, it can be confirmed that 12 learners died at the accident scene and five were taken to the nearest hospitals for medical treatment, of which one has since been discharged.

“The driver of the truck that was involved in the accident escaped unharmed while the passenger sustained injuries and was receiving treatment in hospital,” a police statement read. – SAnews.gov.za

 

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Koeberg Nuclear Power Station operating safely, says Eskom

Source: Government of South Africa

Koeberg Nuclear Power Station operating safely, says Eskom

Eskom has moved to assure the public and stakeholders that Koeberg Nuclear Power Station continues to operate safely and securely.

This after the power utility reduced the station’s two units from full power to 100MW each following a fault on the 132kV transmission lines Pinotage transmission substation near Stellenbosch.

“Eskom confirms that this was an expected response under such circumstances, designed to protect the integrity of the power station and the national grid.

“Eskom further confirms that both nuclear reactors were not affected by this incident. The National Nuclear Regulator has been duly informed of the incident,” the power utility said.

The reduction did not impact the stability of the power system.

“Importantly, there is no risk of loadshedding due to adequate national generation reserves and the National Transmission Company South Africa has given approval for Koeberg Nuclear Power Station to begin increasing the power output of both units.

“Eskom assures the public and stakeholders that Koeberg Nuclear Power Station continues to operate safely and securely, and that all necessary regulatory and operational protocols are being followed,” Eskom said. – SAnews.gov.za

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Gauteng strengthens enforcement of road safety regulations

Source: Government of South Africa

Gauteng strengthens enforcement of road safety regulations

The Gauteng Department of Roads and Transport says it is ramping up road safety interventions through stronger enforcement of existing legislation, adoption of technology and stricter compliance with the National Road Traffic Act (NRTA) and National Land Transport Act (NLTA).

This comes after 12 learners died while they were being transported to school in a Toyota Quantum on Monday morning when the vehicle collided with a truck in Vanderbijlpark in the Vaal, Gauteng.

“We will not compromise when it comes to the safety of our children. Any scholar transport operator who puts learners at risk will face serious consequences,” MEC for Roads and Transport Kedibone Diale-Tlabela said on Tuesday. 

As Gauteng’s road traffic law and safety authority, the department is building its internal legal capacity and creating an updated online repository of road traffic regulations, so road users know their rights and responsibilities.

“Road safety is a shared responsibility. Government will enforce the laws; however parents, operators, drivers, and pedestrians must also play their part in ensuring that everyone is safe and arrives alive,” Diale-Tlabela said.

Government has encouraged parents, learners and motorists to report reckless driving, unsafe behaviour, and unroadworthy scholar transport vehicles through lawful channels (012 999 5407/086 140 0800). 

Where feasible and safe, video evidence may assist authorities identify non-compliant operators and drivers. 

The department further encouraged operators and parents to have dashboard cameras installed for real-time monitoring.

In line with the department’s road safety campaign, it will strictly enforce Section 49 of the National Road Traffic Act (NRTA) which places a statutory duty on the operator of a motor vehicle to ensure:

  • The vehicle is roadworthy and mechanically safe.
  • The driver operates the vehicle lawfully and safely.
  • Passengers are transported without endangerment.
  • Safe loading and unloading of passengers.

The campaign forms part of the province’s contribution to the national department’s 365 Day Road Safety and Arrive Alive programmes.

Enforcement consequences are now correctly framed as:

  • Enforcement actions under the NRTA.
  • Potential suspension or loss of operator status based on NRTA non-compliance.

The department further reaffirms key NRTA regulations governing pedestrian behaviour:

  • Regulation 323(2): Pedestrians are prohibited from entering or walking on freeways, except where permitted by law.
  • Regulation 315: Pedestrians must cross at designated points and obey road traffic signs and signals. 
  • Regulation 316(5): This regulation addresses unlawful and dangerous pedestrian behaviour, including jaywalking. – SAnews.gov.za

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Remarks by Deputy Minister in The Presidency, Nonceba Mhlauli, on the occasion of the Statistics South Africa Integrated Business Planning Session, Kopanong Conference Centre

Source: President of South Africa –

Statistician General, Risenga Maluleke,
Leadership of Statistics South Africa,
Colleagues,

As we begin a new year and prepare for the new financial cycle ahead, I would like to take this opportunity to wish you and your families a productive, healthy, and successful year. May 2026 be a year of clarity, impact, and renewed purpose in the important work that you do.

I am honoured to join you today as you finalise your preparations and plans for the new financial year, commencing in April. These planning sessions are critical moments where reflection meets foresight, and where evidence is translated into action.

As we begin this planning cycle, it is important to situate our work within the broader policy architecture of Government. All our plans, programmes, and priorities are anchored in the Medium-Term Development Plan, the MTDP, which serves as the central strategic framework guiding the work of the 7th Administration.

The MTDP is not an abstract policy instrument. It is a practical roadmap that translates electoral mandates into measurable outcomes, sets national priorities, and provides the basis for accountability across Government. It is therefore essential that the Integrated Business Planning of Statistics South Africa is fully aligned to the MTDP, ensuring that the data we produce directly supports national planning, monitoring, and evaluation.

In this regard, Statistics South Africa occupies a unique and indispensable position. The MTDP relies on credible, timely, and high-quality statistics to track progress, identify risks early, and enable corrective action where implementation falls short. Without reliable data, the MTDP cannot succeed, and without Stats SA, evidence-led governance cannot be realised.

The importance of Statistics South Africa cannot be overstated. Every sector of our economy and society relies on credible, scientific evidence to create clarity and enable informed, responsible decision-making. In many respects, the work you do forms the backbone of effective governance, economic planning, and social development.

We are living in profoundly VUCA times. Volatility, uncertainty, complexity, and ambiguity define our global and national context. The pace of change is relentless, risks are increasingly interconnected, and shocks are no longer isolated events. The Global Risks Report released this week by the World Economic Forum reminds us that climate instability, geopolitical tensions, economic fragility, technological disruption, and misinformation are converging in ways that continue to test institutions and leadership worldwide.

In such an environment, now more than ever, decision-making must be anchored in scientific, informed, and credible data. Intuition alone is no longer sufficient. Opinion is no substitute for evidence. Policy, planning, and investment choices that are not data-driven risk being ineffective at best and harmful at worst.

In a world overflowing with information and changing daily, it is you, the statisticians, data scientists, analysts, administrators, and researchers, who transform complexity into understanding and uncertainty into direction.

Statistics is not simply about numbers. It is the language of progress. It is the foundation of accountability. It is the compass that guides industries, institutions, and communities toward better choices. Every dataset you clean, every model you test, every trend you uncover contributes to something far greater than a report or a spreadsheet. It contributes to trust, something our country needs now more than ever.

It is this trust that gives Statistics South Africa a competitive and strategic advantage within the broader data ecosystem. This is an important position to hold and one that comes with both responsibility and influence.

We live in an era where evidence must compete with opinion, where misinformation spreads faster than insight, and where narratives can overshadow facts. Yet time and again, your work lights the path forward. You help government allocate resources more fairly and competently. You help us plan for a more resilient future. You enable businesses to innovate more intelligently. You support academic institutions in re-skilling the next generation of leaders. Ultimately, you help society understand itself accurately, honestly, and with precision.

But our work is far from finished.

The realities we face today demand even more from us. Global and national climate patterns are shifting dramatically. We see this clearly in the recent flooding in Limpopo and Mpumalanga, where lives have tragically been lost. At the same time, we continue to grapple with persistent challenges such as the school placement crisis, where many children remain without access to education despite the availability of data that should guide effective planning and early intervention.

SG Maluleke and fellow colleagues, while we celebrate the critical role that Statistics South Africa plays, we must also speak honestly about the challenges that continue to surface in Parliament and oversight forums.

Members of Parliament have consistently raised concerns regarding the vacancy rate within Statistics South Africa. Capacity constraints, particularly in specialised and technical areas, place real pressure on the institution’s ability to deliver on its expanding mandate. A strong statistical system requires skilled people, institutional memory, and stability.

Funding constraints have also been a recurring issue. Parliament has repeatedly emphasised that the sustainability of the national statistical system cannot be taken for granted. Underfunding does not only affect outputs. It affects data quality, innovation, responsiveness, and the ability of Stats SA to keep pace with emerging demands such as big data, predictive analytics, and integrated data systems.

In addition, the implementation of the Statistics Amendment Act remains a matter of keen interest to Parliament. The Act strengthens the coordination of official statistics across the state and reinforces the authority of the Statistician-General. Effective implementation is therefore essential to reduce duplication, improve coherence, and build a truly integrated national statistical system.

These are not criticisms for their own sake. They are signals from Parliament that Statistics South Africa matters, that expectations are high, and that the institution is seen as a cornerstone of a capable and developmental state.

As the Executive, we take these matters seriously. Addressing capacity, funding sustainability, and legislative implementation is not optional. It is fundamental to ensuring that Stats SA can continue to serve Cabinet, Parliament, and the people of South Africa with credibility and excellence.

Colleagues, the priorities of the 7th Administration are clear and deliberate. Cabinet has committed itself to accelerating inclusive economic growth, reducing poverty and inequality, strengthening state capability, improving service delivery, and restoring public trust in institutions.

Central to these priorities is the ability of the State to plan effectively, allocate resources strategically, and measure impact honestly. This is where Statistics South Africa becomes a strategic partner to Cabinet, not merely a technical institution.

Whether we are focusing on employment creation, infrastructure development, social protection, education outcomes, health systems, or spatial inequality, Cabinet decisions are only as good as the data that informs them. Stats SA provides the evidence base that allows Cabinet to prioritise correctly, intervene decisively, and assess whether policy choices are delivering real change in people’s lives.

As the 7th Administration intensifies its focus on implementation, impact, and accountability, the demand for high-quality, disaggregated, and timely data will only grow. Your work is therefore not peripheral to the Cabinet agenda. It is central to it.

This raises important questions for all of us.

What is the role of Statistics South Africa in ensuring that data does not simply exist, but meaningfully informs planning and decision-making? Should we, as a country, be leveraging our statistical capabilities more assertively in predictive analytics and scenario planning to anticipate risks, allocate resources proactively, and strengthen long-term resilience?

As technology accelerates, as challenges become more interconnected, and as citizens rightly demand transparency and accountability, the role of the statistics community becomes not just relevant but indispensable.

We must continue to push boundaries.
We must strengthen ethical standards.
We must embrace innovation.
And we must deliberately cultivate the next generation of experts who will carry this mission forward.

Let us be creative.
Let us innovate boldly.
Let us be relentless in our pursuit of truth.
And let us serve the citizens of this country with respect, integrity, and excellence.
When data is respected, democracy is strengthened.

When decisions are informed, lives are improved.

You are not merely working with numbers. You are shaping the future of this country.

Every insight you produce is a building block toward a more just, more strategic, and more resilient South Africa.

I wish you every success in the year ahead.

Thank you for the work you do.
Thank you for your excellence.
And thank you for your unwavering commitment to truth.

Your industry matters.
Your contribution matters.
And your future has never been more important.

I thank you.