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TERMINATION OF SILAPHA WELLNESS PROGRAMME @KASIBC_NEWS

TERMINATION OF SILAPHA WELLNESS PROGRAMME @KASIBC_NEWS 


Following an investigation and directive from the Minister of Sport, Arts and Culture, Gayton McKenzie, the Department of Sport, Arts and Culture has terminated the Silapha Wellness Intervention Programme.  

The Programme was a three-year project offered to artists and sports people intended to assist them to access resources such as wellness counselling (including mental health, financial well-being, grief support, and performance anxiety), educational resources and assessments to help them identify their specific support needs on the wellness engagement platform, and 24/7 professional counselling services via a confidential call centre. 

The service provider was awarded a tender of R18,297,360 for three years and the department was paying a sum of R507,120.01 to the service provider each month. With serious questions raised about where and how the bulk of the money was being spent, as well as concerns about the actual impact of the programme, the Minister decided the money could be better spent elsewhere. 

The department is now actively seeking out alternatives to ensure that the families of artists and sports people can be assisted effectively in times of distress. 

Said Minister McKenzie: “We are exploring innovative ways of ensuring that we do more, and better, for our artists and athletes as a government. 

We are already seeing that impact and change in sports like boxing, which was badly neglected, but we also need to be more proactive with issues like the families of our legends needing support when they pass away. 

“We should be intentional about our plans and know how we will respond in these cases, to offer our athletes and creatives the kind of practical support that’s needed, when it’s really needed.” 



ANC President Cde Cyril Ramaphosa at the Funeral of Cde Lungi Mnganga-Gcabashe @KASIBC_NEWS

ANC President Cde Cyril Ramaphosa at the Funeral of Cde Lungi Mnganga-Gcabashe @KASIBC_NEWS 


Programme Director, The Mnganga and Gcabashe families, Members of the ANC National Executive Committee, President of the ANC Women’s League, Cde Sisisi Tolashe, Members of the ANC Women’s League NEC, Leadership of Alliance and Mass Democratic Movement formations, Comrades and Friends, We are gathered here to say farewell to a leader and an activist whose life was defined by love and service. 

Today we bid farewell to a mother, a sister, an aunt, a freedom fighter, a comrade. On behalf of the leadership and membership of the African National Congress, we express our deepest condolences and sympathies to her family, friends and comrades. While we were preparing to bid farewell to our comrade, the Deputy President of the ANC Women’s League, we heard the news of the passing of the former president of the Women’s League and a stalwart of our struggle, Ma Getrude Shope.

In an African hut, there’s a pole that stands in the middle. It is called Intsika. African women are the izintsika in our homes, in our families and in the nation. They keep everything intact, like that pole in the middle of a traditional hut. Having to lose two izintsika in succession deepens our pain. 

Although they were of different generations, they were of the same political lineage. They fought for the same cause. Cde Lungi Mnganga-Gcabashe was drawn into political action by a deep desire for peace, for freedom and for justice.

She lived her life in the service of others, in the service of her people and in the service of her country. She has walked every step of our journey to democracy with the people of South Africa. She has worked with the people to overcome every challenge they face and celebrated with the people for every success achieved. She joined the struggle at a time of great turbulence and conflict in this province. She became active in local structures at a time of heightened repression, when the forces of apartheid sought to sow division, to turn communities against each other. 

It was her calm and determined manner, her sincerity, her integrity that propelled her to leadership in local peace committees at a young age. From these early experiences, she knew the destruction and the pain of division. Throughout her life, she dedicated herself to forge unity: within communities, within organisations and within her country.

She knew that a people united could never be defeated. She knew that unless we settled our differences, unless we overcame the conflicts of the past, we would not be able to move forward. We would not be able to build a South Africa that belongs to all its people, a South Africa that is just, equal and prosperous.

It is at a time like now, when we have seen a resurgence of racial antagonism from some quarters, that we need people with the conviction of Cde Lungi.

At a time when our communities are being torn apart by gangsterism and violent crime, by corruption and patronage, by a bitter contestation for public resources, we need people of the calibre of Cde Lungi. At a time when our movement still struggles with the corrosive force of factionalism, we are called upon to follow her lead. 

We called upon to be unifiers. To be healers. Cde Lungi was an organiser and a builder. Whether it was building local structures of the UDF at the height of struggle or establishing the ANC as a powerful movement following its unbanning, she understood the value of popular mobilisation and organisation. She understood the need for these structures to be rooted in communities, to be drawn from communities and to serve the interests of communities. 

The value of effective organisation grounded in people’s daily lives is as important today as it was when Cde Lungi started out as an organiser. A little more than thirty years into democracy, when politics has, for many, become an occupation, when the activists of yesteryear occupy positions of public authority, many no longer see the need for a mass-based movement.

For many, mass mobilisation is for elections. It is for conferences. It is for protest. But for a person like Cde Lungi, mass mobilisation is essential for the fundamental transformation of society. It is essential to address the difficulties that people face and to improve the conditions in which they live. For a person like Cde Lungi, democracy relies on the participation and activism of the people. 

We remember her concern as a Member of Parliament that not enough time was dedicated to constituency work. She was convinced that public representatives needed to spend more time among the people they were elected to serve. 

This was the type of leader she was. From her first responsibilities in local structures and regional structures, from the positions she held in the province to her election into the National Executive Committees of the ANC and the ANC Women’s League, Cde Lungi understood that leaders were there to serve. As a leader, she sought neither power nor influence. She did not seek prestige or enrichment. She did not seek public office for the benefits it could bring her. How many of us can today make such a claim? How many of us speak the words of service and selflessness, but are driven by a desire for selfadvancement? How many of us seek authority, but not responsibility? As we reflect on the life of Cde Lungi MngangaGcabashe, let us ask ourselves these difficult questions.

Where we fall short of the standard set by Cde Lungi, where we fall short of the expectations of our people, let us make amends. Let us become better leaders. Let us place the needs of our people above our own. Cde Lungi will be remembered as someone who throughout her life championed the role of women within the movement and within society. Among her earliest political tasks was to recruit women into the ANC, and she dedicated herself to the advancement of women at all levels of leadership.

For her this was a matter of justice. It was fundamental to the achievement of the equal society which we were striving to build. She understood that freedom required nothing less than the full and equal participation of women in all areas of the life of the nation. It is a tribute to her and those who worked alongside her, that our country has made such remarkable progress in advancing the position of women over the last 30 years. She was vital in giving the women of this country a voice and securing their place within the ANC, within our public institutions and more broadly within society. But she knew, as we know, that this struggle is far from over. Women are under-represented in many areas of society, from business to science, from politics to sport. 

Women are more likely to be unemployed and underpaid. African women shoulder the greatest burden of poverty. The violence that is perpetrated by men against women has reached the proportions of a pandemic. It is a scourge that breeds fear and mistrust. It destroys lives and divides communities. And it stands as a barrier to the full realisation of the basic human rights of the women of this country.

We remember Cde Lungi as a leader who was always ready to join many thousands of women in the streets of this country. Always ready to carry a placard to shame perpetrators of genderbased violence. She was always ready to visit and console families who had lost loved ones. The reality of the daily struggles of women in this country requires from us an even greater determination to continue the work to which Cde Lungi dedicated so much of her life. It requires that we follow her lead in mobilising and organising the women of South Africa, of all races, from all walks of life, to intensify the fight for equality and justice. And we must recognise, as she did, that this is a struggle not to be waged by women alone. 

It is a struggle that men must pursue with as much purpose and resolve. We are gathered here today in our numbers because Cde Lungi was driven throughout her life by her love for her people. She was driven by her love for justice and freedom. But she was driven also by a love for life, for her family, for her friends and her comrades. 

To her family, we extend our sympathies for a grievous loss. We say thank you for sharing her with our movement and our people. We have lost Cde Lungi far too soon. We have lost her at a time when we needed her honesty and her dedication most. As we mourn her passing, let us resolve to honour her memory not in words, but in action 

Let us honour her memory by taking forward the struggle to which she dedicated her life – the struggle for peace, for unity and for equality for all.

May her soul rest in peace. May her struggle continue. Hamba Kahle Mbokodo 

I Thank You

Cyril Ramaphosa 



COLOUREDS GENOCIDE CAPE FLATS , WESTERN CAPE @KASIBC_NEWS

COLOUREDS GENOCIDE CAPE FLATS , WESTERN CAPE @KASIBC_NEWS 


The DA has written to the South African Police Service's (SAPS) Western Cape Provincial Police Commissioner, Lt. Genl. Thembisile Patekile, to demand a clear timeline and operational plan for the so-called “extraordinary measures” promised by the Minister of Police to combat gang violence on the Cape Flats.

The promise was made during a Question-session in the National Council of Provinces (NCOP) last week. In order for the undertaking to garner any credibility, this timeline must include concrete answers on when the Anti-Gang Unit (AGU) will finally have a fixed establishment, a full complement of vehicles and the full complement of resources needed to perform its mandate. This is the bare minimum we can do to capacitate those brave men and women who risk their lives for our safety.

The SAPS’s priorities could not be more painful to observe than in its response to two tragic cases of stray bullets. When a bullet was said to have allegedly struck the Deputy President’s blue light convoy earlier this year, SAPS acted immediately; security was escalated, resources mobilised and threat assessments commissioned without delay. Yet, when 4-year-old Davin Africa was shot in his sleep in Wesbank while lying next to his pregnant mother on 14 February 2025 - there was no media-inflated response by SAPS senior management, no public commitment of extraordinary action and no urgency in finding the funds to address AGU resource scarcity.

This institutional indifference is further underlined by the Minister’s own admission in reply to a DA parliamentary question that between 1 March 2020 and 31 December 2024, 3,777 gang and/or gang-related murders and 5,463 attempted murders were recorded in the Western Cape. That’s more than two murders and nearly four attempted murders per day, overwhelmingly concentrated in the Cape Flats gang zones. Despite this answer, there is still not a word of a threat assessment or urgent prioritisation for these communities.

Despite this daily carnage, the Anti-Gang Unit remains in disrepair. It has no fixed structure, only half its vehicle fleet is operational and it operates from an inadequate base at Faure Farm. Repeated letters and warnings by the DA to the Provincial Commissioner have gone unanswered.

In response to a separate written parliamentary question, the Minister claimed that the AGU is structurally established and supported and proceeded to blame resource constraints for its underfunding and chronic understaffing. The double standard is blinding. And it is an insult to the thousands of families on the Cape Flats who live and die under gang rule.

The Minister’s vague assurances of “extraordinary measures” holds no water whilst he refuses to say whether Lt. Genl. Patekile would be held accountable for his clear failures at Provincial Police Commissioner.

The DA has also written to the Chairperson of the Select Committee on Petitions and Executive Undertakings in the NCOP to request that the Minister be called to appear before the Committee and account for this undertaking. This Committee ensures that commitments made by the Executive in the NCOP are monitored and enforced.

The Minister’s promise of “extraordinary measures” must now be held to that standard. The DA will continue its oversight relentlessly.



EXECUTIVE MAYOR CONTINUES OVERSIGHT @KASIBC_NEWS

EXECUTIVE MAYOR CONTINUES OVERSIGHT @KASIBC_NEWS 


The Executive Mayor, Councillor Lucky Sele, accompanied by the Member of the Mayoral Committee (MMC) for Infrastructure Development Services, Councillor Peter Modise, conducted a two-day oversight visit to the Kenmare Water Pump Station, Factoria Reservoir, Munsieville Reservoir, Dan Pienaar Reservoir, Western Bypass and Rand Water Depot on 23rd May & 24th May 2025. 

The visit follows continued water supply interruptions which have severely impacted several residential areas within the municipality. The purpose of the engagement was to assess the root causes of the slow water recovery, monitor current infrastructure performance, and expedite coordination between the municipality and external stakeholders—particularly Rand Water. 

On the 23rd of May, the Rand Water outflow was at 530.8 kl/h and made a significant improvement recording of 750 kl/h this morning.  During the oversight, technical reports and observations confirmed that the abovementioned stations are experiencing reduced pumping capacity due to an inconsistent flow of bulk water supply. 

This is largely attributed to system pressure imbalances and delayed recovery. As a result, reservoir levels in Kenmare, Rant-en-Dal, Munsieville, Lewisham and parts of Noordheuwel remain critically low, with some reservoirs operating below the 20% threshold required for effective reticulation. 

In addition, airlocks within the pipeline network and ageing mechanical components at the pump stations have further compromised water pressure and distribution. Mayor Sele reaffirmed the municipality’s commitment to urgent and coordinated intervention. Engineers have been instructed to fast-track pressure balancing and de-airing operations.  

“We have escalated the matter to our provincial counterparts. The stabilisation of the systems is now a top priority, and all available resources are being mobilised to restore consistent water supply to our communities,” said Mayor Sele. 

We are pleased to report that water supply has been restored in most parts of the municipality. Our team will continue to monitor the system to ensure consistent pressure and supply across all affected areas. 

Residents are urged to use water sparingly and report any visible leaks or unauthorised usage to the municipal Customer Care Centre. Water tankers remain deployed in highpriority areas as an interim relief measure. 



STARLINK VERSUS BBBEE @KASIBC_NEWS

STARLINK VERSUS BBBEE @KASIBC_NEWS 

*Starlink, Equity Equivalents, and the South African Policy Labyrinth*

by Stan Itshegetseng

Member, Vuyani Mabaxa Branch (Ward 27, Zone 10) | NEC Member, Progressive Professionals Forum (PPF)

(Writing in my personal capacity)

*What is Starlink?*

Starlink is a satellite internet service launched by Elon Musk’s SpaceX. It is built on a constellation of low-Earth orbit satellites that deliver high—speed broadband worldwide, particularly to remote and underserved areas. In technical terms, Starlink bypasses traditional terrestrial infrastructure like fiber optics or mobile towers and instead beams internet from orbit directly to user terminals.

In a South African context, this is game-changing:

• ⁠It expands internet access to rural schools, clinics, and farming communities;

• ⁠Empowers black-owned SMMEs with reliable broadband;

• ⁠Accelerates e-health and e-learning services;

• ⁠Supports national imperatives under the National Development Plan (NDP) 2030 for inclusive digital transformation.

*B-BBEE Equity Equivalents: A Tool, Not a Loophole*

The Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment Act 53 of 2003, and more specifically Statement 103 of the B-BBEE Codes of Good Practice (published under Section 9(1) of the Act), makes provision for Equity Equivalent Programmes (EEPs). These are alternative ownership compliance mechanisms specifically designed for wholly foreign-owned multinationals.

The logic is simple: instead of selling equity stakes, companies can earn full ownership scorecard points by investing in initiatives that benefit black South Africans, such as:

• ⁠Skills development programmes;

• ⁠Enterprise and supplier development;

• ⁠Critical infrastructure investments.

This mechanism was not invented by Minister Solly Malatsi. It is a long-standing regulatory tool approved and used by ANC-led administrations through the Department of Trade, Industry, and Competition (DTIC). 

Examples include:

• IBM: R700 million over 10 years in ICT training and supplier development (approved 2015);

• ⁠Amazon: R365 million focused on creating 100% black-owned tech SMMEs (approved 2019);

• ⁠Microsoft: R708 million combined, focusing on enterprise development and the “APP Factory” model (approved 2011 & 2020).

(Ref: DTIC EEIP Register, 2025)

So, when the media suggests that Malatsi is “breaking new ground,” they are either uninformed or complicit in public misinformation. As correctly stated in recent civic forums:

“The Equity Equivalent in BBBEE is not new… the regulation was always there… the Minister is not introducing new policies.”

*But There’s a Catch: Licensing ≠ Ownership Compliance*

Where the Minister is misleading the public—intentionally or not—is in conflating B-BBEE ownership compliance with telecommunications licensing law.

According to Section 9(2)(b) of the Electronic Communications Act 36 of 2005, any applicant for an individual electronic communications license (such as one required by Starlink) must have:

_*“a minimum of 30% ownership by persons from historically disadvantaged groups.”*_

This ownership requirement is not just a BEE scorecard item—it is a legal licensing threshold, embedded in national telecommunications law, designed to transform the sector structurally, not cosmetically.

Thus, while Starlink may qualify for an EEP under the B-BBEE Act, this does not exempt it from the 30% HDG ownership requirement under the ECA. The two operate in separate but interrelated legal regimes.

*The Legal Minefield: What Malatsi is Attempting*

By suggesting that Starlink might operate in South Africa without meeting the 30% HDG ownership requirement—through an EEP—the Minister is effectively attempting to recast licensing law through policy directive. 

That is not within his powers. *Only Parliament can amend the ECA.* Only courts can resolve interpretive contradictions between the ECA and B-BBEE frameworks.


This is why legal scholars warn:

_*“The Minister is seeking to play the role of a court… his policy directive is trying to override what the ECA says, and a legal battle is inevitable.”*_

If left unchallenged, this sets a dangerous precedent—where executive statements are used to bypass the legislative and constitutional process.

*Parks Tau: The Strategist of Silence*

While public attention was drawn to the press-ready performance of Minister Malatsi, Minister Parks Tau operated with the strategic gravitas of a statesman. He was not in the room for photo ops—he was there as a quiet force of diplomatic and trade policy consolidation, ensuring:

• ⁠That any foreign investment aligns with South Africa’s Industrial Policy Action Plan (IPAP);

• ⁠That digital sovereignty and transformation are protected through the ICT Sector Code;

• ⁠That South Africa negotiates not just access, but reciprocal benefit.

Tau was instrumental in crafting the Black Industrialists Programme, the Automotive Investment Fund, and now, behind the scenes, shaping how multinationals like Starlink can enter South Africa on just terms—not exploitative ones.

His leadership represents a return to technocratic statecraft, where political quietness is not weakness but surgical discipline. He is, as I’ve said, the silent killer of neoliberal appeasement, and with him, South Africa’s digital future is in the safest hands possible.

*Conclusion: Law Must Lead, Not PR*

* Starlink has immense potential to empower South Africans.

* ⁠It should be welcomed—but on our terms, in accordance with:

 • The B-BBEE Act,

 • The Electronic Communications Act 36 of 2005,

 • The ICT Sector Code (2016), and

 • The National Development Plan (NDP).

If Starlink seeks a path through the Equity Equivalent Programme, that is valid—but it cannot be used to evade licensing conditions. Otherwise, it is not transformation; it is recolonization by satellite.

South Africa’s regulatory state must remain supreme—not subdued by billionaires in orbit.

Let Starlink come. But let it land on constitutional and ethical ground.

And as revolutionaries of thought, policy, and patriotism, we say:

Let the law speak. Let Parks Tau lead. Let the people benefit.



DA welcomes draft regulations by Minister Malatsi @KASIBC_NEWS

DA welcomes draft regulations by Minister Malatsi @KASIBC_NEWS 

The DA welcomes the draft regulations released yesterday, 23 May 2025, by Solly Malatsi, Minister of Communications & Digital Technologies, to introduce new mechanisms to broaden internet access to all South Africans.

Access to reliable, affordable internet is a key ingredient to economic growth. The Democratic Alliance joined the Government of National Unity to make a difference in the lives of all South Africans. These steps taken by Minister Malatsi are once again proof that the DA doesn't only talk change, we implement it as well.

Currently, most South Africans have to travel to metropolitan areas for reliable internet, as latest statistics from the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (ICASA) from 2022 revealed that only 10% of South African households had access to internet, beyond mobile devices, where they live.

This acts as a barrier to commerce in areas outside of metropolitan areas. It also excludes schools, hospitals, and police stations from reliable, fast, and affordable internet.

To contribute to economic growth, social upliftment, and job creation in all parts of South Africa, we must take an all hands on deck approach, which is what Minister Malatsi's draft regulations seek to achieve.

Although the requirements of the Electronic Communications Act remain, these new regulations encourage and make it easier for investors to make further social investments in our country.

In essence, any contribution to broadening access to the internet and growing the economy for all South Africans is welcome. The DA, as a member of government, is willing to work with all players to achieve these results.

This is a draft policy that must be finalised, and the Democratic Alliance encourages public participation over the next 30 days, as per our Constitution’s legislative process.



DHET AND NSFAS ON FUNDING CHALLENGES IN THE UNIVERSITY SECTOR @KASIBC_NEWS

DHET AND NSFAS ON FUNDING CHALLENGES IN THE UNIVERSITY SECTOR @KASIBC_NEWS 

The Department of Higher Education and Training (DHET) and the National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS) acknowledge the recent challenges affecting funding within the university sector. 

These issues primarily arise from three key areas: 

1. Application Discrepancies: Some students from universities who applied during the TVET application cycle have experienced difficulties with their registration status due to errors encountered during the application process. 

2. Late Registration Confirmations: Certain students, whose registration statuses were only confirmed after the official registration deadline, are currently facing delays in accessing funding support. 

3. Appeals and Budget Constraints: Students whose appeals have been approved are experiencing funding shortfalls due to limited remaining budgets, impacting their ability to cover registration and related costs. 

Both DHET and NSFAS are actively collaborating to address these challenges. 

Efforts include reviewing applications from students who applied during the TVET application cycle, providing funding for students whose registration was submitted late, and exploring options to allocate additional resources to support students with approved appeals. 

Institutions are also being encouraged to assist students in resolving outstanding issues promptly. 

We remain committed to ensuring that all eligible students have access to the funding necessary to continue their studies without undue disruption. 

We appreciate the patience and understanding of students and stakeholders as we work diligently to resolve these issues swiftly. 

Students are advised to regularly monitor updates through NSFAS and university communication channels.