A locksmith company in Cape Town is looking for an experienced locksmith. Requirements: -Grade 12. -Minimum 2 years’ experience. -Must have the knowledge to open all types of locks. -Must know how to cut keys according to specifications. -Reliable and trustworthy. Duties: -Will uphold the company’s standards. -Will perform standard locksmith duties. Please send a copy of your updated CV to us. We do not charge any fees. FAX your CV to: 086 566 8634 Or call Millenium: 084 572 4146
vrapto
Wheel Alignment Mechanic Assistant
A company in Bloemfontein is looking for a wheel alignment mechanic assistant.
Requirements:
-Grade 12.
-Must know how to set up a tyre-contact alignment fast clamp.
-Must know how to operate a wheel aligner machine.
-Must know how to read the print-outs.
Duties:
-Will assist mechanic in his daily task.
-Will occasionally assist with wheel balancing.
Please send a copy of your updated CV to us.
We do not charge any fees.
FAX your CV to: 086 566 8634
Or call Millenium: 084 572 4146
Permanent Part-Time Sales Assistant (Nelspruit)
Cape Union Mart
Cape Union Mart International (Pty) Ltd has been equipping South African adventurers since 1933, and is South Africa’s favourite outdoor adventure store. Stocking everything one needs for outdoor pursuits – including hiking, camping, trail running, mountain biking, snow sports, travel and more – Cape Union Mart is an essential first step in every adventure. Cape Union Mart has stores across South Africa, and in Namibia and Botswana.
eNCA | CATCH IT LIVE: Nelson Mandela Bay set for Trollip’s no-confidence vote
* Editor’s note: This event will be broadcast live on eNCA.com and DStv Now and is expected to start at 10am.
JOHANNESBURG – The no-confidence vote against Nelson Mandela Bay mayor Athol Trollip will take place on Tuesday.
Both the UDM and the EFF want the DA’s Trollip out of office.
The EFF vowed to punish Trollip for his party’s stance on land expropriation without compensation, which the DA does not support.
The UDM claims a coalition government with the DA is no longer a workable arrangement.
The same motion brought two weeks ago failed to get off the ground.
eNCA
News24.com | Ndebele artist Ester Mahlangu receives honorary doctorate
When South African Ndebele artist Esther Mahlangu began painting at the tender age of 10, she never thought that she would get to travel the world just by doing something that she loved.
Mahlangu received an honorary doctorate from the University of Johannesburg on Monday evening.
“I am so grateful to the university management for the gifts given to me today. What they have done for me, they must do for others.”
Read: UJ to honour iconic Ndebele artist Esther Mahlangu with honourary doctorate
“If heaven was within reach, I would fly. I never thought that painting would work out so well. I got to travel the world just by doing something that I did out of love,” she added.
She was accompanied by members of her community, clad in traditional regalia.
Mahlangu, whose full names are Esther Nikwambi, was born in Middelburg, Mpumalanga in 1935.
In an interview with News24 in September, shortly after she had been honoured with a mural in New York, the 82-year-old said her journey with her love for her culture and Ndebele artwork began when she was 10 years old, when she used to watch her mother and grandmother painting the outside walls of their home.
Read more: Celebrating the custodian of Ndebele culture – Heritage icon, Esther Mahlangu
She longed to join them and when the pair took a break from painting, she would steal the paint and try her luck. But, as soon as they returned, she would be out of sight.
“They always said: ‘Don’t ever do that again, you are ruining things,'” she told News24.
The following day Mahlangu would do it again, and again she faced the wrath of her matriarchs.
Eventually, her mother and grandmother gave up and allocated Mahlangu a small space on the wall, which was away from the public, where she could practice drawing Ndebele patterns.
“The next day, I would go there, sit on a tin and take chicken feathers and paint, paint and paint.”
Mahlangu added that her mother and grandmother inspected her work daily.
“Eventually they told me that my work was impressive and they called me to paint the front of the house, and I never looked back until I got married. In my culture, they used to say when you get married, you have to paint your first house yourself.”
On Monday evening, the university’s vice-chancellor and principal Professor Tshilidzi Marwala said the university recognised Mahlangu’s legacy as a cultural entrepreneur who skilfully negotiated local and global worlds as an educator.
“As a visionary individual, she traversed what to others are insurmountable political barriers. In the late 1980s, when KwaNdebele and Moutse region erupted in anti-apartheid violence, she [broke] down barriers in her own way.
“During the time she was invited to participate in the groundbreaking Magiciens de la Terre exhibition, a significant achievement for a black female artist at the time.
“The curators asked her to paint the walls of a life-size replica of her Mthambothini home for the exhibition…she would take the language of Ndebele art to the world.”
Marwala added that, in order to ensure the survival of the Ndebele arts, Mahlangu taught young people at her home.
“She also shares her expertise via a project that aims to document Southern African visual culture as expression of a diversity of inherited local knowledge systems that date back to before the colonisation of Southern Africa.”
“Esther Mahlangu is a living example of how authentic African knowledge systems can be articulated meaningfully and sustainably.
“In her we have an icon worthy of being looked upon to by the next generation of creatives,” Marwala said.
He said the Faculty of Art, Design and Architecture was honoured to confer the degree of Philosophiae Doctor Honoris Causa upon Mahlangu.
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Sport24.co.za | SA hero Simbine struggles to remember 100m final
Cape Town – It will go down as one of the great nights in South African sprinting as Akani Simbine and Henricho Bruintjies claimed gold and silver, respectively, in the 100m at the Commonwealth Games on Monday.
Simbine was expected to finish on the podium, but Bruintjies was a complete outsider.
The 24-year-old Simbine finished strongest and won comfortably in the end, but the race itself is a bit of a blur for him.
“I literally only really remember from the 60m mark,” Simbine told the Team SA website.
“I got out and didn’t see anyone, then I saw myself move [on the stadium television screens] and then I didn’t see anyone else move and said, ‘I actually just won this race’.
“It’s just an amazing feeling to come here for my country and be able to do this.
“Thanks to my country, my coach and my family.”
It is Simbine’s first gold medal at a major championship and undoubtedly the highlight of his career, but he is not done yet.
South Africa – with Simbine and Bruintjies included – will also line up in the 4x100m relay and with Monday night’s result still fresh, they will be backing themselves.
“I’m going home with two golds for sure,” added Simbine.
“This is such a great achievement to get not one but two SA sprinters on to a podium at an event like this, something to really celebrate.
“I’m just hoping that this inspires the youngsters back home to get out and come to training in the belief that they can get to the stage where we are.”
News24.com | Magashule hits back at Trevor Manuel over Winnie’s Brandfort home
A visibly angry and fiery ANC secretary general Ace Magashule launched a not-so-veiled attack on former finance minister Trevor Manuel in which he accused Manuel of ill-discipline and of weakening the organisation by criticising him in public.
“When you talk about unity of the movement, don’t use memorial services of revolutionaries to attack other leaders. When you don’t attack other leaders, you are not a coward. You are a disciplined member of the movement …,” Magashule said.
Last week Manuel laid into Magashule for failing to restore Winnie Madikizela-Mandela’s house in Brandfort where she was banished to by the apartheid regime between 1977 and 1986.
Money was allocated to the Free State government to restore the house as a museum, but years later it still stands derelict.
WATCH: Trevor Manuel calls on Magashule to account for Winnie’s Brandfort house money
Magashule stepped down as premier in March after he was elected secretary general of the party.
Manuel compared the project for the restoration of the Brandfort house to the controversial Estina project in the Free State, which was fast-tracked but which failed to empower the black farmers who were intended beneficiaries.
“This is the same premier who protests the approval for the Estina dairy, totalling some R220m in two weeks. This is the same former premier whose daughter is a beneficiary of a R130m housing contract, but now informs us that this minuscule project to restore the house to which our mother was banished has taken 11 years and can’t be done,” Manuel said at a memorial service in Cape Town.
The house has been a focal point since Madikizela-Mandela’s death on April 2.
But Magashule said criticism of other leaders should only be done in closed party meetings.
“Inside internal meetings of the ANC, we talk. We can criticise you but, when I attack and criticise another leader, I am weakening the movement and this is the culture we must understand – we must nurture it,” he said to a crowd that went into a frenzy as he spoke.
Magashule said no individual could be blamed for failing to honour Madikizela-Mandela. Instead the entire ANC should take the blame.
“You can’t blame any leader. In fact, if you have to blame anybody, you must blame the ANC because the ANC is not an organisation of individuals, it’s an organisation of a collective. When any individual fails, it is the organisation that fails.”
He discarded his prepared speech and spoke off the cuff.
Magashule also suggested that the ANC’s tradition was to honour leaders after their passing, as “people change”.
He also warned that the party risked losing the 2019 elections if it failed to rebuild and unite. He decried leaders who thought their positions made them powerful.
“Don’t think you are important and powerful. The only thing powerful is the ANC. You are nothing as an individual. That is why we must respect and renew this organisation,” Magashule said.
He lamented the gatekeeping plaguing the organisation and said it was killing the 106-year-old liberation movement.
Ironically, under his leadership as chairperson in the Free State, at least two provincial elective conferences that re-elected him to the position were nullified by the courts for the sidelining of members at branch level.
The ANC is hosting is official memorial service on Tuesday in Mbizana in the Eastern Cape, where Madikizela-Mandela was born.
It is expected to be addressed by President Cyril Ramaphosa.
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Control Room Officers
- Ad Placed : 10 Apr 2018 07:48:50
- Remuneration : R 8000 – R 11000 – PER MONTH
- Employment Type : Full Time
- Employment Level : Unskilled
- Industry :
- General Employment
Security - Region : Eastern Cape / East London
- Company : 1 Four All Recruitment (Pty) Ltd
My client situated in East London is looking for 1 intermediate control room officer. Salary for Control room officer: R8000 up to R11000(Depending on total shifts worked for the month) Ref: EAStLint1c Requirements: • At least 4 years control room operations work experience • PSIRA registered To apply send your CV to us at 1fourall recruitment. we do not charge candidates any fees Fax:(086) 762 3375 Email:apply@1fourall.co.za
To Apply for this Job,
Reaction Officers
My client situated in East London is in need of 2 Reaction officers Salary for reaction officers: R5000 up to R7000 (Depending on total shifts worked for the month)
Ref:EAStLoff1
Requirements:
⢠PSIRA registered
⢠At least 1 years reaction officer work experience
To apply send your CV to us at 1fourall recruitment.
we do not charge candidates any fees.
Fax:(086) 762 3364
Email:apply@1fourall.co.za
Tel:061 403 4436
Technical Sales Assistant (Middelburg)
Cape Union Mart
Cape Union Mart International (Pty) Ltd has been equipping South African adventurers since 1933, and is South Africa’s favourite outdoor adventure store. Stocking everything one needs for outdoor pursuits – including hiking, camping, trail running, mountain biking, snow sports, travel and more – Cape Union Mart is an essential first step in every adventure. Cape Union Mart has stores across South Africa, and in Namibia and Botswana.