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Price: R 2 000 in BELLEVUE EAST, JOHANNESBURG, GAUTENG, SOUTH AFRICA SPACIOUS ROOMS AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY – FIRST MONTH`S RENTAL FREE |
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Are you a Professional Recruitment Consultant with an excellent Customer Service track record? We are requiring your strong administrative skills, your initiative and ability to juggle deadlines consistently in order to be a highly successful part of this top team. A professional and determined attitude is our top requirement!
REQUIREMENTS
Matric, relevant tertiary qualification advantageous
Own vehicle essential
Minimum four years’ experience in a sales and administration role
Professional demeanour with an open personality
Fast paced work ethic with top integrity is essential
A self-starter, self-managed while driven to achieve deadlines at all times
Problem solver who can use initiative to solve situations that arise
Assessment ability and decision making
DUTIES
Building relationships with Key Clients and with Candidates suitable for placements
Working alongside the team achieving monthly deadline requirements
Develop and grow the database of candidates and clients
Managing the processing of candidate’s applications
Assessment of candidates for suitability to fill positions
Achieve monthly targets
Checking of figures for accuracy for documentation for the finance department
Managing quotes and tenders
Working with existing clients and growing the database
Developing marketing material for advertising
Presentations to senior level Clients
Calling on Key accounts
Cold calling for new relationships and acquiring new clients
Managing various reports for Management
Resolving problems and conflict resolution of any problems that arise
Negotiating at a high level
Salary: Dependent on experience
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This customer focused, solutions driven company is currently looking for a Sales Manager for their Durban branch.
Minimum Requirements:
New Sales:
Customer Relationship Management:
Commercial Engagement with Customers:
To apply for this vacancy please access this job advert on a desktop computer.
Apply for other Jobs on Job Mail.
A concern specialising in international imports and exports is seeking a meticulous and self-motivated Customs Entry Clerk to join their team.
Open position : Customs Entry Clerk
Area : Port Elizabeth
Salary : R15 000 – R22 000 per month (Basic)
Status : Permanent position
Reporting to : Operations Director
Working hours : Monday – Friday (07:30 – 17:30)
The successful candidate must meet the following job criteria :
– Matric certificate
– Relevant tertiary qualification would be an advantage
– 3 to 5 years experience within a similar role
– Sound knowledge of relevant laws, legal codes, court procedures, precedents, government regulations, political processes and agency rules
– Experience using MS Office Suite
Duties include :
– Calculate and process duties and taxes to be paid
– Arrange for payment of taxes and duties
– Dealing with customers
– Enter details onto specialised customs software
– Allocate the correct licence depending on the types of goods being imported
– Deal with application of duty refunds and tariff reclassification
– Post bonds for the products being imported
– Prepare necessary import documentation
– Liaise with officials in various agencies to ensure goods are cleared through customs or quarantine
– Arrange for transportation, warehousing or product distribution of imported or exported goods and liaise with Freight Forwarders
Skills include :
– Team player
– Abe to take instruction
– Well spoken
– Problem solving ability
Candidates meeting all the above criteria are invited to email their CV to lisa@kingrec.co.za
Please note, applications made via Facebook or LinkedIn will not be evaluated, only email applications will be considered, and only shortlisted candidates will be contacted.
If you have not received contact from us within two weeks, please consider your application unsuccessful
Refugees at the Central Methodist Church in Cape Town celebrated the return of their leader, Jean-Pierre Balous, who was granted R2 000 bail on Friday.
The Congolese leader was arrested on eight charges of assault, including five of assault with the intent to do grievous bodily harm.
Balous denied the charges laid against him and said he has evidence that he is willing to share with the court, that proves his innocence.
His arrest follows simmering tension among refugees who appeared to have split into two camps since staying at the church for the past two months.
They have been living there since October after they were forcibly removed from a sit-in protest outside the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) in the city centre.
Talks are under way to resolve what some have said is an untenable situation at the church regarding hygiene and cramped living conditions.
One Burundian refugee, Sandra Bahibitugu, said that “it is very difficult” living at the church.
Police are searching for two people who shot and killed a patient at a Durban hospital, as the health department re-evaluates its security measures.
The armed men entered the Clairwood Hospital in Mobeni around 18:30 on Friday, said police spokesperson Captain Nqobile Gwala.
“[They] fatally shot a 47-year-old patient. He sustained a gunshot wound to the head.”
According to KwaZulu-Natal Health MEC Nomagugu Simelane-Zulu, the “execution-style fatal shooting” happened in the male surgical ward.
The patient, a foreign national, was being treated for previous gunshot wounds, she said in a statement.
The patient had been transferred from King Edward VIII Hospital to Clairwood on December 23 for wound care and rehabilitation.
“It is alleged that… two unknown armed men stormed past hospital security guards, and proceeded to locate the man in his bed, and shot him in the head at point blank range, in full view of other patients and hospital staff. The suspects also forced their way out of the hospital by pointing guns at the hospital security guards,” said Simelane-Zulu.
It is alleged that after the shooting, the suspects walked back to their vehicle and drove off. When they got to the main hospital gate, which had been closed by hospital security guards, they threatened to shoot the guards and forced the gate open before fleeing.
“Although it is not always possible to predict an incident of this nature, which appears well-planned, the fact that these perpetrators were able to escape without getting apprehended by security or law enforcement does call into question our preparedness as a department to react effectively to such acts,” said Simelane-Zulu.
“It means that our system is not as effective as we would have liked to think. Notwithstanding the fact that these people were armed, and that they also threatened our security guards, we should have had a system in place that ought to have made it difficult for them to get away.
She said they would urgently have to re-look at their security protocols and make improvements as far as possible, within their limited financial means.
No arrests have been made as yet, and police are investigating a case of murder.
For people with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD/GORD) that doesn’t respond to the usual treatments, a complex surgery may help, a new study finds.
In carefully selected patients, the surgery provided much more relief than two different types of medication treatment – 67% for surgery compared to 28% for “active” drug treatment and 12% for the “control” (placebo) drug treatment.
Symptoms often remain
“GERD is an extremely common problem. About one in five people has GERD. Heartburn is the main symptom. Drugs called proton pump inhibitors [PPIs] are the best treatments we have for GERD, but as many as 30% of people still have symptoms when taking PPIs,” said study lead author Dr Stuart Jon Spechler. He’s chief of gastroenterology at Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas.
In that group of people who don’t improve on PPIs, many have what’s known as functional heartburn. That means doctors can’t pinpoint a specific disorder that’s causing the heartburn. Surgery won’t help them, he said.
“If someone has heartburn, it was thought to be reflux-related. The thinking was that if it’s burning, there must be acid in the oesophagus. But there are a lot of other things that can cause that burning feeling,” Spechler said.
He said patients can’t tell if they have reflux or another kind of heartburn. And, if their heartburn isn’t reflux-related, surgery won’t provide relief.
“We only want to operate on the group that will benefit from the surgery,” Spechler explained.
So, for the first part of the new study, Spechler’s team took several steps to identify which patients would be good candidates for the surgery called fundoplication.
This surgery is done under general anaesthesia with a laparoscope, a thin tube with a tiny video camera. The surgeon sews the top of the stomach around the oesophagus. This adds pressure to keep the oesophagus from opening back up and allowing reflux, according to the US National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases.
Procedures to determine cause
“It’s a big operation, but it does fix the plumbing problem and prevents the reflux of all material,” Spechler said. “There are some side effects. The surgery creates a very effective valve that may cause problems with belching or vomiting” because the valve no longer opens in that direction.
The study included 366 patients referred to Veterans Affairs clinics for heartburn that didn’t respond to PPI treatment. Their average age was 48.5 years; 280 were men.
All were given 20 milligrams of omeprazole twice daily for two weeks. If their heartburn persisted, they were scheduled for procedures to determine the cause.
In all, 288 patients didn’t move on to the study’s treatment phase. Some had relief from the initial treatment. Many didn’t complete all of the tests. Some had other oesophageal disorders, or were excluded for other reasons.
That left 78 patients who were randomly selected to receive one of three treatments: surgery; active treatment with omeprazole and baclofen, and possibly a third drug; or the control treatment, which was omeprazole plus a placebo.
In the “highly selected subgroup, surgery was superior to medical treatment,” the authors wrote.
Find an experienced surgeon
Dr Anthony Williams, chief of gastroenterology at Sinai-Grace Hospital at Detroit Medical Center, reviewed the findings and said the study group was small, but the research confirms what gastroenterologists are doing in practice.
“This was a good review that reiterates that we don’t need to send many people to surgery,” he said, adding that in 30 years of practice, he has sent only a few people for surgery.
When people do choose to have this surgery, Williams said, it’s very important to find a surgeon who has done the procedure many times.
“The success of this surgery is really operator-dependent. You need a surgeon who does hundreds of these surgeries a year,” Williams advised.
The findings were published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Image credit: iStock
Cape Town – The Bulls annihilated Varsity Cup outfit UP-Tuks in two warm-up matches at the Tuks Stadium in Pretoria on Saturday morning.
The Pretoria franchise split their extended squad across the two matches and proved far too strong for the students.
After winning the first match 40-0 (half-time 21-0), the Bulls ran riot in the second one with a 96-5 (half-time 42-0) annihilation.
The Bulls will play the Lions in their Super Hero Sunday match at FNB Stadium next weekend, before opening their Super Rugby campaign against the Sharks in Durban on Friday, January 31.
#BULvTUKS FT! Vodacom Bulls 96-5 UP-Tuks. #warmup #match2 #BullsFamily
— Official Blue Bulls (@BlueBullsRugby) January 11, 2020
#BULvTUKS #1stHalf action of #warmup match 2 against UP-Tuks. #BullsFamily pic.twitter.com/rCaUiOPofS
— Official Blue Bulls (@BlueBullsRugby) January 11, 2020
#BULvTUKS Kotze scores an unconverted try to bring the curtain down on the first #warmup match. Vodacom Bulls 40-0 UP-Tuks. #BullsFamily
— Official Blue Bulls (@BlueBullsRugby) January 11, 2020
#BULvTUKS #1stHalf action of #warmup match 1 against UP-Tuks. #BullsFamily pic.twitter.com/fAgPWO7RXZ
— Official Blue Bulls (@BlueBullsRugby) January 11, 2020
Bulls (warm-up match 1):
15 Warrick Gelant, 14 Cornal Hendricks, 13 Johnny Kotze, 12 Burger Odendaal (captain), 11 Rosko Specman, 10 Chris Smith, 9 Embrose Papier, 8 Muller Uys, 7 Wian Vosloo, 6 Marco van Staden, 5 Jaundre Kruger, 4 Andries Ferreira, 3 Wiehahn Herbst, 2 Johan Grobbelaar, 1 Simphiwe Matanzima
Substitutes: 16 Louis van der Westhuizen, 17 Dayan van der Westhuizen, 18 Ian Groenewald, 19 Marius Verwey, 20 Jean Droste, 21 David Coetzer, 22 Dawid Kellerman, 23 Diego Appolis, 24 Tim Agaba
Bulls (warm-up match 2):
15 Richard Kriel, 14 Jade Stighling, 13 Marnus Potgieter, 12 Dylan Sage, 11 Divan Rossouw, 10 Manie Libbok, 9 Ivan van Zyl, 8 Josh Strauss, 7 Abongile Nonkontwana, 6 Jeandre Rudolph, 5 Ruan Nortje, 4 Ryno Pieterse, 3 Mornay Smith, 2 Jaco Visagie, 1 Gerhard Steenekamp
Substitutes: 16 Corniel Els, 17 Madot Mabokela, 18 Adre Smith, 19 Ewan Coetzee, 20 Marco Jansen van Vuren, 21 Morne Steyn, 22 Jay-Cee Nel, 23 Franco Naude, 24 Vaughen Isaacs