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If you feel you are the right candidate for the role, then please send a detailed copy of your CV to 086 577 1281.
Our client is Non the lookout for a Warehouse and Logistics Manager
Duties:
Ensuring supply of the products in the quantity and with the quality standards defined, such as the dispatch of products and spare parts within the quantity and deadlines established.
Coordinate the receipt of raw materials.
Define the stock locations in the warehouse and follow up checks.
Ensure the quality of the information on stocks.
Coordinate stocktaking in area of responsibility, verify stocks, control movements of goods between departments on the system, dispatches, transfers, refunds, etc.
Coordinate the supply of material according to requirements.
Dispatch products to clients or other destinations.
Contact the suppliers/transport companies, for loading and dispatch of material according to the needs of the company.
Process the necessary documents related to transport (customs, duties, insurance, etc.) Select, negotiate and evaluate the transport company suppliers.
Verify the invoicing of the suppliers in this area.
Facilitate transport quotations when required.
Plan and coordinate the team, in accordance with the defined objectives and procedures, carrying out the relevant follow up with them.
Train, develop and motivate staff
Ensure fulfilment of established deadlines of the required action.
Ensure fulfilment of current standards and the internal procedures that affect the activity that of the department
Salary Offer:
R 45000 with full benefits and bonus annually
A vacancy has arisen for an Invoicing Administrator
Principal Responsibilities;
– Invoicing in line with customer credit account limits.
– Preparation of warranty and contract claims in line with procedures.
– Responsible for invoice reconciliations and query resolutions.
Compensation :
R13500 /Benefits
Please send applications to : 086 608 3103
If you have not had any response in two weeks, please consider your application unsuccessful. Your profile will be kept on our database and we will connect with you with any other suitable roles or positions
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Neat & Tidy 1 bedroom with balcony in Silver Lakes.
Did you know?
Halbe Properties consists of a Letting, Residential Sales and Commercial division.
We can assist you with rentals, sales and management of residential and commercial property.
Please do not hesitate to contact one of our Professional Agents to assist you.
This stunning one bedroom, one bathroom spacious apartment overlooking the courtyard is available in the sought after Gateway area. Secure and well managed complex. Possible Air BnB.
This apartment has a undercover parking bay and access to a beautiful pool. It is also within walking distance to Gateway and 10 Minutes drive to Umhlanga Village & beach.
Cyril Ramaphosa looks at the screen as the official results of the 2019 elections are announced (Chante Schatz, News24)
The ANC has been handed it sixth straight term to govern South Africa on what was nevertheless its worst electoral showing; and it should serve as an opportunity to reincarnate themselves, says a political analyst.
Although the party won a healthy majority with 57.5% – or 230 out of the 400 parliamentary seats, it represented 19 seats fewer than in 2014.
READ: ANC pledges to clean the party of corruption, greed and lawlessness
The official results, as declared by the electoral commission, were therefore the ANC’s poorest ever showing in its long electoral run, which started in 1994, when Nelson Mandela led it to victory in the first multi-racial polls.
The party has been battling corruption scandals, sluggish economic growth, record unemployment and poverty – issues its leader Cyril Ramaphosa promised to tackle.
But its poor electoral showing could hamper efforts to revive the flagging economy and fight corruption.
Businessman Ramaphosa, 66, took over last year when the ANC forced then-president Jacob Zuma to resign after nine years dominated by corruption allegations and economic decline.
The ANC’s closest rival, the opposition DA, trailed at a distant 20.7% or 84 seats.
DA leader Mmusi Maimane at the IEC results announcement. (Felix Dlangamandla, Netwerk24)
The EFF, founded six years ago by former ANC youth leader Julius Malema, came third with 10.79%. But that was four percentage points more than in 2014 and means a jump from 25 to and 44 parliamentary seats.
After the official declaration of the results in Pretoria, Ramaphosa said: “Our people have spoken – and they have done so clearly and emphatically.
“They voted for a united South Africa, they voted for a more equal society, free from hunger and want. We can declare with certainty that democracy has emerged victorious.”
Despite the plunge in support, ANC chairperson Gwede Mantashe said the party was grateful for a new “lifeline”.
It was an improvement on its 2016 local government elections performance “when we were really facing a disaster”, he said. “We are picking up from that disaster.”
Minister in the presidency Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma acknowledged the decline in support, but said: “We are happy with the mandate the people have given us and we will work hard to improve.”
“This is an opportunity for them to reincarnate themselves”
“The ANC are being given a chance,” said political analyst Lumkile Mondi. “This is an opportunity for them to reincarnate themselves.”
Analyst Susan Booysen of the Wits School of Governance said the tally was “way higher for the ANC than it would have been had Zuma been still in power”.
The ANC’s reputation suffered under Zuma, and Ramaphosa still faces resistance to his reform agenda, especially from Zuma allies still holding senior positions in the party and government.
Support for the party has fallen in every election since its 2004, when it got nearly 70%. By 2016, it had fallen to 54% in municipal polls in which it lost control of key city governments.
A record 48 parties contested Wednesday’s elections.
A reduced majority nevertheless weakens Ramaphosa’s bargaining power, making him more vulnerable to the pro-Zuma faction in the governing party, analysts warn.
It remains in charge eight of the nine provinces.
Some 65% of the 26.8 million people registered to vote turned out Wednesday.
‘Era of political realignment’
DA leader Mmusi Maimane, put a brave face on his party’s failure to cash in on waning ANC support.
“Even though we’ve lost some votes, we’ve held the centre – and I will lead that project going forward,” said Maimane.
Malema’s EFF made major gains, jumping from 6.3% in the 2014 poll. It campaigned on promises to seize land from whites without compensation to give to poor blacks, and to nationalise mines and banks.
“It’s the last election that it (ANC) will win outright. We have now created the biggest decline for the ANC,” said EFF chairperson Dali Mpofu.
“In the next election there will not be any outright winner. We are going to enter the era of coalitions,… an era of political realignment.”
The conservative and predominantly white Freedom Front Plus, founded in 1994 during the negotiations to end apartheid, performed unexpectedly well, picking up 10 seats – six more than in 2014.
Find everything you need to know about the 2019 National and Provincial Government Elections at our News24 Elections site, including the latest news and detailed, interactive maps for how South Africa has voted over the past 3 elections. Make sure your News24 app is updated to access all our elections coverage in one place.
Cyril Ramaphosa looks at the screen as the official results of the 2019 elections are announced. (Chante Schatz, News24)
South Africa’s 2019 general elections were hard fought but were contested in the spirit of political maturity and tolerance, said the government.
In a statement issued on Saturday, the government commended South Africans for making the elections a “resounding success”.
Spokesperson for Government Communication and Information System (GCIS) Phumla Williams said the official declaration by the Electoral Commission of South Africa (IEC) of the final results of the 2019 general elections paves the way for the sixth democratically administrative to begin its work.
“We congratulate the IEC for a job well done, and for their handling of disputes and various issues that arose.
“We are satisfied that the IEC addressed these issues and that they are in no way detracted from the success and credibility of the elections,” she said.
FINAL RESULTS: This is how many MPs each party can send to Parliament
The IEC was plagued by a number of objections from smaller parties who complained of irregularities.
The DA had also called for an audit of the election results after a number of voters took to social media to show cracks in the IEC’s process, News24 earlier reported.
This led to small parties calling for a rerun of the elections.
“Your vote is your power and we must work even harder as a nation to ensure that all who are eligible to vote do so,” Williams said.
“As we begin to look forward in the spirit of renewal, we call on all South Africans to work together, irrespective of their political affiliation. Our role as active citizens does not end with voting; together we can ensure that our newly elected public representatives deliver on their promises of moving South Africa forward.”
South Africa will inaugurate its 6th democratically elected President on May 25.
“We call on all South Africans to support and assist government so that we can find sustainable ways to overcome the triple threat of poverty, inequality and unemployment,” Williams added.
Find everything you need to know about the 2019 National and Provincial Government Elections at our News24 Elections site, including the latest news and detailed, interactive maps for how South Africa has voted over the past 3 elections. Make sure your News24 app is updated to access all our elections coverage in one place.
Rob Houwing, Sport24 chief writer
Cape Town – The Lions may have earned a nail-biting home victory over the Waratahs on Saturday, but the match only really appeared to serve up further evidence that a fourth consecutive appearance in the Super Rugby final will be beyond them this year.
Although they have also taken enormous pride for several years in proving doubters wrong, Warren Whiteley’s 2019 outfit continue to look some way short of the altogether more zesty, polished Lions side of the 2016 and 2017 years, in particular.
Scratches to their paintwork were already appearing last year, when they lost as many as seven matches in ordinary season, and this 29-28 close shave against the ‘Tahs – SuperSport pundit and former Springbok hooker Hanyani Shimange was justified in branding it a “typical mid-table contest” – did little to suggest that any aspirations beyond merely making the playoffs cut are attainable.
As it is, they are curtailed to fourth in the SA conference and a very borderline eighth overall after this result, where they never looked like threatening to add a bonus point and would have been relieved just to get over the line in a loose, error-laden four-tries-all tussle.
Indeed, when you consider that one of the Lions’ tries came from what studio guru Nick Mallett highlighted was a “dramatic forward pass” early in the move – between Stephan Lewies and Malcolm Marx – the visiting Aussies had reason to feel aggrieved with referee Egon Seconds and his various back-up personnel.
On the mitigatory side, the Johannesburg-based team were coming off a post-tour bye, and player of the match Marx (a game-topping 18 carries, plus 75 metres made and hallmark nuisance value on the deck) admitted afterwards that they showed rustiness virtually throughout.
Whiteley was no less a realist in his own appraisal of the showing: “Our set-piece was inconsistent, we lost control of the ball too much … we need to be better. (But) I am proud of the team for grinding it out; the Waratahs wouldn’t let us go.”
That quest for improvement will need to kick in strongly when the Highlanders – a little ominously in the current climate – become the next outfit from New Zealand to visit South Africa, with a tour starter at Ellis Park next Saturday afternoon.
They are unbeaten in four matches, and will take to the high-altitude clash emboldened by how consummately compatriots the Crusaders dealt with that supposed lung-challenging “drawback” up the highway at Loftus on Friday night.
At least by pipping the Waratahs, the Lions indisputably remained part of the extraordinary battle for conference supremacy this year: it only seems to get tighter even as the group is marked by collective, abject frailty when it comes to results consistency.
That is starkly apparent when you notice that the now conference-leading Sharks (courtesy of their losing bonus point against the Chiefs on Saturday, perhaps the least they deserved) somehow hold bragging rights despite a negative win-loss ratio after a dozen matches.
They have five victories, a draw and six reverses.
Now returning from a decent enough Australasian tour with a win, loss and stalemate, the Sharks have a handy bye before a four-game final push – although one of those assignments will be another long-haul trek to Buenos Aires.
They are likely to see their lead short-lived, as a result: any one or more of the Bulls, Jaguares or Lions will overtake them with a win next weekend and the Stormers, currently bottom, would draw level on points in the unlikely event that they knock over the mighty ‘Saders at Newlands with a bonus point into the bargain.
“We really bonded on this tour; it was awesome,” Sharks captain Louis Schreuder said after the gutsy enough 29-23 defeat in Hamilton.
The validity of those words will be put to the test when his men resume their campaign against the Lions at Kings Park in a fortnight, considering that highly damaging stint at home, ahead of the trek, when they looked so lacklustre in surprise successive defeats to the Jaguares and Reds.
Next weekend’s fixtures (home teams first, all kick-offs SA time):
Friday, May 17
Hurricanes v Jaguares – 09:35
Rebels v Bulls – 11:45
Saturday, May 18
Blues v Chiefs – 09:35
Reds v Waratahs – 11:45
Lions v Highlanders – 15:05
Stormers v Crusaders – 17:15
Byes: Sharks, Brumbies, Sunwolves
*Follow our chief writer on Twitter: @RobHouwing