Don’t miss out on this spacious three bedroom home in a great neighborhood close to popular schools and shopping centres. This home offers a big entertaining room with a built-in braai and fireplace that will keep you warm throughout the winter. The kitchen has enough space for a dining table and perfect for the whole family to help cooking a lovely Sunday lunch. There is a one bedroom flat next to this home with it’s own living room, a kitchen with a gas stove, shower and a toilet. Come view this property and see all the extra’s it has to offer. This one is sure to go fast. Why are you still waiting? Phone NOW!
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for Rent. R 16 500 : 3.0 BEDROOM HOUSE TO LET IN PAARL CENTRAL… South Africa Property Portal
Modern 3 Bedroom house to let in Paarl in secure complex (Vrede) for occupation 01 June 2019 @
R16 500 PM
QUICK SPECS
3 Bedrooms with build in cupboards
2 Bathroom with bath and shower & en-suite in main bedroom.
Open plan kitchen with built in stove and lots of cupboards.
Living area & Dining area
Patio with outside braai area
Swimming pool| Enclosed Garden
Pet-friendly – but application to be submitted
Double automated garage with direct access to the house. Open front garden with off street parking.
24 hour access to the development
Pre-paid Electricity | Water, sewerage & refuse on monthly account payable by tenants together with the monthly rent.
COST BREAKDOWN
Application fee of R120 (payable upfront per person, non-refundable. Your credit report will be emailed to you)
1.5 month Damage Deposit required: R24 750 (Payable within 48 hours once application has been approved or down payment can be arranged over a period of 2 months if approved by landlord)
Lease Administration fee: R1 000 (non-refundable and payable together with the deposit, before occupation)
First month’s rent payable before handover of keys.
Within walking distance from schools, churches and Paarl Medi-Clinic. Easy access to Bergrivier. Boulevard and High School Gimnasium. If you can see this advert, the house is still available. To arrange a viewing, simply reply to this advert to set up a date & time or contact us during office hours, 08:30 – 17:00 Monday to Friday.
Sport24.co.za | Ramsey sparkles as Arsenal sink Napoli
Unai Emery’s side seized control of the tie with a dominant first-half performance at the Emirates Stadium.
Ramsey opened the scoring with a cool finish to cap a flowing move and the Gunners were further ahead before half-time when Napoli defender Kalidou Koulibaly deflected Lucas Torreira’s shot into his own net.
Arsenal couldn’t add to the lead after the break, but they had done enough to put themselves in pole position ahead of the second leg in Naples on April 18.
It was a much-needed success for Emery, who this week called on his players to embrace the pressure of regaining their Champions League status after two successive seasons out of Europe’s elite club competition.
With Arsenal sitting fifth in the Premier League after Sunday’s damaging defeat at Everton, the Gunners can no longer rely on their domestic fortunes to qualify for the Champions League.
That gives the Europa League extra importance, underlining why Emery had played strong line-ups in the tournament all season to keep the option of reaching the Champions League by lifting the trophy.
Having won the Europa League three times during his tenure as Sevilla boss, Emery knows the value of a first leg lead and he sent out an attacking line-up featuring Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, Alexandre Lacazette and Mesut Ozil.
Emery’s men were quickly on the front foot and Koulibaly showed why he is a target for Manchester United with a two brave blocks to stop shots from Aaron Ramsey and Ainsley Maitland-Niles.
Despite Koulibaly’s best efforts, Arsenal needed just 15 minutes to take the lead.
A stylish move carved Napoli open as Ramsey and Ozil exchange passes in midfield before Lacazette fed Maitland-Niles.
Ramsey had continued his run into the Napoli area and the Wales midfielder met Maitland-Niles’ pass with a composed close-range finish for his sixth goal of the season.
It was the perfect way for Ramsey to announce himself to an Italian audience ahead of his close-season move to Juventus.
Torreira is one of the midfielders who will take over from Ramsey and the Uruguayan showed why that should be a smooth transition as he helped double Arsenal’s advantage in the 25th minute.
Tigerishly dispossessing Fabian Ruiz inside the Napoli half, Torreira accelerated towards the penalty area, cleverly checked back to open up more space and drilled a low shot that took a hefty deflection off Koulibaly as it looped into the net.
Napoli are trailing a distant second in Serie A behind Juventus and had endured disappointing results in their previous two games.
The lack of cohesion and confidence in his team made it a far different experience for Napoli boss Carlo Ancelotti than his last visit to the Emirates in 2017, which ended in a 5-1 Champions League victory with Bayern Munich.
Napoli keeper Alex Meret was at full-stretch to keep out Aubameyang’s long-range blast as Arsenal threatened to embarrass the Italians.
Without a win in seven visits to England, Napoli’s hopes of ending that barren run dwindled even further when Lorenzo Insigne blazed over from close range.
Napoli tried to rally after the interval, but Koulibaly’s header was tipped over by Petr Cech, while Piotr Zielinski blew their best chance when he missed the target with only the keeper to beat.
Arsenal remained dangerous and it took a good save from Meret to deny Ramsey before Maitland-Niles was also frustrated by the over-worked Napoli keeper.
Ramsey should have put the result beyond doubt when he shot over in the closing stages, but Arsenal will still travel to Italy in confident mood next week.
News24.com | Gangster State author: Magashule operated like Jacob Zuma
“I was interested in finding out about the person who now occupies one of the most powerful positions in the ANC.”
This much, author and investigative journalist Pieter-Louis Myburgh said when he launched his book, Gangster State: Unravelling Magashule’s Web of Capture at CapeTalk in Green Point on Thursday evening.
The discussion was led by News24 editor-in-chief, Adriaan Basson, at the new venue offered by the radio station.
At the eleventh hour, Exclusive Books at the V&A Waterfront in Cape Town – which was meant to be the venue – withdrew from hosting the launch
News24 earlier reported that Donald Kau, head of PR and communications at the V&A Waterfront, said, after a three-way meeting between the V&A Waterfront, Exclusive Books and the South African Police Service, a decision had been taken to cancel the launch, “primarily informed by the safety of our patrons”.
READ: V&A Waterfront book launch cancelled amid security fears, venue changed
At the launch, Myburgh told the crowd: “When I started taking close interest in [Ace] Magashule, I realised that he needed more scrutiny. His operations were akin to that of former President Jacob Zuma.”
He qualified the statement by saying that Magashule had used public resources for private gains, and like Zuma, used his family and friends as proxies for corruption and dodgy dealings.
In his explosive book, Myburgh ventures deeper than before into Magashule’s murky dealings, from his time as a struggle activist in the 1980s to his powerful rule as premier of the Free State for nearly a decade, and his rise to one of the ANC’s most influential positions – secretary general.
“While premier of the Free State, Magashule was involved in everything that happened, from the hiring of municipal managers to the awarding of toilet paper tenders,” charged Myburgh.
This, added Myburgh, allowed Magashule the influence needed to cripple the Free State.
Myburgh also commented on the feedback he received since the book was released some two weeks ago.
He said, notwithstanding the ANC’s statements and the disruption at the Sandton launch in Johannesburg, the feedback has been positive.
WATCH: Pieter-Louis Myburgh encouraged by discussions around ‘Gangster State’ book
“It’s a book in the public interest of South Africans. And the feedback has been mainly positive,” added Myburgh.
The ANC Youth League in the Free State cancelled its plans to set copies of his book alight at the Mangaung rubbish site next week, after the ANC’s leadership at Luthuli House intervened and condemned their intentions.
Magashule has publicly denied any wrongdoing during his time as leader of the Free State.”We will prove in court that the man is a blatant liar,” Magashule told eNCA at one stage.
Health24.com | The battle to bring antivenoms to Africa
Snake antivenoms have been around for 125 years, are effective and can be produced cheaply at scale. Yet Africa, with its abundance of deadly snakes, has an alarming shortage of the life-saving medicine.
Experts and campaigners blame a combination of weak production capacity, feeble policy and oversight, high prices and a general lack of concern for the plight of people in poor, remote areas of the world.
Dangerous manoeuvre
The method of antivenom production has changed very little since it was first developed by French immunologist Albert Calmette in the late 19th century. It remains a painstaking, time-consuming process, although researchers are working to develop synthetic alternatives.
First, a technician has to milk a snake’s venom in a dangerous manoeuvre that sees it holding the animal’s head still while it bites a cup covered in plastic film, releasing its poison – a small amount each time – into the container.
Small venom doses are then injected into a large domestic animal, usually a horse, to trigger an immune response and the production of toxin-attacking antibodies.
After several doses over a period of about a year, the horse produces so many antibodies that it becomes immune to the venom, at which point blood can be taken from the animal.
In a lab, antibodies are then separated from the blood, to be given to snakebite victims – who may need several doses.
An antivenom usually works only for a specific species, or small group of species of snake.
Prohibitive price
A key challenge, especially in poor, remote areas of the world where most snakebites occur, is that most antivenoms need to be refrigerated.
Already patchy, availability of antivenoms in Africa was thrown into disarray when French laboratory SANOFI stopped production in 2014 of its FAV-Afrique drug, which was effective against a number of species, including some of the most dangerous on the continent.
The last available doses expired mid-2016.
SANOFI was moved mainly by financial considerations. The prohibitive price of a single dose – more than $100 (±R1 410) – rendered sales in Africa unprofitable.
The failure to use antivenom “to save tens of millions of lives… is a shameful failure. Nowhere in the world is this more confronting than in Africa,” says the Global Snakebite Initiative, adding in a report on its website that the “collapse of the snake antivenom market in Africa” was a “medical tragedy”.
Lower demand and falling sales
The cause is multifold.
In a vicious circle, unaffordability leads to lower demand and falling sales, which result in reduced production, higher costs, and raised prices for consumers.
Even an antivenom produced on the continent and effective against multiple snake species, is nigh impossible to find further north than South Africa, where it is made, a 2018 study by the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine found.
“The market remains volatile because they are small producers and the African antivenom market is limited,” said Julien Potet, an expert in neglected tropical diseases with aid group Doctors Without Borders.
Inconsistent quality standards and lacking oversight have also seen an infiltration of counterfeit and “inappropriate” antivenoms developed for different snake types in other countries. Using the wrong antivenom can be dangerous, even deadly.
Doctors Without Borders, which describes Africa’s antivenom shortage as a public health crisis, has launched its own survey of available antivenoms.
Antivenom should be free
Most were brought to the market “without any clinical information, without any data on their efficacy or safety in humans,” said Potet.
A further problem: even if antivenoms were available, people most likely to be bitten by a venomous snake live prohibitively far from a clinic or hospital, some of which have no refrigeration capacity, and with medical staff that have never been trained in treating snakebites.
“We are losing around 1 000 people in Kenya each year from snakebites,” said Royjan Taylor, director of the Bio-Ken snake farm and research centre on the country’s east coast.
This is out of 81 000–138 000 worldwide.
Africa alone sees about half a million snakebites that need treatment every year, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
“Governments and the international community therefore should really pick that up… What I would like to see over the next five to 10 years, maybe even 15 years, is for an antivenom to be produced for each area of the world that has a problem and that antivenom should be provided to those people free of charge,” Royjan said.
The WHO has launched a massive review of the availability, efficacy and safety of snakebite serum available in Africa, where the majority of countries have no effective or affordable antivenom at all.
Image credit: iStock
How This Former Ballerina Is Revolutionizing Home Workouts
“I spent my teens and early 20s as a professional ballerina, dancing with companies in New York City and Montreal. After retiring in 2008, I went into the boutique fitness field. At first, the only space I could afford was a 500-square-foot room in a church, which meant there was no room for traditional equipment. I had to figure out: What can you do in a small footprint that gives people the benefit of a total gym? I came up with a high-intensity circuit that toned the full body. When I brought in mirrors, people loved them. They found the visual feedback inspiring and also helpful in keeping their form correct.
Fast-forward to 2016, which found me running three fitness studios across New York City. Getting to my own workouts was hard, especially because I was pregnant at the time. Biking or running on a treadmill in my apartment just didn’t appeal. I tried workout apps, but they weren’t immersive enough to hold my interest.
RELATED: Use This 10-Minute Leg Workout to Get Toned While Channeling Your Inner Ballerina
RELATED: I’m the Worst Dancer, but I'll Never Quit Taking Dance Fitness Classes—Here’s Why
I started thinking how I could bring that small studio experience into my home…and thought back to the mirrors I’d put in that church years ago. I came up with Mirror, an interactive home gym that hangs on your wall.
In the early days, when I didn’t have a physical prototype, people couldn’t understand what the experience would be like. Then once it was made and they could experience it, I heard, ‘I can’t believe I didn’t think of this!’
Variety’s a key component of a good workout, so Mirror users can choose from live and on-demand classes in cardio, strength, yoga, barre, boxing, HIIT, and more… without leaving their home. I’ve heard from parents who say that for years they’ve struggled to find time to get out of their house and work out—and then felt guilty once they did. Being able to work out at home isn’t just a solution for them, but helps their whole family.
RELATED: 10-Minute Cardio Workout You Can Do at Home
Many wellness-based goals are focused on future rewards—like making you stronger one day. Or thinner. Or healthier. That makes it really challenging to be successful. If you enjoy the experience now, future rewards will come. So that’s another mental shift I’m hoping Mirror will bring. Many people look in their mirror at home and spend time criticizing their body. I want this to help them celebrate what they’re capable of.”
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PR, Media and Digital
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Jackie: 072 487 3387
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Nova: 073 393 9731
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Complaints Inspector (Durban)
A position exists for a complaints inspector to join a high end manufacturing company. The ideal candidate must have excellent communication skills, be a peoples person and must be able to remain calm and collected under pressure. Previous experience in a factory environment is beneficial.
The successful candidate will need to conduct a complaints inspection with accurate measurements and photographs for the factory. Feedback of the inspection to be provided to the relevant manager. Must be able to maintain client relationships and filter feedback to the client.
Skills required:
- Must have a stable working history with at least five years’ experience
- Valid driver’s licence
- Ability to speak and understand multiple lanaguages
Should you meet the requirements please email:
target=”_blank: “az.oc.rehtworcidnas@adnileb
Posted on 11 Apr 13:26
Sandi Crowther Recruitment
One of the most established team of Recruitment Consultants in Durban with a reputation for sourcing and placing top quality candidates at select companies.
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Learning And Development Practitioner (fmcg)
Job Description Address identified training needs through the provisions of LD service solutions in line with agreed training plans and budgets. • Ensure external legal compliance in LD through provision of agreed training as required for company legal, industry specific and SETA related requirements. • Ensure internal compliance to LD quality requirements in terms management information, learning management and learner records. • Facilitate internal training in support of integration to the company high performance culture. Qualification Requirements• ODETDP Qualification or equivalent (NQF level 5) • Qualified Skills Development Facilitator. • Trade or Vocational qualification will be an advantage. • Valid driver’s licence. Experience Requirements• At least 2 years supervisory experience in training environment • At least 3 years working experience in the FMCG industry an advantage. • Min 3 years’ experience in Learning and Development within OBE and NQF. Key Outputs • Address identified training needs through the provisions of LD service solutions in line with agreed training plans and budgets. • Ensure external legal compliance in LD through provision of agreed training as required for company legal, industry specific and SETA related requirements. • Ensure internal compliance to Premier LD quality requirements in terms management information, info@rnbplacements.co.za
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