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Car Learnership
- Ad Placed : 19 Jun 2018 09:18:21
- Remuneration : R 4200 – R 4200 – PER MONTH
- Employment Type : Contract
- Employment Level : Unskilled
- Industry :
- Training
Training Jobs - Region : Western Cape / Cape Town
- Company : 1 Four All Recruitment (Pty) Ltd
A client of ours is running a 8month Learnership program at their car dealership based in Capetown. Candidates will earn a NQF level 2 certification, upon completion. Stipend:R4200 per month Ref:CarLearCPT1 Minimum Requirements: • Mechanical Trades: NTC3 or technical Matric • No older than 25 years old To apply, please send a copy of your CV and any relevant Certificates to us at 1fourall recruitment. We do not charge candidates any fees. All calls will be answered between 11am and 1pm (Mon to Friday) No telephonic applications will be considered. Fax number: 086 539 7894 (Mark it attention Peter) Email:apply@1fourall.co.za Tel:061 403 4436
To Apply for this Job,
News24.com | Four shot at Cape Town taxi rank
Three minibus taxi owners and a bystander were injured in a shooting at Cape Town’s busy Joe Slovo taxi rank near Canal Walk shopping mall on Tuesday morning.
“Police are on the scene at the Joe Slovo taxi rank, Milnerton, where unknown persons opened fire and wounded four persons this morning,” said police spokesperson Captain FC van Wyk.
Omuramba Road South is closed between Racecourse Road and Freedom Way, said Western Cape traffic chief Kenny Africa.
Meanwhile, Congress of Democratic Taxi Associations spokesperson Besethu Ndungane said he was trying to get to the scene to find out what had sparked the shooting, but was stuck in gridlocked traffic due to a protest on Mew Way.
His initial suspicion is that the shooting may be related to the route disputes that have plagued the city in the past weeks, but he said he could not say for sure until he got there to speak to everybody on the scene.
Comment from the Cape Amalgamated Taxi Association was not immediately available.
Taxi operators declared a truce and signed a peace accord at the end of May after Western Cape Transport MEC Donald Grant threatened to shut down all ranks in the city to stop the war over routes.
Read more: Bloody weekend as 10 people killed in Cape Town taxi violence
The Joe Slovo rank is a major connecting rank to other destinations in the city.
This is a developing story.
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eNCA | Courtney Pieters’ murderer back in court
CAPE TOWN – The man who murdered three-year-old Courtney Pieters will be back in the Western Cape High Court on Tuesday.
Mortimer Saunders admitted to killing the Elsies River toddler last year.
READ: Murdered Cape toddler would not have survived poison: forensic toxicologist
Last week, a DNA expert testified that he had found a positive match of the accused’s semen on a top worn by Pieters on the day she died.
Saunders has confessed to poisoning, beating, choking and suffocating the child, but he denies raping her.
READ: Woman sobs as she recalls day she found Courtney Pieters’ body
The State has not accepted his pleas and is prosecuting him on charges of premeditated murder and rape.
A pathologist is expected to take the stand on Tuesday.
eNCA
Aa Customer Service Co-ordinator (hammarsdale)
- Ad Placed : 19 Jun 2018 09:00:27 Affiliate ad
- Remuneration : PER MONTH
- Employment Type : Full Time
- Industry :
- Logistics
Other Logistics - Region : Kwazulu-Natal
- Company : MPRTC Recruitment
AN INTERNATIONAL CHEMICAL COMPANY WITHIN THE PAPER AND PULP INDUSTRY REQUIRES AN AA CUSTOMER SERVICE CO-ORDINATOR IN HAMMARSDALE Position is strictly for AA and Disabled candidates.
Requirements:
- Diploma in Customer Service Management
- Export Certificate (Advantage)
- 3 – 5 years’ experience in Customer Service within the chemical Industry
- Knowledge of all processes and procedures for order processing
- Experience Dealing with domestic and International Customers
- Knowledge of all SHERQ Requirements
- Excellent written and verbal Communication Skills
- Computer Literate
Applicants must reside in HAMMARSDALE or surrounding area.
Please take note: if you have not been contacted within 14 days, please consider your application unsuccessful.
Visit our website to view all of our current vacancies: www.mprtc.co.za
To apply for this vacancy please access this job advert on a desktop computer.
Apply for other Jobs on Job Mail.
Senior Field Technician
A Client in the office automation industry is looking for a senior Field Technician (copier technician/engineer) with minimum 5 yearsâ experience. Own transport and valid driverâÂÂs license is essential. N+ Comptia qualification will be an advantage. Fluent in English and Afrikaans essential.
Some of the responsibilities of the successful candidate will be,
- Delivering of service excellence and building good client relations
- Hardware installation and training for clients
- Driver and firmware installations
- Must be able to work under pressure
- Proven skills in performing technical duties of the highest standards
- Must be able and willing to perform any other maintenance functions that would be required
- Maintain and update services, maintenance and repair schedules, records, files and registers
- Must be willing to work overtime and be on standby when required
- Computer literate
We are looking for an enthusiastic, self-motivated, reliable and trustworthy candidate who is a team player.
Closing date: Friday 1 June 2018
Health24.com | How your mucus can be a guide to sinusitis treatment
Chronic sinusitis can be extremely painful, and those with the condition may feel sick for weeks and find it difficult to participate in everyday life or complete simple tasks.
According to a recently published Vanderbilt University study, a person’s nasal mucus could provide vital information to predict the type of chronic sinusitis, which could ultimately assist doctors in determining whether surgery or medical treatments will be the most effective.
What does the research entail and what does this mean for the future treatment of chronic sinusitis?
What is chronic sinusitis?
The sinuses are hollow, moist spaces that drain through the nose. When the sinuses are prevented from draining due to either an infection or allergic reaction, fluid and mucus remain trapped. This results in the inflammation and irritation of the sinuses, which is referred to as sinusitis.
Chronic sinusitis is sinusitis that lasts for a long time, usually longer than three months. People with asthma and allergies are usually more vulnerable to chronic sinusitis. There are various types of sinusitis:
- Acute sinusitis: typically lasts up to a month
- Sub-acute sinusitis: longer than one month
- Chronic sinusitis: longer than three months
While chronic sinusitis lasts longer than acute sinusitis, the symptoms are the same and include: A cough, thick nasal mucus, post-nasal drip, headaches, fever, congestion, facial pain and swelling.
However, chronic sinusitis sufferers may also develop nasal polyps, which are growths on the tissue of the nose and sinuses, resulting in difficulty breathing.
“When we look at the postoperative outcomes for those patients, which we assess through a quality of life measure that assesses patient symptom burden, we find that at one year follow up, patients in certain clusters do much better than patients in other clusters,” Dr Turner said.
Future of chronic sinusitis treatment
According to Dr Turner, the findings should pave the way for more personalised medication and treatment options for chronic sinusitis patients, instead of the one-size-fits-all option that is currently in use.
Presently, chronic sinusitis patients are examined to determine how much previous treatment they have undergone and are then administered courses of anti-inflammatory medications such as antibiotics. Only once this has taken place the surgical options are explained to the patient.
“In theory, going forward, this is something that could be used in a point-of-care fashion before making a decision to take a patient to surgery. Perhaps some patients may do better with continued medical therapy, or with biologic medications.” Dr Turner emphasised.
Image credit: iStock
News24.com | Quick-thinking driver foils North West cash-in-transit heist attempt
An attempted cash-in-transit heist was foiled in Mooinooi in the North West on Monday night when the driver managed to get himself and his armoured car to safety after coming under fire, police said on Tuesday.
National police spokesperson Colonel Brenda Muridili said the driver was shot at on the road towards Majakaneng at about 19:00.
With bullets hitting his vehicle, he came to a halt when one of the tyres was hit. He stopped the vehicle and waited for the robbers to approach him.
ALSO READ: Cash-in-transit heists could lead to losses of R470m, Parliament hears
As they came closer, he sped off on the flat tyre and only stopped when he arrived at a filling station to get help.
Majakaneng and Mooinooi are between Hartbeespoort Dam and Rustenburg.
“It is commendable,” said Muridili of the driver’s actions.
The company’s name was not immediately available.
NIU swift reaction commended
In the meantime, police are still investigating the heist on a G4S armoured truck on Jakes Gerwel Drive near the Philippi police station, in Cape Town, on Monday morning.
Attempted CIT Heist.
Majakaneng/MooiNooi. Driver managed to drive off and stopped at a petrol station. Vehicle shot several times. pic.twitter.com/rzCqoZi9xR— Yusuf Abramjee (@Abramjee) June 18, 2018
“The police’s national intervention unit (NIU) responded swiftly to the crime scene resulting in a shootout between the robbers and the police; no injuries have been reported,” said Muridili.
In that robbery, the attackers blew up the side of the van to get to the money, abandoning a BMW on the scene as they made their getaway from the bridge where the attack occurred.
Muridili said that acting national commissioner Lt-Gen Sindile Mfazi commended the NIU’s swift reaction to the Cape Town heist, because robbers only got away with some of the money that was scattered at the scene after the explosion.
ALSO READ: ‘It happened very quick’ – witness recounts latest cash-in-transit heist
“We have declared that the high density stabilisation operations, launched earlier this month, will utilise medium to high risk operatives hence the quick response by the NIU. We will continue to hunt down the perpetrators that continue to threaten the authority of the state,” Mfazi said in a statement.
National commissioner Khehla Sitole is currently out of the country.
The Directorate for Priority Crimes, known as the Hawks, is investigating and anybody with a tip-off is asked to pass it on to Crime Stop at 08600 10111.
Sport24.co.za | Rassie backs Bok youngsters to improve defence
Cape Town – The Springboks, over the last two weekends, have done enough to suggest that there is hope yet.
Back-to-back wins over Eddie Jones’ England, who not so long ago were considered the only nation capable of challenging New Zealand at next year’s Rugby World Cup, have gone a long way towards extinguishing the disappointment that came in 2016 and 2017.
For all his good intentions, the Allister Coetzee era will go down as one of the darkest periods in South African rugby history.
When the decision was taken to part ways with the former Stormers boss at the end of 2017, South African rugby needed an injection of something fresh.
Three Tests into Rassie Erasmus’ tenure as coach, that seems to be exactly what has happened.
The first two Tests against England in Johannesburg and Bloemfontein have seen the Boks play an attacking brand of rugby that was absent throughout the Coetzee era.
While still paying mind to the traditional strengths of Bok rugby, Erasmus has this side looking as enterprising as ever with ball in hand.
The likes of Faf de Klerk, Willie le Roux, Aphiwe Dyantyi and S’bu Nkosi have been particularly exciting when moving forward, and for the first time in a long time it seems like the Boks have the ability to hurt opposition sides with quick recycling or turnover ball.
That said, the starts in both Test matches remain a concern.
In Johannesburg the Boks were 24-3 down in no time while, in Bloemfontein, they conceded two early tries to go 12-0 down.
The intensity on attack that followed meant that the Boks could recover, but there are still worries over the defensive frailties that have existed, especially in the wide channels where England have found space.
Both Nkosi and Dyantyi have been found wanting at times, while there are also suggestions that the defensive alignment between Am and his wings is slightly out of sync.
Whatever it is, Erasmus believes that the problems will be rectified with time.
“I think it’s just experience. It’s like putting a short putt in your back yard; when it’s only you watching that putt you’ll nail it every single time,” he explained.
“But if you do it in front of 50 000 under pressure, the only way you can get used to that is to feel it under that situation and make those mistakes.
“Then you go and do the review and put it under the same pressure at training sessions and just repeat that process so that they get used to it.”
Am has now played three Tests for the Boks while Dyantyi and Nkosi have two each.
“They are young, and they’ll get it right over time,” Erasmus said.
“It almost cost us the game (in the first Test), but those guys who made those mistakes scored some wonderful tries as well. For us as coaches it’s about staying calm and giving the guys time to learn from their mistakes.”
While the overall picture is positive, and the improvement is there for all to see, Erasmus conceded that there was still a lot to be done.
“On the field I think we’ve definitely improved in areas which we thought previously were some of our weaknesses,” he said.
“We’re not great yet but I think the kicking game and aerial skills are getting better and, tactically, I think we are more or less getting better with the balance between attack and defence.”
Erasmus has conceded that there will be a number of changes made to his side for the 3rd Test in Cape Town on Saturday.
Kick-off is at 17:05.
eNCA | UPDATE: Uber drivers back on the road after Monday’s strike
• Editor’s note: This article is updated each time new information becomes available.
JOHANNESBURG – Uber drivers are back on the roads after a strike.
Teresa Munchick from The Movement, an organisation representing Uber drivers, said drivers lost income.
On Monday, some drivers gathered to hand over a memorandum to Uber and Taxify bosses.
##uberGoslowGauteng
Uber drivers gathered for a meeting in Zolake Johannesburg pic.twitter.com/k91Ul4uhiP— Mr GoodNews (@MalaitaSA) June 18, 2018
The drivers are unhappy about the 25 percent service fee, charged by Uber, per ride.
They also voiced their concerns over the fuel price increase.
eNCA