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Sport24.co.za | ‘Hurt’ AB clings to his crown
London – I am not going anywhere.
That was the fulcrum of Proteas one-day international captain AB de Villiers’s message as he faced the unenviable press conference post-mortem on his team’s crushing exit from the ICC Champions Trophy at the hands of India at The Oval here on Sunday.
The team’s media officer Lerato Malekutu implored an eager army of questioners to “speak into the microwave” – she gave a more radiant smile than De Villiers did as she acknowledged her harmless booboo – and the skipper certainly then got the near-inevitable grilling.
But if anyone was wishing to hear the 33-year-old batsman, who plays more selectively for South Africa these days, say he was relinquishing his ODI crown, he wasn’t about to play ball, despite this failure to reach the knockout phase, coming immediately on top of a 2-1 bilateral series defeat to England.
Why did he still want to be the captain? “Because I am a good captain, and because I believe I can take this team forward. I can take us to win a World Cup, I believe … I love doing it (the leadership).”
Asked whether a profound shake-up was required in the wake of another glaring failure in a multinational limited-overs tournament, he replied: “That question can only be answered by those in control of making radical decisions.
“It’s not my decision, that. We’ll have to wait and see what people out there decide.
“I’m not thinking about the next (tournament) now. We just want to sort of get through this hurt. It is hurting quite bad.
“(The loss was) nothing to do with the energy, the belief in the team; we felt we had a great chance to win today, we just unravelled as a side out there.
“It’s as disappointing as any of the other (major tournament) losses of the past … it ranks right up there. The way we lost was the most disappointing part … we were in a really good position with the bat in hand early on.
“Through soft dismissals we lost our way. That was the part for me that hurt the most. We were on the way for around 300, which I thought was very defendable on that wicket today.
“I wouldn’t like to blame guys out there; it’s just one of those things that happen.”
De Villiers’s insistence that his charges didn’t implode mentally is likely to spark quite spirited debate back home, considering how the batting collapsed from a decent platform, and including the run-outs of himself, David Miller and last man Imran Tahir.
“I felt the team was pretty composed out there today. I didn’t think we lost it with composure. I felt pretty calm out there.
“A few errors in judgement cost us badly today. We desperately needed another partnership in the middle order; that’s where we lost our way. We needed to get the ball rolling again after my run-out. We couldn’t do that.”
On his own dismissal, he said: “There was a call out there, and I thought we could get through for the run.
“Run-outs happen. But three in one innings is definitely not the way we want to play our cricket.”
*Rob Houwing is attending the Champions Trophy for Sport24. Follow our chief writer on Twitter: @RobHouwing
News24.com | Father and two others to appear in court for murder of girl, 10
Mthatha – Two men and a woman have been arrested for the abduction and murder of a 10-year-old girl from Misty Mount in Libode, Eastern Cape police said on Sunday.
One of the suspects arrested is the 30-year-old father of the girl, Lieutenant Colonel Mzukisi Fatyela said.
The trio, aged between 22 and 30, is expected to appear in the Libode Magistrate’s Court on Monday on charges of abduction.
They will then appear in the Tsolo Magistrate’s Court on Tuesday on charges of murder and possession of an unlicensed firearm.
According to Fatyela, the girl was allegedly abducted by her father and his fiancé from her school in Misty Mount and was later found dead in a forest in the town of Tsolo, about an hour and half away from Libode.
“The child allegedly left her father and his fiancé because they were allegedly mistreating her. She went to go stay with her grandmother.
“They went to school, and abducted her. They were arrested by the organised crime unit,” said Fatyela.
Fatyela said that the suspects initially approached authorities, claiming that the 10-year-old had been kidnapped, but during interrogation, they admitted that they had kidnapped the child.
eNCA | Phosa in the running to lead the ANC
JOHANNESBURG – Former ANC treasurer-general Mathews Phosa has accepted endorsements to be the party’s next leader.
Seven branches in Cape Town’s Khayelitsha township are giving him the nod to be in charge of the governing party.
Phosa says church leaders need to pray for the country, which he believes is desperate for change.
During his address, he highlighted the scourges of crime, poverty and unemployment gripping South African society.
Phosa also criticised the incumbent ANC president, Jacob Zuma.
“We know what is wrong in the country. And we know how we can correct what is wrong. I want to ask the church to pray for national healing,” he said.
“We are sick as a nation. But that healing will also cost us something. It will cost us our president – Zuma.“
“He is part of the scandal and is on top of the scandal. I’m saying this as an honest Christian. I am stating the facts. We need national healing as the country,” Phosa added.
eNCA
India give SA masterclass in how to win when it matters
That price was an anaemic total of of 191, a low hurdle that India hopped in 38 overs to win by eight wickets.
In the process, India burnished their reputation as a team who seize the moment and with it the trophy: they have won the World Cup, the Champions Trophy and the World T20 in the last 10 years.
South Africa confirmed that when the kitchen heats up they head for the garage: they have won one match in their last 19 trips to those three tournaments when elimination has loomed, and that game wasn’t a final.
AB de Villiers’ men seemed on course for a far more substantial score while Quinton de Kock and Hashim Amla were compiling their partnership of 76 — South Africa’s highest opening stand in the tournament and only their second of 50 or more for any wicket.
Drama didn’t seem imminent when Amla cut Ravichandran Ashwin into MS Dhoni’s gloves in the 18th over, and when De Kock reached a half-century it was noted that all five time he had made 50 in one-day internationals against India he had gone on to a century.
Not this time. De Kock scored 53 before swiping past a delivery from Ravindra Jadeja that nailed his off-stump.
Even so, at 116/2 and not quite halfway through their innings, South Africa seemed set to post a total that could compete with India’s potent batting order …
Five overs later, the madness struck.
At 12.24pm, Faf du Plessis nudged Jadeja to point and tried to take a single that wasn’t there for the taking, and even a full length dive by De Villiers couldn’t stop one of cricket’s most fleetfooted players from being run out.
That would have been a cruel blow to absorb for South Africa’s captain, who came into the tournament as the No. 1 ranked batsman in the format but scored only four runs from the five deliveries he faced in his first two innings.
He had a shot at redemption on Sunday, and he seemed determined to take it.
But it was stolen from him by poor judgement and, perhaps, fate.
At 12.29pm, Du Plessis cut Ravichandran Ashwin to short third man, set off on a run, changed his mind and returned to his crease, and looked up to see David Miller at the same end of the pitch.
The ball was duly delivered to the other end, and after much deliberation it was decided that Miller was the one to go.
In the space of those five minutes and the six deliveries they encompassed, South Africa’s hopes of staying alive in this tournament ebbed to a new low.
Their supporters will dispute that assertion considering how many times they have been shot in this movie before — every four years since 1992.
Du Plessis was their last hope of rewriting that sorry script, but he dragged Hardik Pandya onto his stumps four overs after Miller went.
Up in the dressingroom, De Villiers sat ashen-faced and holding a pen.
Might he have been composing his resignation from the captaincy or even his international retirement?
Or was he pondering the cruelty of finishing on the wrong end of the equation in all seven knockout matches in which he has batted?
Or that he was not required to bat in the only knockout match South Africa have won during his career – the 2015 World Cup quarter-final against Sri Lanka in Sydney?
Other players looked equally distraught; the sight of De Kock, his arm draped consolingly, even protectively, around Miller’s shoulder particularly poignant.
South Africa’s last eight wickets disappeared for 51 runs, all 10 for 115, and two of them in as many deliveries by Bhuv Kumar.
Imran Tahir survived, with a squirt to third man, the hattrick ball — which was accompanied by a rising roar of demand from an apparently exclusively India-supporting, sell-out crowd.
The innings was ended by, wouldn’t you know it, Tahir’s run out.
India’s reply was more a festival than a fight.
So much so that Tahir did not take his customary tear into the outfield when he had Shikhar Dhawan caught in the deep for 78 to end a second-wicket stand of 128.
Dhawan’s partner, Virat Kohli, finished with 76 not out.
Now, there’s a man who knows his way around the kitchen.
eNCA | Tired, traumatised Mosul mothers unable to breastfeed
KHAZIR, Iraq – Wazira rocks her tiny baby pleadingly but he is inconsolable, crying for the milk his mother can neither produce herself nor buy in a camp near the Iraqi battleground city of Mosul.
“He’s been crying since the moment he was born. He only stops when he’s so exhausted that he falls asleep,” the 24-year-old Iraqi mother said, sheltering her baby Rakan from the scorching sun with a piece of white cloth.
“I cannot breastfeed him and I feel he’s never satisfied. There’s no good food to eat and no money to buy baby formula,” she said, sitting outside one of the clinics in Khazir camp.
The camp southeast of Mosul, where Iraqi forces are deep into the eighth month of a massive operation against the Islamic State jihadist group, is crammed with around 32,000 people displaced from the war-torn city.
PICS: Fleeing IS, Mosul’s civilians cart out the living and the dead
Conditions in Khazir, one of the largest — but not the worst — displacement camps around Mosul are difficult. Temperatures soaring past the 110-Fahrenheit (43-Celsius) mark add to Rakan’s discomfort.
“Sometimes I pound the biscuits they give us at the camp into powder and mix them with water to try to feed him by force,” said the young mother, her face partly covered by a black veil.
A few yards (metres) down the queue, Marwa is also waiting for her turn to take her eight-month-old daughter to a doctor.
The 25-year-old mother, who fled west Mosul with her family two weeks earlier, already had no maternal milk to give Maryam five months ago.
“These past few months made me very tired, we kept moving from house to house until we finally managed to get out,” she said. “I was sick and couldn’t feed her anymore.”
As elite forces retake the city one neighbourhood at a time, civilians often used as human shields by the jihadists stay cooped up in their homes — at risk from shelling and dwindling food supplies — until their area is retaken.
Harrowing dispatch from Mosul: residents say ISIS executed people fleeing, child left clinging to mother’s corpse: https://t.co/sZ1P0MZ7aq
— Louisa Loveluck (@leloveluck) June 7, 2017
The line of haggard-looking mothers holding their wailing babies, curled around the clinic run by the International Medical Corps, a US-based charity.
Stress
Neshmeel Diller, one of the doctors at the clinic, said she examined up to 80 women in a single day.
“Seventy percent of them complain of their inability to breastfeed and of their children always being hungry and crying all the time,” she said.
“The psychological condition of these mothers and the hormonal changes caused by anxiety and depression, the lack of privacy and physical comfort as well as of balanced nutrition… all these factors converge to affect their ability to breastfeed,” Diller said.
She added that the pressure of life in the camp often meant that mothers would lose the patience to repeat their attempts.
PICTURED: An Iraqi military tank rolls along a road during fighting with Islamic State militants in al-Zanjili district in western Mosul, Iraq June 11, 2017. CREDIT: REUTERS/Erik De Castro
Doctors Without Borders (MSF), another medical charity, said it was also monitoring the impact of high lactation failure rates on nutrition among the displaced child population.
More than 800,000 people have been forced from their homes since the start of the Mosul operation last October.
Most experienced traumatising living conditions under the ruthless rule of IS for close to three years, risked their lives trying to flee and now face a very uncertain future.
Hard not to get choked up watching this. Little girl survived ISIS massacre and “hid against her mother’s corpse.”https://t.co/0EcRLpZPoS
— Angry Bosnian Fan (@AngryBosnianFan) June 6, 2017
“Stress is a major factor affecting the mothers of our little patients. Stress affects breastfeeding more than a mother’s own nutritional status or physical health,” MSF’s medical coordinator in Iraq, Evgenia Zelikova, told AFP.
“We do notice an increase in malnutrition among babies whose mothers are no longer able to breastfeed,” she said.
“This is because formula milk is often hard to come by or extremely expensive in besieged areas of Mosul and in the camps.”
The UN Children’s Fund said it had noticed a spike in malnutrition among the most recently displaced children and had begun distributing a peanut-based supplement among affected populations.
AFP
News24.com | #KnysnaFires claim seventh life
Cape Town – The death count of the Knysna fires now stands at seven following the death of a woman who succumbed to burn wounds on Saturday night, James-Brent Styan confirmed to News24.
The woman, who is the mother of the three-year-old child who died on Wednesday, also suffered burns and was confirmed dead on Saturday evening at Tygerberg Hospital.
On Saturday, five fighters in George were reported to have sustained minor injuries. Styan – spokesperson for Western Cape local government MEC Anton Bredell – confirmed in a statement that the total number of fatalities in Eden came to seven on Sunday, including one firefighter.
With the help of 1106 firefighters in the area, all fires have been contained, said Styan. The Knysna municipality also confirmed on Sunday evening in a statement that Knysna remains open for business.
The fires that started five days ago ran rampant through the town of 77 000 people. The fire was propelled by strong winds from a storm that ravaged the Cape area last Wednesday.
The weather is expected to cool down, with reduced winds and 30% of rain expected over the next two days, according to a statement from the South African Weather Services (SAWS).
The cooler weather has allowed for aerial resources to be implemented easier, making it easier to water-bomb the affected areas.
On Sunday morning, aircraft were on scene, including from the South African National Defence Force (SANDF) and Working on Fire (WOF).
Damage
According to a statement from Styan, all fires have been contained on the north side of Knysna and north side of Sedgefield. Six more houses were burnt down in Knysna since Saturday.
Brenton-on-Sea was reported to be affected on Saturday, with more houses being gutted by fires fuelled by gale force winds.
There are reportedly no losses in Buffalo Bay, as the town was protected from runaway fires by way of deliberate back burn.
A back burn is a method used by firefighters to fight natural fires with man-made fire. A wide area in the path of the fire is scorched, and it acts as a divide between the oncoming fire, subsequently also reducing the amount of fuel available to the fire.
Meanwhile, in Bitou, about 50 structures were burnt down, but this is yet to be officially confirmed pending a formal assessment.
DA leader Mmusi Maimane tweeted earlier that he would be in Knysna on Monday, saying: “South Africans have lost houses, property, and so we must stand together as a people. Amandla!”
Nearly 10 000 residents were evacuated due to the fires which destroyed homes, structures, and power and communication lines.
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