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The ANC in the province has not replaced Ntuthuko Mahlaba after he was arrested last week.
Mhlaba appeared in the Madadeni Magistrate’s Court on Monday for murder, attempted murder and two counts of conspiracy to commit murder, according to ANC provincial spokesperson Nomagugu Simelane-Zulu.
Mahlaba, who was sworn in as mayor earlier this month, was arrested on Friday in connection with the murder of ex-ANC Youth League member, Wandile Ngobeni, and allegedly linked to the attempted murder of another member. Ngobeni was assassinated in May 2016.
Mahlaba is also the chairperson of the ANC’s Emalahleni region.
Simelane-Zulu said the mayor’s case was postponed to April 1 for his bail application.
Formal bail application
“Our comrade appeared in court today and his matter was postponed because the State said it was not ready to proceed with the matter. The State then requested the matter be postponed until April 1, for his formal bail application,” she said.
Simelane-Zulu added that the ruling party in the province was worried about the current state of affairs in the province.
“We are worried about the developments because the person facing charges is our comrade as well as the deceased was also our comrade. As the ANC, we believe that everyone is innocent until proven guilty.
“We will allow the law to take its case and it is for the state to prove its case against the accused. Tomorrow there is a press briefing where we will deliberate further on the matter and the way forward at the Newcastle municipality. For now, he remains the mayor of the municipality,” she said.
Mahlaba’s arrest came days after Harry Gwala District Mayor Mluleki Ndobe’ was arrested for the 2017 murder of former ANCYL secretary Sindiso Magaqa.
Charges against Ndobe were provisionally withdrawn in the Umzimkhulu Magistrate’s Court on Monday.
READ: ANCYL in KZN says members facing murder charges must be recalled
Last week, the ANC Youth League (ANCYL) in KwaZulu-Natal called on the party’s provincial executive committee (PEC) to recall those facing murder charges.
The league said the continued stay of members facing murder charges was “harming the image of the ANC”.
“The ANC Youth League is calling on the PEC of the ANC to recall all members of the ANC who are deployed in various government position but who are facing murder cases,” the league said in a statement.
“The ANC as a leader of society cannot allow itself to be in conflict with the people.”
According to the league, its leaders in the province “have been the most targeted in the senseless killings in our province, accounting for the majority of those killed during the spate of political killings in the province.”
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People transitioning female to male face issues around future fertility. But new research suggests children in the future are a real possibility for these transgender men.
Now, research shows that transgender men can remain fertile after even one year of testosterone treatment.
Ovarian function well-preserved
It’s common for transgender men – those who were born female but who identify as male – to undergo testosterone therapy as a gender-affirming treatment. But some may later want children through their own pregnancy or via surrogate, the Israeli researchers explained.
“Because the long-term effects of testosterone therapy on fertility are unknown, the current recommendation is to stop testosterone at least three months before fertility treatments,” said lead investigator Dr Yona Greenman. She heads the Transgender Health Center at Tel Aviv-Sourasky Medical Center.
The study included 52 transgender men, aged 17 to 40, who received testosterone therapy over 12 months. They had the expected increase in testosterone blood levels and decrease in oestrogen, but their levels of anti-Mullerian hormone (AMH) remained in the normal range for fertility.
AMH levels are used to appraise remaining eggs in the ovaries. Average levels in study participants decreased only slightly, suggesting their ovarian function was well-preserved, according to Greenman.
Participants also showed no changes in the thickness of their uterine lining. A thick lining is crucial for embryo implantation and a successful pregnancy.
Reproduction a transgender right
The findings are to be presented Saturday at the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting, in New Orleans.
“Our research shows for the first time that after one year of testosterone treatment, ovary function is preserved to a degree that may allow reproduction,” Greenman said in a meeting news release. “This information is important for transgender men and their partners who desire to have their own children.”
She said more study is needed to examine the effects of testosterone on other benchmarks of fertility, including the quality of eggs and embryos fertilized in vitro.
“These results are a further step toward providing transgender people basic rights such as reproduction,” Greenman added.
Research presented at meetings is typically considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.
Image credit: iStock
NEXT ON HEALTH24X
Rob Houwing, Sport24 chief writer
Cape Town – The impotence of their backline play is currently a glaring impediment to the Stormers being deemed knockout-phase material in this year’s Super Rugby.
Heard that one before?
It was, of course, also a hallmark of generous periods of Allister Coetzee’s tenure as head coach between 2010 and 2015, the only difference being that they were often SA conference masters, had a famously adhesive defence and won roughly two-thirds of all matches he presided over for them.
But the pattern is re-emerging to a worrying extent in 2019 … or at least as far as being try-shy in concerned.
Currently sixth on the overall table with three wins from five starts (so at the races for finals-series status), the Stormers were, however, probably deprived of a courageous triumph over the Hurricanes in Wellington on Saturday because their backs failed by a considerable distance to match the front-foot capabilities achieved by their keen, grunt-laden pack.
They were eventually beaten 34-28 although they did bank a losing bonus point – scant reward for the yeoman industry of men like Pieter-Steph du Toit, Bongi Mbonambi and company.
Competition statistics after round six show that the Stormers are the only team in the entire competition with a single-figure “tries for” count at this stage: nine.
Next worst are compatriots the Bulls (11), while the ease with which certain other teams are crossing the whitewash is reflected in the Crusaders and Lions sharing the honours at the top with 25 each, albeit both from an extra match over the Capetonians.
In another blast from the fairly recent past, if you like, the Stormers are at least lying joint second-best with the Waratahs when it comes to fewest tries conceded: 13.
The Sharks are presently doing easily the most sterling shut-out job of all teams, with only eight concessions.
Still, it seems pretty clear that the Newlands-based side, whose next tour date is against the Blues in Auckland this Saturday (08:35 SA time) will have to try to engineer better thrust from their back division if they are to be treated seriously enough as potential title aspirants this year.
It is just as sobering a stat that only two of their nine tries have been scored by outside backs – one by centre Dan du Plessis against the Jaguares at Newlands, and an early intercept by Damian Willemse when he was starting fullback against the Sharks in Durban.
Three have gone to scrumhalves (two to Herschel Jantjies, one to reserve Justin Phillips) and the other four all rumbled over the line by pack members: like a couple of other SA sides, the Stormers have a noticeable trump card in their rolling maul off the attacking lineout.
The fact that they had to make a near-hellish number of tackles was a reflection, though, of their inability or lack of confidence to keep ball in hand: there was far too much wasted kicking from them and the wings again caught the proverbial colds as far as attacking opportunities were concerned.
Robbie Fleck’s charges continue to be bedevilled by the lack of a street-wise game manager at scrumhalf where, for all his raw talent and personal nippiness, Jantjies understandably still has plenty to learn strategically – veteran Jano Vermaak being so often on the crocked list hardly aids their cause in the berth.
But flyhalf looks too fluid, as well, despite a run of several matches on the trot for fit-again Jean-Luc du Plessis; he has worn the No 10 jersey since the second match, following the disastrous opening-game 40-3 defeat to the Bulls at Loftus where Willemse – the starting pivot that day — appeared to have been made a prime scapegoat.
Du Plessis, though, has come off some two years of painstaking injury rehab, is also not helped at all by the recently-confirmed serious illness to his legendary father Carel, and has generally looked well off the sort of levels he was capable of before his string of mishaps.
If they are to show a greater sense of backline X-factor against the Blues, it might not be the worst idea to reinstate the hot-stepping, mercurial – but also suitably direct at times — Willemse to flyhalf.
Yes, the versatile 20-year-old made some gaffes of his own against the Hurricanes after coming on as a substitute, but a show of confidence in him in one spot (and ideally his beloved No 10?) for a few matches might be just the tonic for the Stormers to show more penetration behind the boiler room.
Another Plan B option for the berth, if it is decided to pull out Du Plessis this weekend, would be Josh Stander, who is on tour in the broader party and played some crisp matches at ten during last season’s Currie Cup for Western Province.
*Follow our chief writer on Twitter: @RobHouwing
There’s been conflicting accounts about what happened before South African pilot Charl Viljoen crashed a plane into the Matsieng Flying Club facility at Matsieng Aerodrome in Botswana.
Prior to the tragedy on Saturday, Viljoen and his wife had attended a baby shower at the facility.
“The deceased pilot was an uninvited guest at a private function that was held at the Matsieng Flying Club facility at Matsieng Aerodrome. It is rumoured that the pilot was involved in a domestic dispute earlier in the afternoon,” read the statement from the Matsieng Flying club.
News24 sister website, Netwerk24 spoke to Mark Mansfield from the club, who said there were rumours that Viljoen and his wife, Natasha, caused a scene but it is unclear what the issue was.
Natasha’s sister, Naruschka Winter, disputes this, saying she doesn’t think the couple had a fight. She, however, did not want to speculate about what happened.
The Citizen reported that it had received a voice note in which a man named only as Chris alleges to have spoken to one of the survivors and witnesses.
“They had a party at Matsieng, a baby shower, and that’s one of the Kalahari Air Services pilots, and he had a fight with his wife there and he actually hit his wife, and everybody told him to f**k off because you don’t treat a woman like that.”
Viljoen is believed to have then left the club by car and headed to the Sir Seretse Khama International Airport, where Kalahari Air Services is based.
It is unclear how he got access to the 2016 Beechcraft Kingair B200 aircraft A2-MBM.
‘Something amiss’
A friend of Viljoen’s realised something was wrong when the pilot called him from the aircraft asking about his wife’s whereabouts, Netwerk24 reported.
An unnamed pilot told the publication that the friend had realised something was amiss and screamed for everyone to get out of the building.
Viljoen made several low-level fly-pasts from different directions before crashing into the building.
He died when the plane hit the structure, destroying some vehicles in the nearby parking area.
EWN reported that Viljoen started working at Kalahari Air Services in October last year.
Netwerk24 said the couple, who attended Hoerskool Zeerust in the North West together, had lived in Botswana for the past 10 years.
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