9 August 1994 - The Namibian

12
* TODAY: HUAMBO ISSUE HALTS ANGOLANTALKS * ZIM'S Sl'RUGGLE FOR DEMOCRACY * . . \ Bringing Africa South Vol.3 No.470 N$1.50 (GST Inc.) Tuesday August 09 1994 Woman brutally raped Borehole probe taken a step forward A WOMAN was assaulted, throttled and raped by two men in a field near Windhoek's Khomasdal suburb at approximately 02hOO on Sunday, the police reported yesterday. The woman, aged 30, was kicked in the face and stomach before she was raped. The po- lice are investigating a case of rape and as- sault with intent to do grievous bodily harm. In a separate incident, a woman was raped in Katutura 's Golgota area at approximately cont. on . page 2 CHRISTOF MALETSKY LETTERS have been sent to senior Government officials and others implicated in the 'borehole probe', which was completed last month, the Office of the Prime Minister confirmed yesterday. The probe was insti- that two top Government tuted four months ago to officials had boreholes investigate allegations drilled and constructed on their private property with drought aid money. The letters apparently list various allegations. MediaLiaison Officer in the Office of the Prime Minister, Wilma Deetlefs, said they were waiting for responses from those implicated before the matter is taken to Cabinet for a deci- sion. Deetlefs could not say who the letters had gone to. "The matter is still sub judice until it had been discussed in Cabi- net," she added. It is not known when the matter will come be- fore Cabinet. "It depends on when the Prime Min- ister receives the reponses, " Deetlefs said. An investigation was launched following me- dia reports that drought aid boreholes had bern 'wrongly' allocated to cont. on page 2 Mandela 'the hero' arrives SOUTH AFRICAN President Nelson Mandela will join the ranks of Namibia's heroes today when a Windhoek street will be named after him. Mandela's first official stop after landing at Eros Airport this morning will be at the renaming cer- emony for Klein Windhoek Road - which from today will be known as Nelson Mandela Avenue. The South African leader will nno mm:; "' l" 111 Lt>" company ofMandume Ndemefayo, Hosea Kutako, Frankie Fredericks, Michelle McLean and Presi- dents Robert Mugabe and Sam Nujoma who have all had the honour of having one of the capital's roads named after them. The ceremony outside the South African High Commission will take place at lOh40 with Prime Minister Hage Geingob, Minister of Regional and Local Government and Housing Libertine Amathila and Mayor Vivienne Graig. Afterwards the Windhoek public will have a chance to see the new SA President when his motorcade will travel down the new Nelson Mandela Ave to Independence Ave and then onto Robert Mugabe Avenue via Bahnhof Street befo re finally arriving at State House. After talks with President Sam Nujoma and other Ministers at State House Mandela will visit the Build Together housing project in Katutura with Foreign Minister Theo-Ben Gurirab at 16hOO. cont. on page 2 'rc) )IY POPULAR PRESIDENT ... South African President Nelson Mandela will be honoured in the Namibian capital today when a street will be named after him. Photo: AFP . N$ I () (M)()-(M) '1'IIIS / c"'XMftclr\ COMMERCIAL BANK OF NAMIBIA ___ 10-38-72-00 / YC)IJ! YC)IJ I{Nc)"r JUIC)IJ'I' 'rlIIS if r 22!)( )L.I() oJI' / 19 9 L( / /' Pay or Order -----..., ... IIN$ 3lf l plO 2 b --v-v .2 211' \

Transcript of 9 August 1994 - The Namibian

-~

* TODAY: HUAMBO ISSUE HALTS ANGOLANTALKS * ZIM'S Sl'RUGGLE FOR DEMOCRACY * . . \

Bringing Africa South Vol.3 No.470 N$1.50 (GST Inc.) Tuesday August 09 1994

Woman brutally raped Borehole probe taken a step forward A WOMAN was assaulted, throttled and raped by two men in a field near Windhoek's Khomasdal suburb at approximately 02hOO on Sunday, the police reported yesterday.

The woman, aged 30, was kicked in the face and stomach before she was raped. The po­lice are investigating a case of rape and as­sault with intent to do grievous bodily harm.

In a separate incident, a woman was raped in Katutura 's Golgota area at approximately

cont. on. page 2

• CHRISTOF MALETSKY

LETTERS have been sent to senior Government officials and others implicated in the 'borehole probe', which was completed last month, the Office of the Prime Minister confirmed yesterday.

The probe was insti- that two top Government tuted four months ago to officials had boreholes investigate allegations drilled and constructed

on their private property with drought aid money.

The letters apparently list various allegations.

MediaLiaison Officer in the Office of the Prime Minister, Wilma Deetlefs, said they were waiting for responses from those implicated before the matter is taken

to Cabinet for a deci­sion.

Deetlefs could not say who the letters had gone to. "The matter is still sub judice until it had been discussed in Cabi­net," she added.

It is not known when the matter will come be­fore Cabinet. "It depends

on when the Prime Min­ister receives the reponses, " Deetlefs said.

An investigation was launched following me­dia reports that drought aid boreholes had bern ' wrongly' allocated to

cont. on page 2

Mandela 'the hero' arrives SOUTH AFRICAN President Nelson Mandela will join the ranks of Namibia's heroes today when a Windhoek street will be named after him.

Mandela's first official stop after landing at Eros Airport this morning will be at the renaming cer­emony for Klein Windhoek Road - which from today will be known as Nelson Mandela A venue.

The South African leader will nno mm:;"' l" 111 Lt>"

company ofMandume Ndemefayo, Hosea Kutako, Frankie Fredericks, Michelle McLean and Presi­dents Robert Mugabe and Sam Nujoma who have all had the honour of having one of the capital's roads named after them.

The ceremony outside the South African High Commission will take place at lOh40 with Prime Minister Hage Geingob, Minister of Regional and Local Government and Housing Libertine Amathila and Mayor Vivienne Graig.

Afterwards the Windhoek public will have a chance to see the new SA President when his motorcade will travel down the new Nelson Mandela Ave to Independence Ave and then onto Robert Mugabe Avenue via Bahnhof Street before finally arriving at State House.

After talks with President Sam Nujoma and other Ministers at State House Mandela will visit the Build Together housing project in Katutura with Foreign Minister Theo-Ben Gurirab at 16hOO.

cont. on page 2

'rc) )IY 1~11II~NI)S:

POPULAR PRESIDENT ... South African President Nelson Mandela will be honoured in the Namibian capital today when a street will be named after him. Photo: AFP .

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2 Tuesday ~ugust 09 1994 THE NAMIBIAN

Flower power . for cancer

THE launch of the Carnation Day and the sale of the flowers in Namibia were an outstanding success this year according to Kurt Johanneson, director of the Cancer Association of Namibia, yesterday.

Diamond -company donates N$100 000 for sea training

Johanneson said 9 500 carnations had been sOld this year in Windhoek alone compared to 5~ last-year. The flowers had also sold ~~1I in other parts of the country.

Johanneson could not say how many car­nations were sold countrywide as figures from other town,S had not yet reached the associa­tion. However, he believed- that sales were "outstanding in the whole country".

He said the association had begun to sell the carnations four years ago with a target of 3 000, "and the sale is getting bigger each year".

The association sells the flowers each year to raise funds for its work with cancer pa­tients.

This year the day was launched on July 21 and the association hoped to collect N$100 000 through selling 23 000 flowers at N$5 each. The day was launched with a N$20 000 donation by the First National Bank.

Last year 10 000 carnations were sold.

Mandela visit

ONE OF the companies searching the Namibian try"_ seabed for diamonds has given a giant N$1 00000 David Godfrey, execu­donation to boost training of Namibians in tive-director of Rassing seamanship skills. . Foundation, says the

ODM gift comes at a key neering skills including point when the future of welding, filing and shap~ , the workshop training fa­

The gift from Ocean Diamond Mining Hold­ings Ltd (ODM) is to a Rassing Foundation mari­time training centre and will be used to pay for a professional engineering instructor to teach ship mechanics and other prac-

ing. ODM has been search­

ing for and mining dia­monds off Namibia's off­shore islands since 1984 and with the reintegration ofWalvis Bay most of its

tical maintenance skills. operations are now run This goes part of the through Namibian au­

way towards filling a key thorities. skills gap in Namibia. It is currently raising Although the sea, includ- money on the Namibian ing fisheries, oil explora- Stock Exchange and en­tion and diamond mining, couraging Namibians to are set to be one of the become shareholders. main sources of the na- Recently managing di­tion's income in future, rector Andre Louw said very few Namibians have he was replacing the Cape sea experience or ski ll s. Town-based crew with

" It is well known that Namibianseamen who are there is a severe shortage hardworking a~d quick to of maritime and marine- learn. related skills in Namibia In a statement from

cility depended ,on hiring a professional' engineer­ing instructur. .

The Rassing centre is in Liideritz and is run by Graham Kings.

It was started by the foundation in 1986 but is

FROM PAGE 1 already friendly relation- and this problem needs to Cape Town he said he ship between Namibia and be addresses with great hoped the money would South Africa. urgency," said a press re- be used to develop "the . "The ANC and Swapo leasefromthefoundation. ski ll s needed by

dreamt together about The course will reach Namibianstobenefitfrom southern Africa as a re- the recogni sed the opportunities offered gion," he said. "President qualificaton of Grade I by his company and oth­

now run in close co­oepration with teh Minis­try of Fisheries and Ma­rine Resources .

The workshop build.ing was a gift from the Na­mibia Engineering Corpo­ration, while the equip­ment to fit it for marine training comes from Nor­wegian state aid agency Norad, the Ministry and some extra equipment from fishing firms Pescanova and Sea Har-

vest. The German Embassy

has also given consider­able support.

When it first began it concentrated on basic skills to train. Liideritz people to get jobs in cray­fish factories and boats. It is gradually upgrading in different directions, in­cluding training fisheries inspectors for the minis­try and deck officers for the fishing companies.

The 26-hour visit by Mandela will be his sec­ond trip abroad since his inauguration. He visited Mozambique in July. The visit is a clear indication of South Africa's foreign policy priorities, an SA official said yesterday.

Mandela's visit will ce- marine motorman and ers in the expanding TRAINING FOR THESEJ\ ... Ocean Diamond Mining recently joined the ment bilateral relations cover other marine engi- Namibian maritime indus- companies backing sea skills training for Namibians with a N$100 000 between the two countries donation to help Rossing Foundation hire a professional marine engineering

"The EUb~~1t and open the way for co- A ~...l TTy",,,.l ... "'".,... 1-.. '" 1...l ;",,""'000- £ • Hn t ...... erftz training centre.

the most important on the Gurirab added. "Nelson FROM PAGE 1 Tholken said that ac-foreign policy agenda," Mandela is a hero of not cording to infonnation said a senior official at the only African people~ but alleged smuggling op- received by his embassy South African High Com- all those throughout the eration. the two men only had mission in "':'i~dhoek. world who yearn f?r f:ee- He would not reveal one weapon, an AK47, Forelg~MlmsterTheo- dom,. human. dl.gnI,~y, the names of the which they carried for

Ben Gunrab told S~p.a equalIty and Justice. - Namibian policemen, self-protection. yesterday that the . VISit Sapa, Own Correspond- only saying they were An Angolan worker marks a new phase In the ent. not serving in the north with the agency was

Brutal rape of Namibia. . killed earlier in the year Dr Hinrich Tholken of in an ambush apparently

the Gennan Embassy in carried out by U nita near FROM PAGE 1 Erf 698, Volta Street, in Windhoek said yester- . Ondjiva.

Katutura's Wanaheda. day that the German Cap Anamur, a Ger-07h30 on Sunday. Police Simonwasstabbedwith Embassy in Luanda was man non-governmental said the suspect is known. a sharp object on the left dealing directly with the organisation, has been

The police have ar- side of the chest after a arrests. He added that the working with the rested a 26-year-old man quarrel. The suspect told embassy in Windhoek Angolan government in connection with the the police he had acted in had few details about the clearing mines in the Borehole probe death ofSakariaSimonof self defence. > incident. Cunene Province. ------------------------------~--~------------------~. ----~ FROM PAGE 1 meant to help communi­

ties survive the drought near the farm of the Min­ister and deputy minister.

their area and denied they used the farm boreholes.

jhJunt.Efio BaforiLodfje TEACHER

REQUIRED FOR PRIVATE SCHOOL -

Exclusive private school on a private game sanctuary is looking for an experienced qualified teacher for Grade 1-7 +. Teacher must be fluent in English, have a four year qualification and four-year experience in teaching.

For further information, please call or fax 0651-4035.

= j I', r As~ f:o ~ ~aQ Oelofs" ",, j' ' jl T . ", ?.I' ... . ~i.""

)hJuntf!io BaforikJoe·

RECEPTIONIST REQUIRED

Private game sanctuary is looking for a receptionist. Person must be fluent in English and p~eferably speak German as well.

- - I

CHEF CUM CATERING MANAGER

Private Game Sanctuary is looking for a.chef cum catering manager. Perso,) must be well experienced.

J Minister of Justice N garikutuke Tji riange and deputy minister of Home Affairs, Nangolo Ithete, for a farm on which they run an ostrich busi-­ness. '

In April last year. the two boreholes, estimated to cost N$80 000 each, were drilled with emer­gency Government funds

Although the boreholes had not been fenceq off, farm staff and villagers agreed they were only for farm use and not for the Uutsathima community, situated about 20 kilome­tres away. The villagers were given another two boreholes in and nearby

It has been alleged that · the boreholes were drilled at the request of !thete for their newly-established Etosha Domesticated Os­triches Farm.

Prime MInister Hage Geingob received the re­port shortly before he left for the United States and promised to act on it as . quickly as possible . -- . . ~--

Seven Aids deaths per hour BLANTYRE: Seven people are dying in 1985, the disease had claimed 130000 of Aids every hour in Malawi, vice- lives by March 1994. He painted a president Justin Malewezi said yester- gloomy picture of the Aids situation in day. Opening a one-day conference on Malawi and said 13 748 people are af­the Aids crisis in the southern African fected by the HIV virus every month. state, Malewezi said: "We seek to re- "There is great loss of skilled and un­spond with a degree of urgency this skilled labour and orphan hood is on the epidemic requires." Malewezi, whose rise. This will have a major bearing on

For further information please call gov~rnment h~s lau~ched a c~mp~ign the?e.velop~e?tofth~country,"hesaid. or fax; Jan OelQfse at 0651-4035 " '1, 1 , against. t~e , tiller dlse!lse, sa~d Since OffiCial statiStICS proJect over 890 O?O'

'. • , " I MalaWI dlagrrosed the first17 Aids cases: orplians by the yew1000. ,I f t,t ~; r ~: '; l,)~( '" f! ,(.'UJf;/ ·~JULtl . .r .'/ ~·# r...l.l;~,· J.!,,~l~t .AJJ:...r~

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Progress slow on parties'

poll funds

THE NAM1BIAN

~. J J

Tuesday August 09 1994 3

Five car theft cases in court • JOSEF MOTINGA

ALL FIVE cases dealt with by the Windhoek . CHRISTOF M~.LE,TSKY Regional Court yesterday concerned the theft

WITH less than fOUF of motor vehicles in and around Windhoek. months before David de Jay, 43, was found guilty of stealing a Namibians queue up to Mercedes Benz belonging to Louis Lubbe from Plot vote in Presidential and 20, City Bricks, at Brakwateron April IS this year. Parliamentary elec- He was found guilty of theft and the alternative tions, scheduled for charge ofu'sing a vehicle without the consent ofthe early December, very owner. little has been done He is to reappear on September 21 for sentencing. about the proposed De Jay has been out on bail of N$S 000. funding of political par- Billy Rapaethane, 36, appeared on a charge of ties. stealing a Volkswagen City Golf valued at N$42

Legislation had been 163 from Noordwes Motors or Louis Bower on expected to be finalised 'WELCOME TO NAMIBIA' ... President Sam Nujoma on Friday welcomed the Ambassadors of October 6 1993 in Windhoek. and passed in the Na- Finland and Russia to Nambia and wished them an "enjoyable and happy" stay. The President During a previous appearance, the accused tionalAssembly in June (centre) is pictured with Russian Amabassador Bakhtiev Khakimov (left) and Minister of Foreign pleaded not guilty and told the court the car had providing for the fund- Affairs The-Ben Gurirab at State House. belonged to him. He had sold it because the cost of ing of parties which the repairs had been too expensive after it had been competed in the 1992 N SA ' . t t I . damaged. He had given all the documents for the l?cal and regional elec- . a m se ·o c ear car to the persons to whom he had sold it, but had tIons. , . . . been arrested on charges of theft afterwards.

However, this failed . Rapaethane is out on bail of N$4000 and the case to materialise. was postponed to September 20.

According to earlier d k fi t d · t · Victor Mabumbo, 26, appeared for the theft of a reports, it was pro- Ford Courier bakkie from Hermanus Hansen in posed that each party ec S 0 r ex ra I Ion Windhoek on November 19 1993. The alternative be bankrolled to the charge is that he used the vehicle without the tune of N$600 000 plus owner' s consent in the district of Otjiwarongo. The N$S,20 for each vote • CHRIS NDIVANGA Namibia under the Commonwealth scheme. case was remanded to October 26. they received in the THE N 'b' d S th Af . However, Tjiriange did not say when the three Two other cases involved Stoffel Van Wyk 33 . alUl mn an ou ncan govern- . . H Kl ' , 1989 electIons. • . . C nghtwmgers - Leonard Veenendal, orst enz whose case was postponed to August 18, and John

This could not be con- ments will use~chemes tha!exlsh~. ommon- and Daryl Stopforth - would be extradited. Baptista, 22, charged with Sam Malakia, 22, whose firmed as preparations wea~th countnes to ~xtradl~e.fugltIve offe~d- "Nami bia' s request is still valid and it is up to the case was postponed to September 20. for the legislation were ers In both countnes, Mimster of Justice South African government to see what they can .... .... ......... .. . . . ............... ................ ............................. .. ................ .. ................... ............... ..... ..... .......... . apparently still far Ngarikutuke Tjiriange told The Namibian do," he said. 1 .• ' !ill ; !lli iiliI i 2I :~iI ; i l from coming toParlia- yesterday. Tjiriange said it was difficult for him to say now ment. Tjiriange met his South African counterpart whether the Namibian Government would ask for

"Nothing h!l5. . ah Omar last week to review issues discuSsell l h " "~b-~d;,,; ~~ o f" 4.~oo rC-:R . l't'P.r"tive s founp .to done about the party with hiS fornier ~coiinterpart Kobie Coetzee. have been IDvol~ed ID ~e killIng of Swapo activist funding so far. Maybe According to the Commonwealth scheme sus~ AntonLub~wsk1.HesaJdProsecutor-GeneraIHans aftertheresumptionof pects wanted for crimes committed in the . two Heyman still had to go t~rough volumes of docu­the National Assembly countries could be extradited without signing extra ments from the Lubowskl Inqu~s~ befor~ he co~ld ... when all Parliamen- agreements. . . co?clude whether there was ~ufflclent (pnma faCie) tarians will be back in South Africa re-joined the Commonwealth after eVldenc~ to mak~ a case agamst th~ ~CB members. Windhoek" one of the country's first non-racial democratic elections Other Issues discussed by the MIDlst.e~s last week those expected to deal in April. . included t~e issu.e of attorneys pr~cttslng 'across with the issue told The Tjiriange added that it was now up to the two th~ ~order especI~lly those at Walvls ~ay. The t,:"o Namibian. countries to get their houses in order and to activiate Ministers also reviewed. agreements Signed earlter

The National Assem- the scheme. between the two countnes. bly is expected to The three rightwiRgers wanted in connection . Bilat~ral c~-op~ration was taken "a step furt~er resume again on Au- with bombing of a UN office at Outjo and the In the n~ht ~.I~ectlOn from where we left off With gust 23. _ murder of a policeman in 1989 could stand trial in Coetzee , TJlrtange concluded.

Young men 'pushed deceased over edge'

Sentenced for fraud

'DJ' -Alcock killed in crash

• JOSEF MOTINGA

FOUR young men were sentenced in the Windhoek High Court on Friday in connection with the death of Ha ikon do, Kafita at Oshipala village in the Ondangu'a dIstrict on February 23.

Simeon Hanga was convicteq of.cul­pable homicide and sentenced to six years' imprisonment of which three were conditionally suspended. Thomas Hamunyangi was found guilty of the same offence and sentenced to four years' of which two were conditionally suspended.

Tuhafeni Ndameshime was convicted of common assault and sentenced to six months' imprisonment which was sus­pended for five years. Erastus Martin was convicted of assault and sentenced to nine months' imprisonment sus­pended for five years. The four were originally charged with murder after Kafita died of head injuries.

The court heard that at the tirr.e of the attack, Kafita had already sustained-m-

juries to his head and face inflicted by members of the community because the deceased had stabbed someone with a knife.

Giving judgement, Judge Pio Teek found there was no clearcut evidence as to whether, at the time of the assault by the -rour accused, the blood clots on the brain of the deceased were present as a result of the previous injuries and were aggravated by the attack, or whether the attack by Hangi and Hamunyangi had caused the clotting.

Whatever the case, the accused could see that the man had been wounded, yet continued to assault liim. By doing so they had unlawfully or negligently ei­ther caused or hastened the death of Kafita.

, Teek accepted the evidence that the deceased had not atta<;ked anybody.

Hanga had kicked the deceased on the neck and Hamunyangi on the jaw. The post-mortem showed Kafita had a bro­ken jaw and blood clots on the brain.

ANNA Iyambo was yesterday sen­tenced · to a fine of N$800 or four months' imprison­ment after pleading guilty to stealing a cheque to the value of N$840 98 from the Ministry of Fi­nance.

According to the charge-sheet, and on her own admis­sion, Iyambo stole the cheque from Akufuna Iyambo at the Ministry of Fi­nance on July 30 199~.

The next day she took it to Pep Stores and pretended she was entitle~ to the cheque.

CHRISTOF MALETSKY

ONE OF NAMIBIA'S most respected radio an­nouncers, Daniel 'DJ' Alcock, died in a car ac­cident at the weekend.

Alcock (34), one of the ~st known voices on the DamaralNama service, was on his way back from a two-week stint in the Erongo and Kunene re­gions where he was working on a documen­tary with Otjiwarongo­Qased cplleague, Josef !Garab.

After dropping !Garab, the car in which he and four other people were travelling, over­turned between Otjiwarongo and Omaruru.

Alcock and a three­month-old baby died in­stantly while another man and a 20-year-old

The late Daniel 'DJ' Alcock

school girl died later in the Otjiwarongo hospi­tal. The other passen­ger, the mother of the baby, sustained head in­juries. Names of the other accident victims have not been released be­cause their next-of-kin have not yet been in-

formed . The manager of the

DamaralNama service, Johannes Isaacks, said the service had suffered a severe loss as Alcock was "a very dedicated and committed person".

Isaacks said Alcock had always aimed toedu­cate listeners through his programmes and mostly presented religious and youth programmes.

"He was committed to the upliftmentof the peo­pie and was very keen, always coming up with new ideas which worked well.

His death is great loss for the whole of Na­mibia," Isaacks said.

Alcock was born in Mariental and leaves a wife, Diana and four children. Funeral ar­rangements will be an­nounced later.

4 Tuesday August 09 1994 THE ,NAMIBIAN

Going back to their roots • CHRISTOF MALETSKY been used to create divi- bring up children speak­

ONE OF Namibia's small fishing companies, Auob Fishing Company (AFC), whose director and shareholders are former residents ofStampriet, on Saturday donated N$15 000 to the commuIiity of the town for a self-help project.

sion among the different . ing their own mother conmmunites and pro- tongue. We must do mote apartheid . away with such prac-

"Today we can use tices," Minnaarurged the culture to know and un- 300-strong crowd. derstand each other bet- He called for people ter. to write stories in their

language that can only be spoken and not writ­ten or read."

Vera Ei ases, the chair­person of AFC's board of directors, said it was "a long-awaited day and a dream came true!"

The Namibian is published by the

Free Press of Namibia, 42

John Meinert Street,

Windhoek. Editor: Gwen

Lister. T e l: (061 ) 36970, Fax (061) 33980. PO Box

20783, Windhoek.

Printed by John Meinert (Pty)

Ltd, Stubel Street,

Windhoek.

AFC donated a further N$! 000 to the Jakob Sou! Primary school.

The handing over cer­emony was marked by a colourful annual Cul ­tural Festival organised by members of the Khaibasen Community Project.

Speaking at the occa­sion, a representative of the regional office of Education and Culture, Abraham Minnaar , called for greaterpartici­pation in cultural activi­ties to sustain Namibia 's heritage.

He said the future of the different Namibian cultures rested with each separate group and de­pended on individual ef­forts.

"There is no one to blame if we lose our cul­ture," Minnaar said.

~. 1 Year

.'i' NAMIBIA •• R70 'R130

. R270 R525

. tl SOUTH AFRICA ,_ Weekly Dally

R75 R140 R300 R650

• ·: .. 1 BOTSWANA, LESOTHO, I.':.'. ... . MALAWI, ZIMBABWE ....

Weekly R200 R390 DaUy RSOO R1550

People are either shy, mother tongues saying In the past culture had afraid or reluctant to "There is no future for a

As a member of the Stampriet community,

IN STEP ... This group of young children from the Jakob Soul Primary School gave a display of traditional Bushmen dancing which delighted the audience. Photo: Christof Maletsky

nbe the difference between infatuation and love and explains media myths about love.

(KTVends) (Open Time) 16hOO: Wings 16h30: Loving 17hOO: Egolf

Strangers: 17h30: The Jeffersons World News Year VI (KTV starts) (Premium time)

13hOO-14hOO: 20hOO: News 09hOO: The Elephant lShOO: Lady Boss _ World News 20h34: Story Writing Show Part I and World Competition (KTVends) A movie star's wife de-Report 20h55: Snoops 09h30: Egoli (repeat) cides to buy her husband

16h56: Opening Tango: Dance of Death 10hOO; Reversal Of a studio. The owner will 17hOO: S e s a m e 21h41: One-On-One Fortune (13) sell if she first goes un-Street 22h12: The Ascent of (KTV starts) · dercover - disguised as a Learning the fun way Man 14hOO: The Further secretary _ to spy on his is the name of the game The Hidden Structure Adventures of son-in-law who is deal-down Sesame Street This episode deals with Superted ing in pornography and way. the beginnings of ch em- 14h30: MagillaGorilla drugs. But she is the 18hOO: Tots TV istry, both in the ancient 14h40: Yippee, daughter of a Mafia boss 18h16: Home And metallurgy of China and Yappee & and just as deadly. Star-

•• ZAMBIA, ZAIREi Away . Japan, an~ in the mysti- Yahooey . ring:. Kim D~laney, Jack R235 R400 .. 18h40: Magazme cal se.archmgs of the al- 14h50: The Adven- Scaha, Davld Selby R920 R1820 ••• • Programme: chemists. A theory of the tures ofGrad~ 20hOO: Lonely Guy

•• Zoom . elements emerges ~nd Green~pace (16). • . J FRANCE, GERMANY,. __ ........ 19h~2: ~ve LIfe becomes the fo~ndatlOn 15hOO: TheFhntstones A . struggh~g . y.oung

EUROPE, BRITAIN •••• FafllnK,ln Love . of modern atomic theory. 15h30: Conan The wnte~earnshlshvmg.by

Eiases said AFC knew the wishes ofthe parents for their children and the dreams of the children.

"We aim to be part and parcel of development in the region by making regular contributions as long as we can afford them.

The private sector has a role to play in the de­velopment of the com­muni ty and we aim to work in partnership with the government to uplift those disadvantaged in the past," she said.

Village council mem­ber, Appolus !Gaoseb said appeals to big com­panies like R6ssing and CDM were finally heard by AFC. "As formerresi­dents of the town they don't want the children to have to suffer as they did," !Gaoseb said.

The · community is planning a self-help project which will in­clude a big garden. Act­ing headmaster, Steven Coetzee, said the school would use the money to buy an .overhead projec­tor.

card company. After finding his live-in girl­friend in bed with someone else, he and a friend become lonely guys and losers - until the day he writes a book that turns loneli­ness into the ultimate love potion. Starring: Steve Martin, Charles Grodin, Judith Ivey 21h30: In Concert A special music pro­gramme featuring John Mellencamp, Mark Curry and Nick Tay\or. 22hl0: CadillacM~m

(IS) OOhOO: The Playboys

(16) 02hOO: Original

Intent (A) 03h40: Transmission

, ends . Weekly RSOO R980 }.. This episode deals With 23h03: Sport Adventurer workmg for a greetmg Dally R1200 R2500 \

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NB. Applicants must be Namlbian Citizens. interested pe.,;ons who meet the above requirements should submit the following to the Chairpe.,;on of the School Board:

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Zim's struggle for democracy BULA WAYO: Almost three years after democratic politics became fashionable world­wide, Zimbabwe's political parties still have to come to grips with how to practise democ­racy within their ranks, the national news agency Ziana reported over the weekend.

project that image be­cause their leadership is an offshoot of the ruling party. ,

Zanu PF's outward appearance of unity has since early this year been challenged by serious power struggles capable of loosening the stran­glehold it has had on Zimbabwean politics.

appointments favoured by the party presidency.

E n 0 c h Dumbutshena's FPZ is unlikely to survive the untimely split it suffered recently when secretary­general Themha Dlodlo and a substantial mem­bership rebelled against him to form the Forum Party for Democracy (FPD).

Personality differ­ences and unbridled hun­ger for power among the leaders appear to have taken over the business of national politics in Zimbabwe.

For a start, the honey­moon of guided democ­racy within the ruling Zanu (PF) was over and replaced by squabbles that have created cl iques within the party.

The opposition Forum Party of Zimbabwe (FPZ) has split in two, while the Zimbabwe Unity Movement, the

Brilliant young man

killed in . car crash

OSWALD SHIVUTE ATOSHAKATI

A MAN described as a brilliant doc­tor, Salom Paul us, died in a gruesome car accident here last Thursd evening whe'j{ car crashed into an Angolan truck.

Dr Paul us, who practiced at the Oshakati State Hos­pital, died on the spot.

According to some people, the truck allegedly did not have parking lights at the back. The driver main­tains it did.

Dr Paulus was the chief of Oshakati's Intensive Care Unit (ICU) and his death is a great loss to the community and to the hospital.

He was also very acUve ,.in the com­mtu'lity and helped many people.

{\part fr!?m. 'hjs work in the ICUhe' also he}ped at the Oshakati Police mortuary, doing post-mortems, 'when approached. This he did with an open heart.

Dr Paulus leaves his wife, Maria, a teacher at Oshakati Combined School, and one child.

The funeral ar­rangements are not yet known.

... ,~" ,;, ...... . -~.~

Democratic Party (DP) and the Progressive Party of Zimbabwe (PPZ) are facing serious constitl\tional crises.

Analysts said the con­fusion is a residue of years of centralised con­trol of the party mem­bership dating back to Zimbabwe's pre-inde­pendence and immedi­ate post-independent socialist era of 1980.

Even opposition par­ties, though claiming to fight what they perceive as Zanu (PF), s undemo­cratic policies, hardly

Only the political stat­ure of President Robert Mugabe appears to be holding the centre to­gether avoiding a split that has characterised the opposition move­ment in the country.

But this stature has been indirectly chal­lenged by some senior party members using the grassroots to question government policies and

A similar that trap befell Tekere's Zum, which led to the splintering of the party. The party flouted con­stitutional provisions because like any politi­cal party it is not used to the culture of debate, argued Dlodlo, whose FPZ is seeking recon­ciliation.

The squabbles iJlus-

Loo pr-oblem~ 'threat to "ChInese civilisation'

"'...... ",.,

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BEIJING: A competition opened ih lectuals to empty public bathrooms Beijingyesterday to find the best blue- each day of "human fertilizer", in print for a public toilet. order to get in touch with the masses.

The contest, which will run for two Workers and students in the capital months, organised by the city govern- regularly complain that the leadership ment and open to professinals and invests huge amounts of public funds amateurs alike, is aimed at gathering in five-star hotels that will bring in new, environmeJ1t- and user-friendly hard currency from foreign tourists, concepts in toilet design~ said the . but next to nothing on toilets for the official Beijing Daily. Chinese people.

Beijing 's public conveniences, four "The bad conqition of public toilets walls and three holes, are generally in in the capital is.affecting the image of an advanced state of filth and disre- Chinese civilisation," said the news­pair. paper: The daily added that the prob-

Most emit an odour so strong that it lem of public toilets is now ranked the seems unlikely they have been cleaned fifth-most importantconcem ofBeijing since the Cultural Revolution of 1966- residents, following clothing, food, 76, when Mao Zedong ordered inlel- housing and transport. - Sapa-AFP

trate lack of commitment by the parties to consti­tutional rule even if they embrace multi-partism, said the director of Bulawayo Legal Projects Centre David Coltart.

People are awakening to the tight controls that characterised Zimba­bwean poli tics, but the leaders find it difficult to cope, added Coltart.

The Zanu FP national politi ca l commissar Moven Mahachi disa­greed saying the quar­relling regarded as indiscipline in the past, reflected democracy creeping into the party, even if at times it di ­verted from party or na­tional policy issues to personality differences.­Sapa

Left: WOMAN ON THEM0VE ... Jericho ~ Fatmeh Birnawi has been appointed by PLO leader Yasser Arafat to establ'ish and command the Palestinian women's police force in the Gaza Strip and Jericho. Birnawi was the first Palestinian woman guerrilla jailed by Israel after the 1967 Middle East war. She was sentenced~to two~Jjfe

terms for bombing an Israeli cinema and was freed in a prisoner exhange in 1977. Photo: Reuters via Nampa Comrades do it

with condoms

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6 Tuesday August 091994

~

Reserve Bank acts on Rand

JOHANNESBURG: SA Reserve Bank intervention lifted the commercial rand to an intraday high of R3,60911dlr in active trade yesterday.

"Reserve Bank has been in today, albeit not as aggressively as it has in the last couple of weeks," one dealer commented. ,

Dealers said central bank support for the cornrand was surprising, particularly after the rand initially firmed on weekend dollar weak­ness. Reserve Bank officials were unavailable for comment.

At the close the local unit was at R3,6113/dlr compared with Friday's R3,6200 close.

The finrand weakened after trading in a nar­row band for most of the day.

"There has been nothing out of the ordinary in the finrand market today aside from it touching the topside of the R4,5200-R4,5800range which it has been stuck in for the past two weeks," one dealer said.

Atthe close the investment unit was atR4,5750 from a previous R4,5400 finish. - Sapa-I-Net

THE N~MIi3fIAN ' ..... ....

Joburg stock exchange JOHANNESBURG: Shares on the Johan­nesburg Stock Exchange ended mixed in fairly active trade yesterday as industrials were boosted by Friday's positive reserves figures and improved business confidence and gold shares lost ground on a softer bullion price, a dealer said.

board, Vaal Reefs was down 800c to R399,00, while Western Deep fell 21 Oc to R 190,40. Among key industrial shares, SA Breweries gained 25c to R88,25 and Remgro gained 100c to R28,00.

Shortly after the offi- higher at R32,00 after Antimony producer cial close, the all share shares worth R 18,51- Consolidated Murchison index had gained 30 million - the highjest added 500c to R22,OO points to 5 758 as the all value traded on the day - after a report by Lon­gold index lost nine changed hands in 64 don-based Baring Secu­points to 2 103 and the . deals. rities which said its prof-industrial index notched Market mainstay De its could rise ninefold to up 46 points to 6 576. Beers gained 25c to R45-miIIion in the year

The dealer said early R 117,75 and associate ended June on the back trade had been quiet but Anglos notched up 200c of a sharply higher anti­activity had picked up to R252,OO. On the gold monyprice. - Sapa-I-Net

~f.:~~~~~~~~~~~ I.~.I dertone.

Oil from coal producer Sasol continued its strong run from Friday on the back of expecta­tions of improved earn­ings.

The counter ended the day 75c (2,4 per cent)

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SA farlllers get better deal

BLOEMFONTEIN: Steps to give small farmers easier access to State credit have already been implemented, SA Agriculture Minister Kraai van Niekerk told the National African Farmers Union in Bloemfontein yesterday.

He said all racially-based preconditions in the Agri­culture Credit Board had been removed, leaving only "sound" economic criteria for credit.

"Even they have been re-evaluated to eliminate red tape and to take into consideration the needs of all farmers in the new dispensation." Dr van Niekerk said two black, two coloured and two Indian agricultural­ists had been appointed to the credit board. "They function well and champion the needs of those not previously accommodated by the board."

Agricultural credit committees in each magisterial district would be enl arged with qualified individuals representing small, new or potential farmers.

Dr van Niekerk said his department would promote ownershi p of land "wherever possible through finan­cial assistance, with sound economic principles as the only prerequisite".

He said the expertise of the Agriculture Department, in the past directed towards the predominantly white commercial sector, was now under a new management system.

"The essence of the new approach is to adapt and transf~rm the present ,information into digestable lan­guage to serve all farmers."

The department would also provide a support serv­ice, which included the training of farmers and practi­

, cal guidance by agricultllre officers. - Sapa , . ~ . ,

Aids .spreading fast Y.9KOHAMA: About 3 million people around the 'world lfave caught the Aids virus during the past year alone,. bringing .. t1:)e globai. totai of infections to more than 17 milliol\, with no slowdown in sight, health official~ ,say-. . 'i.' . ' ; "

One-third of those new infe.ctions occurred in Asia, ~, newest focus ·of,the epl~riiic. HIV, the Aids virus; is now spreading faster· here than anywhere else. Dr Michael Merson,he"ad of the World Health Organiza­tion's Aids proiranu'ne, said that more people 'were infected with HIV in the past year than ever before. Sub-Saharan Africa is still ·the part'of the world most devastated bY'the virus. More than 10 million people there are believed to have HIV. And Aids - the disease ~ beco~l.lhuge killer there.""

1.1

Economic Indicators Yesterday's quotations for unit trust funds: FUND NAME BUY SELL YIELD% ABSA: GE: 204,17 191,00 2,73 Balanced 103,85 97,48 na Industrial 183,58 171,73 2,15 Income 100,96 99,78 11 ,01 BOE: Growth 242,85 226,91 2,10 People's Income 103,36 102,27 10,55 COMMUNITY: Growth Fund 160,39 149,90 4,52 COMMERCIAL UNION: Growth 174,82 163,22 2,06 COMPOSITE: All Share Index: 131,17 122,57 na FEDLIFE: Fedgro Growth 185,94 173,61 3,46 Income 101,26 99,22 na GUARDBANK: Growth 3604,42 3353,20 2,84 Income 120,13 118,87 11,59 Industrial 198,15 184,25 2,61 Resources 241,31 224,37 3,19 Prosperity 109,06 102,03 na Stability 107,96 101,49 na IGl Life: GE 184,95 172,99 2,58 METBOARD: Metfund 324,25 303 ,64 2,23 Gilt 121,73 120,45 11,29 Managed 126,80 119,06 na High Income 100,31 99,26 na METROPOLITAN: Metlife GE 147,72 138,04 5,43 MOMENTUM: GE 356,56 334,60 3,26 NBS: Hallmark GE 1375,89 1284,80 2,36 Hallmark Income 100,10 99,10 0,00 NORWICH: GE 675,07 680,44 2,46 OLD MUTUAL: Investors 4218,93 3933,39 2,13 Sentinel 240,13 223,99 na Growth 336,44 313 ,54 3,35 Top Companies 376,06 350,52 2,63 Industrial 564,12 525,71 1,86 Mining 527,47 491 ,72 2,01 Gold 211,39 197,09 3,07 Income 110,37 . 109,18 11,06 SAGE: Gen Equity 3424,74 3 191,59 2,47 Resources 212,45 198,29 C 2,72 Financial 642,97 , 599,61 na Income 216,68 214,51 na SANLAM: GE 2147,33 2007,20 2,98 Index 1722,84 1610,14 2,85 Prime Growth 632,98 591 ,69 3,30 Industrial 1348,93 1260,17 2,76 Mining 383,06 357,89 3,21 Income 96,59 95,10 11,88 SOUTHERN: GE 295,77 276,63 2,32 Mining 220,57 206,26 2,92 Pure 179,30 167,58 1,96 Income 597,78 585,83 10,08 STANDARD BANK: GE 1531,53 1439,02 4,39 Income 91,77 90,82 10,98 Gold 252,38 237,16 5,97 Industrial 135,84 127,98 International 147,14 137,70 2,28 SYFRETS:. Growth 430,27 401,97 2,28 Trustee 170,57 159,68 2,00 Income 110,76 109,65 11,43 Gilt 1137,13 1125,75 11,13 Balanced ' 109,61 103,07 na Prime Select 117,63 110,05 ' , na UAL:GE 2895,93 2714,99 . 3,53 Mining .595,01 556,5.7 1,96 Selected 3034,23 2839,14 . 2,36 Gilt 1219,42 1207,23 ,12,20 Managed 1356,99 1276,03 ;7,50 Max IncClme 1042,27 1031,86 U,24 .~

NAMIBIAN TRUSTS: .",\.::

OLD MUI'UAL: ,/:"

. Growth· 223,35 208,48' na Income· 101,95 100,72 'na' , SANLAM:

, .i .~

Gro..vth 109,45 102,74 na ': Income 100,99 99,43

I

na

Gold price

.Yesterday afternoon gold fixing: 377,00 US ooUars per ounce as compared with 377,70 at morning fixing, 378,30 at<FriliJ.YAafternoon fixingl ' . .,~ ,.

THE NAMIBIAN .' ,",'."

Angolan talks snarl on control of Huambo

LUSAKA: A row over control of Unita's done before but this time we in the government are central highlands stronghold of Huambo is not going to make any further concession whatso­threatening peace talks between the move- ever," he went on. ment and the Luanda authorities a senior "As far as we are concerned we are ready to sign Angolan minister said yesterday. ' the peace agrrement even tonight because we have

"We are in a situation where we are repeating alre~dy. accepted the last pac~age ?y . the .(UN) what has happened before ... the talks have come to me?latlOn and what we ~re asking t.hl s time IS that a crossroads where Unita is not ready to signa peace Umta should,?ct responsibly and abide by therules accord and blame the government," said deputy of the game, he said. . .. Foreign Affairs Minister Georges Chicoti. A~a:t fr~m the Huambo Issue, w?l~h IS not a

Unita d~mands for the governorship of Huambo specific pOint ?n the agenda of the difficult peace were unnecessarily holding up the completion of tal~s, the two sides have exhausted ~he I 0 umbr~lIa the Lusaka peace process, which began in Novem- pOints of a UN prepared agenda wh~ch ~or over five ber last year, Chicoti said, adding that Unita was mo~ths stalled ?? t?e power sharing Issue under "not ready for peace." natIOnal reconcIliatIOn.

Unita has been offered control of three of Ango- Other last minute problems raised by Unita are

Tuesday August 09 1994,7

WORLD BRIEFS Syria balks at peace deal

DAMASCUS: Syria said. yesterday there were still no signs of a peace deal with Israel on the horizon follow­ing talks between US Secretary of State Warren Christopher and President Hafez al-Assad. The gov­ernment daily Tishrin ~aid Israel was refusing to respect international law and UN resolutions demand­ing its withdrawal from occupied Arab lands, which would lead to "fair and comprehensive peace" in the region.

PAC accused seeks amnesty . CAPE TOWN: The Supreme Court in Cape Town was told yesterday that an 18-year~0Id Pan Africanist Con­gress member, who is being held in connection with the St James church massacre, will "definitely" apply for indemnity. Gcinikhaya Makoma, of Khayelitsha, appeared in the Supreme Court yesterday for a post­ponementofthe case against him. He was not asked to plead. He is facing II murder charges, 57 attempted murder charges and two charges relating to the illegal possession of guns and ammunition.

Killing doctors 'justified' la '.s 18 provinces, but it is insisting the governor- the eventual amnesty for political prisoners, and the ship of Huambo be one of the three. public "sensibility" campaign which is to precede

"Huambo is not relevant to the peace package... the swearing-in of its members in parliament and. the government is not at war with Unita because of government. The two sides also have to discuss JACKS ON: Anti-abortion activists are requiring writ­Huambo," Chicoti said. restitution of the corpses of three Unita leaders ten peace promises from protesters for "spiritual war­

"The complications Unita is bringing in now killed during the battle for Luanda in late October fare" this week at the state's two abortion clinics. over Humabo are aimed at trying to find a way of 1992. Then the talks have to set a date for the However,at l.eas~oneorgani~~rsignedan~therkindof breaking down the peace process like they have signing of the Lusaka protocol. _ Sapa-AFP docum.e~t: a Justl~able homicide declaratIOn that sup-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~~ru~llmg~omoodocmn.T~Am~~n~~itioo

GETTING INVOLVED ... Tipper Gore, wife of US Vice-President AI Gore, washes a Rwandan orphan suffering from cholera on Sunday. Mrs Gore started"helping relief workers at Muugano

of Life Activists plans to begin weeklong "No Place to Hide" protests yesterday at the Jackson and Gulfport clinics ofDr Joseph Booker, the only doctor in the state performing abortions.

Five killed at nightclub GWERU: Five people were killed and four seriously wounded in a shootout on Sunday night at a night club in Gweru in Zimbabwe's midlands, Ziana national news agency reported yesterday. A man and two women were shot dead by a Zimbabwe Defence Force soldier before he turned the gun on himself. The fifth person died on arrival at hospital. The cause of the shootout is not known.

Burundi govt cracks down BUJUMBURA: Burundian authorities jailed an op­position leader after he called for a protest march through the capital, an informed source said yesterday, amid signs of growing civil and ethnic unrest in the country. Mathias Hitimana, who heads the People's Reconciliation Party (PRP), was arrested and detained Sunday hours after around 500 youths clashed with police in central Bujumbura while. protesting the arrest of seven students, the source said.

UN concern over Moz refugee camp shortly after her arrival in Goma, Zaire. Photo: Reuter via Nampa. MAPUTO: A United Nations Security Council mis-

UN urges French to stay on KIGALI: Fearing another mass exodus of in three months. refugees, the United Nations urged France "How long will we have to keep these suspects in once again yesterday to delay its departure jail? We cannot wait too long," Twagiramungu told

from southwestern Rwanda. ' ' a press conference. A spokesman for the UN's refugee agency said '''We will. do. ou~, utmost to ensure t~em. (the

there is "a very real possibility" that up to I million suspects) fair trials. He n~t~d tha~ an earlier figure R wandans cobld stream over the border into Zaire of people targeted for war CrIme trIals referred only when French troops leave. ' to :;.tirst susp~cts who ar~ administrative officials."

Francealreadyhaswithdrawn.about300soldiers - So~e (o~those) are Innocent, some have even

from Rwanda and plans to remove its remaining 2 been killed, he added. 200 troops by Aug 22. , ~e new .Rwandan gov~rn~ent set up by the

It has said however that the deadline could be mamly Tutsl Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) early extended tw~orthree w'eeks if\1ecessary to preserve last ~on~ "backs e~foI1s of~e J~ernatio~al com­order in its so-called security zone. ~umty ~Im~d at settmg up an mdependent mterna­

Meanwhile Some 200 people suspected of having tIOl~I. ~Ibunal to t~ the ~rpetriltor~ ~f massacres

. sion yesterday began a round of meetings in Maputo aimed to ensure that Mozambique holds UN-presided elections on October 27 and 28 as planned. The mis­sion has representatives from nine member countries, including Russia, China and the United States. Ac­cording to the UN in Maputo, the mission's mandate is "to inform government and Renamo leaders of the Security Council',s concern about delays in. imple­menting the peace process and stress the importance of holding elections on time."

New man in Simpson case LOS ANGELES: A storekeeper has reported that a mystery man escorted Nicole Brown Simpson and her children to an ice cream parlour hours before she was slashed to death. He was about 1,85 m, in his late 20s, and wore a suit and tie, according to 21-year-old Bill Chang, managerofa Ben and Jerry's ice cream parlor . less than a km from Ms Simpson' s Brentwood condo­minium.

French hunt extremists takenpait In genocide in Rwanda are being held by of clVlhanfopulatl?n~, w~ll.e rec~gmzl~g the ~o,:"-the new authorities Premier Faustin Twagiramungu petence of mternal Jur~s~lctlons, the pnme mlms- . .

. ,' '. ' . . " .' . ter said. . PARIS: French pobce arrested 23 people overnIght saidy,~s~da~. ;., ' ,!, , :. ; j • • • Sunday in operations following threats from Algerian

Whlle backmg the formation of an mternatlOnal He also ~ald that soldiers of the defeated former Islamic f'undamCfn~ists, police said yesterday. In op-tribunal to try the war criminals, he deplored the Rwandan Arm.ed Forces, were gradually returning erations across Paris police stopped J AOO cars. and slow pace of the international community'S inves- to Rwanda and rallying to the new regime. questionedover2000people,leadingtotbe23arrests. tigation into the ethnic bloodletting that left ~p to Some 300 of them, including at least one colonel Some 50 people, inclu~ing a number of ~oreign~rs one millionRwimdarisdead,mostly minority Tutsis, and three majors, had returned so far. _ Sapa-AP W?ose ~pers w~~e not m o~der, w~re!lelpmg pobce

. '.. ' . _ . With. ~elr .e~q~!~les [ ?lIowmg, ~. s~~l1llar sw~p th~, , . ,Stay.' . allv~ DOliilriJ t ,dr.,in.k ana · d!"J..rye~ .. ~':7':. p~~t:JIg!\t.tm,~..!lT ,· ... :;z~,; • .&"_·: •• "::':·~"u::d .... :,:;,;·~~""" , ,,

8 Tuesday August ~9 1994

HEADING ABROAD ... From left: Haroldt Gonteb, Tanya de MeO<lonza, Ingrid Kinda and Fabian Shaanika.

New horizons beckon FOUR young Namibians will leave to attend United World Colleges courses in England, Swaziland and Hong Kong from the beginning of September.

Fabian Shaanika and Haroldt Gonteb will be going to the United World Col­legel0fthe Atlantic in Wales where they wiIli s.tudy for two years with young people' from 34 other countries around the world. They will take the Interna­tiOlid Baccalaureate exam at the end of their two years which will give them a university entrance qualification to over 500 uni,versities around the world. Fa-

bian is head boy of the German school at Swakopmund and Haroldt is studying at the Martin Luther High School.

Tanya de Mendonza , a pupil at Centaurus, will go to Hong Kong to join young people from all over south-east Asia and other parts of the world to take the same two-year course.

Ingrid Kinda, who is studying at St Pauls, will travel to Swaziland in Janu­ary to the United World Colleges at Waterford Kamhlaba. There she will find students from all over the world and in particular from Africa.

DRUGS SOONER OR LATER YOU'LL

HAVE TO TALK TO SOMEONE

The POlice

The Undertaker

Wherever you see the DRUG WISE COUNSELLOR Sign you'll find a pharmacist who has been trained to deal with the problem of dmg abuse. The help is free and confidential.

The Law

Your Pharmacist

, " . " Spon~~ored by ~ as a:~erlJiC; to lbe community

FAIlIG ANO I'EAD

THE NAMIBIAN

UP GOES THE HOUSE ... First step is the steel frame, which is fastened together into a rigid structure. All is built by Namibians.

A Canadian boost for Nam housing industry • TOMMINNEY

A NEW Namibian housing industry could be launched, creating many more jobs, if an experiment funded by the Government of Canada is successful. This is a test steel house built at Outjo by specially-trained Namibian craftspeople using locally-made materials both to show how the house is built and to test how it lasts under the searing local conditions.

The low-cost house used Canadian design and It is built in a joint. venture betwee

Canadian International Development Agency (Cida), the municipality of Outjo and the Ministry of Regi onal and Local Government and Housing.

All the construction materials are supplied by Namibian companies and skilled Namibians have built the various parts used in the building as well as the work on si te.

The main structural element is formed steel,joined together to make a rigid and long-lasting frame. The walls are made of expanded metal filled in with wood wool and covered by conventional plaster. The corrugated iron roof is fixed to the frame, using fasteners and supports which are often used in house-building in Canada.

"The craftsmen have been very quick to learn the Canadian technique for erecting the structure," says Bob Hoffman, superintendent for ICL International Consulting Ltd, the Canad ian company managing the project.

"In Canada, the system is routinely used in the construction of schools, offices and clinics as well as residential buildings," adds ICL managing direc­tor Jerry Helfrich, who headed their delegation to Namibia. "The system is easily adaptable to a wide

FILLER ... The walls are filled with wood wool, made of planks of wood forced through a shredding machine

variety of floor plans and finishes ." If this system is adopted by Namibians it could be

the base for a new construction industry with many job opportunities for skilled and unskilled men and women. The products and ideas could even be exported to other countries.

SMART FINISH ... They walls are covered with expanded metal by the Namibians under the . guidance of the €anadian team.i .. ~;r ',"' ',?

THE NAMIBIAN

OMAFA osho ga thikama pO ngeyi • OSWALD SHIVUTE MOSHAKATI

EHANGANO lyaanafaalama mo Nooli ndjoka lya thikama maakalelipo yomIitopolwa ngashi, Oshana, Ohangwena, Oshikoto nOmusati oli li li ipongolola nawa noli na ekalelopo lyiihwapo mIitopolwa ayihe ine, okuza mOshigongi shalyo oshinene shoka sha ningilwe mu Juni nuumvo mOshakati.

Thomas Ikwa. Omudhiginini gwIiniwe oye Isaka Kayofa nOmupeha gwe omusamane Usko Nghaamwa.

mOshitopolwa sha OSHANA,OMAFAoga kalelwapo komusamne Ismael Shailemo ngoka

Pauyelele mboka wa pewa oshifo shika kOmun a shipund i gwOk o m i ti y e Ogandjimaye le ya OMAFA noku Ii wo o mun as hi p u ndi g wO kom itiye yAanafa a lama kOmangetti omusamane Gabes Shihepo, otau ulike mpok a kutya Ewili k ongundu lyEhangano ndik a, ngashi Iya hogololelwe mu Juni nuumvo mOsh igongi oshinene shalyo shoka sha ningilwe pOombelewa dha Ngoloneya ya Shana mOsh akat i, olya t h i k a m a mEwi l ik ong unnd u lyolyene oshowo mi ilyo iikalelipo ylitopolwa ine,

Oshana, Ohangwena, e li omunashipundi Oshikoto nOmusati. gwEw i I ikongu nd u

Okwa tseyith a wo moka oshowo omupeha kutya konima yomasiku gwe Metusal em o taku ka hogololwa ' Ashipala, Amushanga natango iilyo iikalelipo oye Andreas Kayofa yo momikund a ne nge nomupe ha g we yomIikandjohogoJolo- Melkisedeck Nkandi, Constituences. Omudhiginini gwl in iwe

Ewilikongundu enene oye meme Frieda Elifas ,I Y A a n a f a a I a m a nOmupeha gwe tate yomOnooli ngashi Iya Jacob Vilho. nyanyangidhilwe mOshitopolwa sha nonale,olya thikama nee H A N G WEN A , mOmusamane Tarah OMAFAogakalelwapo Imbili ngoka e li kOmusamane Samwel om una s hip u n d i Nepunda ngoka e li gwEhangano ndika, 0 m un a s hip un d i ngashingeyi oshowo gwEwi I i kongundu momunashipundigona moka taya mbidhidhwa tate Samwel Nepunda, ku Junias Hamunyela, taku ya A mu shanga Amushanga oye Moses omu samne Abednego N amho lo taya Nghifikwa nOmupeha mbidh idhwa ku Josef g we omus am a ne, H a I w ee n do,

Omudhiginini gwIiniwe oye Erastus Shakela ta yambidhidhwa ku Simon Sheuyange.

mOshitopolwa sha OMUSATJ, OMAFA oga kalelwapo komusamne Johannes Shikongo ngoka e Ii omunashipundi gwEwilikongundu ta yambidhidhw a komusamane Andreas Anguwo, Amushanga oye Abisai Aipanda ta yambidhidhwa ku Julius I1 e ka o manga omudhiginini gwIIniwe omus,amane Oswin Mukulu nomukwatheli gwe tate Vaino Kelimwe.

mOshitopolwa sha Otjikoto,Omafa oga kalelwapo komusamane Augustus Shiindi ongOmunashipundi gwEwilikongundu mOshitopolwa shoka taya mbidhidhwa ku tate Moses Auala, Amushanga oye Abner Ndja bula nomupeha g we Paul us Jona, Omudhiginini gwliniwe oye tate Sakari a

Ndeutepo ta yambidhidhwa ku tate Mathias Nghipandulwa.

OKOMITIYE OGANDflMA YELE ya OMAFA oya thikama momunashipundi gwayo tate Gabes Shihepo ta yambidhidhwa komusamne Tarah Imbili, Amushanga oye tate Frans Ihuhwa oshowo iily o yilwe ng ashi me me Fri ed Elifas, me me Elizabeth Nam undje bo, tate Johannes Andjamba na tate Melkisedeck Nkandi. IilyoyOMAFA mbyoka tayi kakalelapo Ehangano mOmikunda n e n g e rnIitopolwahogololoopo tayi ka uli kwal hogololw a meni lethimbo efupi nokuza nee mpoka OMAFA otaga ka kala giihwapo nawa thilu notaga yi nee miilonga yeyakul o lyAanafaalama. Omusamane Shihepo t~ lombwele pehala lyOmunashipundi tate Tarah Imbi li .

Pohamba noshinima shoKC);evoet • ABSALOM SHIGWEDHA Mongunduyaambaka oshiwikeshaziko,omwa

IILYO K t b k I· th" omwakwatelwa mbokali wo muna aAngola.

, ,yo ~evoe m yo a ya 1 ya, IglpO yali nale metanga "Epangelo lyaNamibia Namlbtapethlmbolyemanguluko,otaYlkakala I k "t I S th 01 " '10 g k 'dha

h'k ' , 'k k I k'l k N 'b' yaa WII a yo ou yl I n e I as 1 e y~PltI wa 0 uga u I a 0 amI I~, uuna West African Territorial 0 k uta a m b a k 0

ya ga?~Ja ~ondokum~nde dhll;ukwashl~'Yan~ Force (SWATF), nosho aaNamibiatayagalukile d~oshlh, D~lk~ odha h dha poplwa kom,lOlsteh aakwanezimo yawo . koNamibia, ihe itali ka Yllkwamem Hlfikepunye Pohamba, metItano, Pohamba okwa ti ota ka kalanandelyataambako

Pohambaokwatiiilyo Iilyo mbika yili 93, kala a taambako mboka aazaizai," Pohamba ta mbika, i tayi ka kala mwakwatelwa uunona tayakagandjauukwatya popi. Ta tsikileko nande ' ya thindilwa nosho wo aakulukadhi, wawowuukwashigwana natango kutya aaSouth kongudhi. Oministeli oyali ya falwa koSouth ihe nando ongawo, Afrika oyali wo anuwa Pohamba okwa li wo a Afrika oshiwike sha . opena oku kala pena yeshi zimine kutya, monathana nominsteli ziko, konima sho yali ya e I and u I a t h a n 0 opena iilyo y imwe yaSouthyegamenoSyd- taaguluka oongamba ewanawa. Okwa ti yoPolisiyaSouthAfrika, ney Mufamadi, okuya moNamibia mongundu yaamboka 'yali yape epitikilo ok u k u n d a t ha n a koonkondo shaali yali ya taaguluka ongundu yaalumentu , oshinima shika. paveta. oongamba shaali paveta aakulukadhi nosho wo

'I

III Akuvule a undulilwa­kOmpangu yOpashitopolwa • OSWALD SHIVUTE MOSHAKATI

OMvMATI omugundjuka gwomOshakati AkuvuleJohannes ngokaa kala ta patanekwa omolueyakopo lyOhauto yomusamane Lisias Mutileni omvula yayi pamwe namukwawo gumwe ngoka a li a yahwa okusa kOpolisi 'pondje ya Shakati, konima ashike sho ya fadhuka po nohauto ndjoka, okwa holokele mOmpangu bya Mangestrata Etitano lya ziko nOshipotha she osha undulilwa kOmpangu yOpashitopolwa hoka oko hakupangulwa uufuthi wlihauto ngashiingeyi.

Kamatyona gumwe Immanuel Andreas, ngoka namukwawo gumwe ya adhikile taya kembadhala

okuteya Ositola yimwe ya tate Ismael Mbulu mOshakati, ndele mukwawo nguka gwedhina Kandongo, ta yahwa okusa kOosecurity dhaampoka ongulohi ndjoka, okwa monika ondjo mOmpangu ya Mangestrata ohela ndele ta pewa egeelo lyoomwedhi 24 mondholongo. OOmwedhi omugoyi odha kuthwako ye a kale ina uvikila sha shafa shika muule woomvula ntano.

Omulumentu gumwe omugundjuka gwedhina Kaluapa Zenen okwa holokele naye mOmapangu ya Mangestrata inOshakati yohela eti 08.08.1994 noshipotha shuufuthi a teya egumbo. Okwa pewa oomwedhi 24 mondholongo omanga kuyele miipotha nenge moshipotha shimwe a li wo a pew a oomwedhi dhi vulithe pomulongo.

Kepulo kutya onkatu yini tayi ka kala ya katukilwa iilyo mbika yopolisi, Pohamba okwa ti "epangelo lyaSouth Afrikaolyi li Iya uvaneka oku kala Iya opaleka egumbo Iyawo". Oku li wo kwa tegelelwa omupresident gwaSouth AfrikaNelson Mandela, ngoka teya metalelopo Iya koNamibia nena, a ka kale akundathana kombinga yoshinima shika naPresident Sam Nujoma.

Omulilo gwa dhimwa

OMULILO ngoka gwa Ii gwa tameke natango okufikaokuti kwOmbuga mUumbugantu wOshitopolwa sha Shana nOmusati osho gwa dhimwa manga kOngundu yaakalimo yaahoka taya kwathelwa kEtanga lyo NDF.

Shoka sha li sha etitha omulilo mbuka inashi shiwika natang o shimwe a s h i k e ota ku tengenek w a kutya aalithi yiimuna nenge aakalikuti yaahoka.Omathimbo ga ziko , omulilo ngaanguka ogwa li gwa fik e po oshitopolwa oshinene shOmaulithilo gOmbuga ya Ndonga nUukwambi mOshitopolwa sha Shana, omanga inagu dhimwa kwali.

Tuesday August 09 1994 9

,Iilyo yoKoevoet otashivulika yi kaye

mondholongo AANAMIBIA mboka yali muukwiita wiilongo yopondje shaali paveta mwakwatelwa mboka yoKoevoet nosho wo oSW A TF, mboka paife ya hala okugalukila koNamibia, otashivulika yaka pewe egeelo. Attorney-General Harmut Ruppel okwa ti shika otashi ka ningwa pamulandu gwoveta yegameno. Kehe omuNamibia ali metanga Iyuukwiita -waSouth Afrika nenge muukwiita wiilongo yimwe yi ili, otaya vulu okugeelwa moNamibia kohi yoveta yegameno, ndjoka yali ya tulwapo momuvo 1990.

Omutamanekindjayi gwaNamibia Hans Heyman, okwa ti aantu mbaka ngele oya monika ondjo, m0I1dholongo otaya ka kala ashike yi ifutilamo okapandi koondola N$IO 000 nenge ya kale mondholongo uule woomvula mbali.

~ News for now

• ... • I Of ' .t 1 ~ ..... ._,.

10 Tuesday August 09 1994

FAX: 36982

~[l,~~~~r?~~@ ~@W~~~~~~~~OO1f~

I~III Special 1iI~1 Services

CASH For your HiFis & TVs

CASH For your Fridges and

Freezers (any condition)

CASH For your Lounge suite, diningroomsuites, and

kitchen furniture Tel : 220012

TV - Audio Expert TV - Video - HI-FI Service

Phone 37700

HE OOi\L18T Always ready for problems

and sickness. Contact Or Scharief at

62243

KHOMASDAL MOTO SPARES

TOVOTA COROLLA OWNERS

We stock your car's windscreen

Grille Bonnet Fender

Headlight Cornerlamp Bumperlamp

Bumper corner Taillamp

Lamp lenses Service parts

Gaskets Oilseals

Brake parts Window winders

FOR SERVICE PHONE TINUS OR LANCE AT: KHOMASDAL MOTOR

SPARES TEL 061-211760/211766

~ For -.:. Sale

Volkswagen Golf CSX1 .8 model 1990

Airconditioning 1 radio-tape - extra spare tyre

52000km one owner, service record

Price: N$35 000 neg Contact: Karin Tel : 223066

PADDLESKI for sale N$700-00

Tel : 220012

CHICKEN GRILL For rake Away or

Restaurant for sale, takes 12 chicken, N$800-OO

Tel: 220012

NEW WALLSAFES tor , 8'818

Securlty'group 'B, Inside measurments: 44 x 36 x 45cm

N$700 each Tel : 220012

Kenwood KA4020 Audio power amplifier, 100w, Two RCL disco speakers, very

high quality, would suit disco. N$2500 or nearest

offer Phone 225042

~~.

M~~ TO LET

PIONEEP ." !\RK EXT 1 N$2200 ~ ;'ownhouse : 3 be- '(> stove, 2 bath-rooms, locK-UP garage, en­closed garden.

"'i· ;~ EER PARK N$, - p.m. Duplex to,"" 3e, 3 bedrooms, enc' 'ld garden

FOR SALE ACADEMIA

N$: 00 (neg) Huge pri-vatE spacious, 5 bed-rO,or home, 3 bath-roon rv room, lounge, dinin Jom, double ga­rage ervant's quarters, stOfl Im. A real bargain not I ,e missed.

K LIF.IN WINDHOEK N$21 0 000. Two-bed­roomed townhouse under construction , one bath­room, lock-up garage.

Phone Ester at 222971 (all hours) or Ezanne at 35633 (after 14hOO)

Lovely view - Posh area Bedroom house with BIC

Lounge, diningroom TV room, 2 bathrooms

Lovely open plan kitchen with built-in stove

One room flat Double garage

Price N$495 000-

ACADEMIA Close to school

5 Bedroom house with entrance hall

Lounge, diningroom, TV room

2 Bathrooms, kitch!!n PLUS: One room flat plus

servant's quarters Swimmingpool, single

garage Completely walled in PRICE: N$350 000-

Contact Person Helen Majiedt

Tel: 223218 (w) 231157 (h)

TEL: 36970

~ For -.:. Sale

HI~~~ND PLOT FOR SALE

34 Hektar 8km from Windhoek only

10 minutes drive Electric Game fencin~

Solar power stable block Swawek power

3 Boreholes 4 Horse stables

Newly build house 3 Bedroom 2 Bathroom

Very big lounge Big dining room

Big kitchen with build-in cupboards

rice: N$600 000,00 (Neg)

If you have a farm to sell in the following districts: Gobabis,Otjiwarongo,

Okahandja, Grootfontein. ,et hold of me, I am having

potencial buyers.

ontact: Azor Hujarunguru Tel : 224884 (W)

240862 (H)

HIGHlAND .' l!jt6.t~j HOUSE FOR SALE

OPONGANDA 3 Bedroom

1 Study room 1 Bathroom

,~ Kitchen Lounge

Lockable Carport

KHOMASDAL 3 Bedroom

1 Y2 Bathroom Kitchen with cupboards

Lounge 1 Garage

VERY BIG ERF t>RICE N$150,000 Transfe

included.

KHOMASDAL 3 Bedrooms

1112 Bathroom Very big lounge

Kitchen with build-in cupboards

Lockable carport Price N$150,000

CONTACT: AZOR HUARUNGURU

TEL: 224884 (W) 240863 (H)

~ For -.:. Sale

FOR SALE Opel Kadett 1985

RIT, Dark green metallic N$6000 (neg) ,

Contact Linda at Tel: 43067 (all hours)

I~. Special IiI ~I Services

DRAFTING SERVICES Architectural and general

mechanical drawings -made by an experienced drattsman in AUTOCAD Contact: Mr C. Alberto

atTel: 220398

AUTOCAD Courses

AUTOCAD (release 12)

courses given by a very

experienced teacher - for

more details contact: Mr C

Alberto at Tel : 220398

THE NAMIBIAN

SA fail to take up challenge LEEDS: Needing 298 for victory, South Africa batted their way through to a predictable draw in the second Cornhill cricket Test against England at Headingley yesterday.

ship which had seen the innings into its 22nd over.

Dull fare, but tactics which met with full ap­proval from coach Mike

When play was finally a dismal trot, laboured Procter. "Five runs an called off the tourists ha<;l fQr 82 minutes for his over .. . noton the final day scored 447 and I-IQ/l dozen runs before giv- of a Test," he ,said. '7'kts . in reply ~o Erig; ing spinner Phi) Tufnell Earlier in the day Eng­land's 477/9 decl. and a simple return catch. land's two overnight 267/5 decl. Gary Kirsten was a frac- men, Graham Thorpe

England captain tion more ' adventurous, and Graeme Hick took Michael Atherton' s contributing 28 to their · advantage of a di sinter­lunchtime declaration 43-run opening partner- ested looking SA attack left the tourists a chase I

of about five runs to the over. One-nil ahead in the three-Test series the South Africans rejected the challenge.

Their "rather safe than sorry" policy had obvi­ously been anticipated -the stands which had been packed for the first four days were relatively empty.

Opening batsman , Andrew Hudson, who has been

Jt;;I Work kLJ Offered

Taxi driver needed Contact Linda at

Tel: 43067

m Legal Notice

THE ALIENS ACT, 1937 NOTICE OF INTENTION

OF CHANGE OF SURNAME

I, Thomas Shalongo Nkandi , residing at Onankali, South Ondonga, employed as a Lieutenant intend applying to the Minister of Home Affairs for authority under section 9 of the Aliens Act, 1937, to assume the surname of Asheela, for the reasons that Nkandi is my father's surname. I don't want to use it anymore. I want to use my real surname Asheela. I

to boost their third ­wicket partnership to 133.

Hick, who was dropped by Fanie de Villiers when he had 31 on Sunday, scored an impressive second 50 off onl y 45 balls to reach his second Test century in 28 matches . Thorpe - run out by a direct hit by ' keeper Dave Richardson - struck 10 boundaries in his 73.

previously bore the name(s) TOUGH HITTER ... AlIan Donald of South Africa in action during his T.S. Nkandi. I intend also test-best score of 27 on the fourth day of the second test at Headingley. applying for authority to Donald, batting with a runner, could miss the rest of the series due to an change the surname of my inflamed cyst on his right toe. (Photo: Reuters via N ____ - r

minor children Hesekiel and or

Josephina to Asheela. Any person who Objects to my

.assumption of the said surname of Asheela, should as soon as may be lodge his 1 her objection, in writing, with a statement of his 1 her reasons thereof, with the Magistrate of Otjiwarongo.

THE ALIENS ACT, 1937 NOnCE OF INTENTION

OF CHANGE OF SURNAME

I, David Wilhelm, residing at Epalala, Uukwanyana, employed as a Cable Jeeder at Telekom intend applying to the Minister of Home Affairs for authority under section 9 of the Aliens Act, 1937, to assume the surname of Hashili, for the reasons that Wilhelm is my father's name. I want to use my real surname, Hashili. . I previously bore the name(s) David Wilhelm. Any person who objects to my assumption of the said surname of Hashili, should as soon as may be lodge his ther objection, in writing, with a statement of his t her reasons thereof, with the Magistrate of Windhoek.

SPORT SHORTS - FROM PAGE 12

her firs t tournament victory since May. Graf, who failed to play up to her standards all

week, finally had all elements of her game working in beating the WTA tour's No 2 ranked player in 67 minutes.

Schwarz for Arsenal SWEDISH international Stefan Schwarz says he wants to help his new club, Arsenal, to get among the goals next season. Schwarzjoined Arsenal, who lifted the European Cup Winners Cup last season, for 1,8-million pounds from Portuguese giants Benfica. Gunners' midfielder John Jensen, who ' missed the European final victory over Parma after damaging a knee playing for Denmark, is back in full training.

Becker revived BORIS Becker's resurrec tion proved Mark Woodforde' s undoing on Sunday as the fonner world number one from Gennany dismantled the Australian 6"2, 6-2 in the final of the Los Angeles Open. Becker, playing the A TP tennis tour event for the first time, needed just 55 minutes to beat Woodforde, claiming his second title of the season and the 40th of his career.

AUSSIES FACE NZ

FROM PAGE 11

Knox, center Pat Howar<i, halfback George Gregan and winger Damian Smith were among the play­ers whose positions in the side had been ques­tioned.

Smith ran in two tries and Gregan won the man-of-the-match award.

The Australian team: Matthew Pini, Damian Sm\th, Jason Little, Pat Howard, David Campese, David Knox, George Gregan, Tim Gavin, David Wilson, Willie Ofahengaue, Garrick Morgan, John Eales, Ewen McKenzie, Phil Kearns(captain), Tony Daly.

-

THE NAMIBIAN

Morocco, Cameroon suffer JOHANNESBURG: Morocco and Cameroon, still smarting from humiliating World Cup exits, suffered further blows to their football pride at the weekend.

became the third Moroc- seal on the biggest upset can club to liftthe Cham- of the competition this pions' Cup, were ex-year with a second goal. pected to overcome Sogara and reach the Results:

Former winners for the World Cup finals quarter-finals. African Champions' WydadCasablancawere in the United States. But a shock 1-0 home Cup, second round, eliminated from the Af- Morocco lost to Bel- defeattwoweeksagoleft second leg: rican Champions' Cup gium, Saudi Arabia and them with a mountain to , In Libreville after losing 2-0 away to Holland - the worst per- climb in Libreville, and AS Sogara, Gabon, 2 AS Sogara of Gabon in formance by an African the peak disappeared Wydad Casablanca, the second round. nation since Zaire from their vision in the Morocco, 0 (Sogara

And Canon Yaounde flopped in the then West ; second half. qualify 3-0 on made an unexpected exit Germany 20 years ago. Nigerian Ipaye Waslu, aggregate). at the same stage of the . Cameroon held Swe- whose four goals helped African Cup-winners' Cup-winners' Cup, de- den in their opening ,thePortGentilclubreach Cup, second round, spite defeating Agaza of match, but heavy defeats the quarter-finals last second leg: Togo 1-0 at home. by Brazil and Russia en- year, converted a 50th In Yaounde

-Tuesday August 09 1994 11

/

The cup ties, originally sured an early flight minute penalty kick. Canon Yaounde, WHIRLWIND ... WHShotsprinter,JudyBoshoff,shootsoutoftheblocks scheduled for May, were home for the Indomita- With five minutes left, Cameroon, 1 Agaza, during the recent Sanlam Super Athletics Championships staged at the delayed becau se the bIe Lions. Gabonese international Togo 0 (Agaza qualify Independence Stadium. Judy will represent Namibia in the 100 metre and countries were preparing Wydad, who in 1992 Jonas Ogandaga put the" 3-2 on aggregate). 200 metre races at the upcoming Commonwealth Games in Victoria,

Canada.

Fish River marathon Seiler wins time trial PEPSI and Marathon Sugar will sponsor this year's Fish River Marathon which will take place on Satur~ay, August 20. The Canyon Hotel at Keetmanshoop will act as the official host of the event, the most prestigious in the running calendar.

The 52 kilometre event is open to individual ath­letes over 18 years old who will compete in cat­egories for men, ladies and veteran men.

The road relay in which team members run approximately 10 kilo­metres, is open to teams with all five athletes older than 12 years in the

ior men (12-18) and la­dies.

Entry forms are avail­able from the Canyon Hotel at telephone (0631) 3361. The entry fee is N$30 for indi­vidual athletes and N$75 for teams, which isN$15 per athlete.

The_race will be (un 52 kilometres from

on the

road to LUderitz and will commence at06hOO. The route will finish at the Canyon Hotel.

Both the marathon and road relay have a time limit of 6 hours.

The organisers have also announced that 17 refreshment points will be available along the route situated approxi­mately 3 kilometres apart offering water as well as Pepsi Cola.

First Aid would also be provided throughout the race.

Prizes incl ude medals, sponsored by the Can-

yon Hotel, certificates, sports towels and pro­motional prizes spon­sored by Pepsi.

T-shirts and prize money sponsored by Marathon Sugar will also be at stake.

T Mutavdzic and Petra van Wyk of Canyon Hotel at telephone (0631) 3361; Inspector W Pearson of the Namibian Police (0631) 2386 and/or Inspector Dry, also of the Namibian Police (0631) 2207 can be contacted for more information.

NAMIBIAN cycling ace Heiko Seiler clocked an impressive 53,23 seconds to clinch the senior section during Saturday's race on the Western Bypass in Windhoek.

The_ event, competed over 40 kilo­metres, was sponsored by Corn-Man.

Following closely on the heels of Sei ler was Martin du Plessis who com­pleted the race in 54,19 with Michael

Andries Taljaard pipped the juve­niles division in I hour and 22 min­utes. Artur Kuppe maintained his grip in the veterans section in 1.00.20, fol­lowed into second spot by Gerry Lynch in 1.04.50. Full results: Seniors - I. Heiko Se iller (53.23); 2. Martin du Plessis (54. 19); 3. Michael Swanepoel (55.17); 4. Henry Page (57.20).

Swanepoel clinching third place at Juniors - I. Pierre Marais (57.21); 2. 55,17. , Jacque Celliers (58.35); 3. Pieter

Pierre Marais emerged tops in the Liebenberg (1.00.00). juniors category with a time of 57,21, J '1 J Ad' T I ' d " uveOl es - . n nes a Jaar followe~ by Jacque Cellters In 5~,35. (L.22.00). The third. sQot went to Pleter Liebenberg who finished tFie course .. Veferans - I . Artur Kuppe (1.00.20); in one hour. 2. Gerry Lynch (1.04.50).

SA to host junior soccer JOHANNESBURG: South bia, Malawi and South Africa. Africa has been given the honour "I cannot praise Coca-Cola highly of hosting the inaugural enough for coming to our rescue and Confederation of Southern sponsoring the first Cosafa under-17 African Football Associations tournament," said Bhamjee. "It is from (Cosafa) international under-I7 the ranks of these players :-vhere the t t hi hk' k ff t future world soccer stars Will come. ournamen w c IC so nex "I have always said the future of

week. world football lies in Africa and I am The tournament involving the-nine more convinced than ever that the fu­

members of (:osafa will be sponsored ture Maradonas will come from' the by Coca-Cola and was launched by southern African region." Cosafa president Ismail Bhamjee of The competitors will be split into Botswana at the sponsor's headquar- two sections for the round-robin phase, ters in Johannesburg yesterday. with the top two teams in each group

The competition runs from August going through to cross-section seinifi-15 to 20 and,'will be played at Johan- nals. The .(jnal and playoff for third nesburg'sOrlal}doStadiumandMarks place will be played at Orlando Sta­Park, and Mamelodi's H M Pitje Sta- dium on !,ugust 20. dium. Sectiol 1 comprises Zimbabwe,

, - ' The competing countries are Bot- Lesotho, Botswana and Mozambique, HAPPY FELLA ••. second-ranked Goran IvanisevicofCroatia sprays champagneatthepresentation swana, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, with Zahlbia, South Africa, Malawi, ceremony of the US dollars 410000 men's Australian Open tennis tournament in 'Kitzbuehel on Lesotho Swaziland Namibia Zam- Swazila'ld and Namibia in Section 2. Sunday. Top seeded Ivanisevic defeated unseeded Frabrice San toro from France 6-2, 4-6, 6-3, 6-2 1i ii'l-iiii' iiii'iiiiiii iiiiiiiiii in the final. (photo: Reuters via Nampa). I

Munich fall to BreD1.en·· MUNICH: Michael Schultz scored in the 14th minute of extra time and New Zealand's Wynton Rufer added another 10 minutes later to give Werder Bremen a 3-1 victory over Bayern Munich on Sunday in the German Super Cup.

The victory spoiled the debut of coach Giovanni Trappatoni and striker Jean-Pierre Pap in, both hav­ing come to the reigning German league champion

.. from the Italian first division. ·It was the second straight Super Cup victory for

Breme~, which finished_ ~ighth in t~ljll}un~esliga

"This game gives me something to think about -we got a lesson from Werder Bremen," Trapattoni said. Trapattoni, who left J uventus after leading it to a second-place finish in the Italian first division last season, takes over from Franz Beckenbauer, who guided Bayern to a record 13th Bundesliga title last season.

With the acquisition of players such as Papin from AC Milan and Swiss international Alain Sutter, Munich is hoping to regain the European Cup title,

it last won in 1976. It last went to the , 1987. ' ... :::i' ' .. ".cL

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12 Tuesday August 09 1994

SPORT Sport Shorts

BA supporters BLACK Africa Sports Club supporters are urged to attend a very urgent meeting to be held at the Shifidi School Hall on Thursday, August 11.

Announcing this news to The Namibian Sport was Jackey Uirab, former chairperson of the Sup­porters Club.

The meeting starts at 18h30 sharp.

Death warrant SOUTH African rugby supremo Louis Luyt virtu­ally signed the death warrants of Springbok coach Ian McIntosh and the SA team manager in New Zealand, Jannie Enge1brecht when he said he would not support them continuing in the posts when the SA Rugby Football Union executive met in Cape Town next Friday, August 19.

Luyt said: 'They will have ajob until the 19th, but I won ' t support the job."

Emenalo signed

THE NAMIBIAN

Fireworks expected in schools tourney

Semifinals this weekend ... • CONRAD ANGULA found some consolation made their presence felt

with a solid 3-1 victory in the competition when over the respected they gunned down their DOSW. Shifidi Secondary

The most remarkable School counterparts in a win of the weekend came hard-fought 3-2 victory. from Dawid * Academia,

Results

N am Football Association

Coca-Cola Championships

QUARTERFINAL re­sults from the Coca-Cola soccer tournament played at the weekend: Augustineum 3, Shifidi 2; A Shipena 3, DOSW I; HTS 4, Jan Jonker 3; Eldorado 0, Dawid Bezuidenhout 7. * The semi-finals will be played this weekend.

FIREWORKS can be expected this weekend when eight of the Central Region's top schools will battle it out in the semifinal round of the prestigious Coca-Cola Secondary Schools Championships at four different venues in Windhoek. Bezuidenhoud who de- Augustineum, Dawid Namibia

stroyed Eldorado Sec- Bezuidenhoud, Ella du Thetoumament,spon- venues around the ci ty. ondary School 7-0 in a Plessis, HTS, Rehoboth Rugby Union

sored by Namibia Bev- There were some ex- match which was noted and A Shipena will bat-erages, is played under citing matches including for its attack from the tIe it out in the semifi- Metropolitan the auspieces of the Na- the Higher Technical the word go. nals this Friday with the . mibia National Schools School who, despite Pre-tournament fa- finals fixtured for Satur- U mon CUp Sport Union which, in . playing in the touma- vourites, Ella du Plessis, day. Quarterfinals turn, is an affiliate of the ment for the first time in lived up to their reputa- The overall winner of Namibia Football Asso- many years, ousted Jan tion when they ousted the Central Region will RESULTS in the quar­ciation. Jonker A:frikaner highly respected Dobra join schools from other terfinals of the under-19

The second round was Secondery School 4-3. 2-0 in what was de- regions in the finals of schools rugby competi-completed at the week- A Shipena, who had a scribed as the most ex- the championships to be tion: end with five exciting disappointing outing at citing outing of the week- playedatKeetmanshoop WHS 31, Mariental 9; quarter-final outings the recentOtjikoto Sport end. from August 27-28. HTS 49, Otjiwarongo 0;

NIGERIANWorldCupdefenderMichaelEmenalo played at four different FestivalatTsumeb,also G~o?tfontein 18, PK ~e has joined English First Division club Notts County. v

l44Iih

Mers .13

1;3 AThcademl.a

E I 28 h I d · th fh ' t' , ona . eseml-mena 0, ,w 0 p aye In ree 0 IS coun ry s f I ' 11 bId h' matches in America, had been given a free transfer Ina : w~ e paye t IS

by Belgian side Molenbeek. wee en .

Regis injured BRITIAN'S world silver medallistJohn Regis said he was butted yesterday after bowing out of the European Championships with an achilles injury.

But Regis, who won a record four medals at Split four years ago, is still hopeful he will be ready for the Commonwealth Games in Victoria, Canada later this month.

Wilmot joins Palace CRYSTAL Palace, newly promoted to the English Premier League, have signed former Arsenal goal­keeper Rhys Wilmot from First Division Grimsby Town for 80 000 pounds.

Wi1mot will provide cover for the London side's first-choice goalkeeper Nigel Martyn while reserve Jimmy Glass undergoes a cartilage operation.

Rampant Steffi I ON THE BLOCKS ... 100 metres runners (f.1.) Lasse Juusela. Finland, British lOOm world champion Linford Christie, Sinisa Ergotic and Sergey Kronelyuk Belarus during take off at the

STEFFI Graf, playing her best tennis in months,European Athletics Championships in Helsinki on Sunday. Christie qualified in a time of 10,39 routed Arantxa Sanchez Vicarion 6-2, 6-1 on Sun- seconds. The finals were expected to take place yesterday. (Photo: Reuters via Nampa). day to win the US dollars 400000 Toshiba Classic,

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TORONTO: Dream Team 11 has dominated the World Basketball Championships with slam dunk diplomacy.

for it, it comes a lot easier."

When US coach Don

The competition level rises a notch this week in round robin quarter-fi­nal play, with the Na­tional Basketball Asso­ciation stars, playing Australia on Tuesday, Puerto Rico.on Wednes­day and Russia on Fri­day.

US players are notex­actly shaking in their shoes. "Maybe when we get to the last stages, the semi-final and final, that's when you will see some real intensity from this team," Dream Team forward Dominiq ue Wilkins said.

Nelson was asked about The NBA players had Mark Bradtke, the inside

. no advance plan against key for next opponent specific foes beforefirst- Australia, a dumb­round matches, but still founded look fo llowed. won lopsided victories Nelson knows long­over China, Brazil and range threat Andrew Spain. Gaze, though.

"What we know about "They have great out-the teams is what we see side shooters, maybe the on the court and we play best in the world in Gaze, from there," US forward and they are versatile," Shawn Kemp said. Nelson said. "Sometimes I think "As far as organiza­that's why we don't win tion and a team that by 20 or 30 points there makes it difficult for in the first half. other teams, they are up

It takes a bit of adjust- with the best of them." ment in the first 10 or 15 No one, however, has minutes. come close to stopping

Butonce you get a feel O'Neal near the basket.

"We have the best big men in the world and they are going to d.omi­nate," Nelson said .. "Right now, teams seem to be trying to stop our outside game and the in- . side is wide open.

Eventually teams will try to stop us inside.

It doesn't matter what teams do, we're going to make them pay the price."

"Shaq is a big fellow," Kemp said.

"I let him have the low post and usually take what's left."

"We're all just having fun sitting back watch­ing Shaq and Shawn," Wilkins said.