Oyster World Property Pointer Wolwedans Game Farm Beach House Restaurant Reflexions Professional Hair Top Up Service Station Delfinos.Passion for food-Passion for life Ponto Grille and Carvery Skorpios Security

 

MosselbayonTheline | First With The News

Daar gebeur elke dag soveel dinge op die nuusfront dat g'n mens kan byhou of alles onthou nie. Omdat Mosselbayontheline meesal die belangrikste nuus saam met talle mooi foto's van die omgewing op ons Facebook-blad publiseer, gaan baie van dié nuus/foto's mettertyd verlore.

Derhalwe publiseer ons voortaan elke maand se nuushoogtepunte en foto's onder een sambreel met die skakel na die betrokke FB-plasing om dit makliker toeganklik te maak vir dié wat dit op ons FB-blad misgeloop het. 

Meimaand was verkiesingsmaand, maar ook een van die mees gewelddadige maande in die land . . . desondanks stroom toeriste/nuwe intrekkers daagliks na Mosselbaai en ons foto's onder al die berigte wys hoekom. Voorbladfoto: Kolie Visser

 

1 Mei /May 2019: WERKERSDAG EN VOORLOOP TOT VERKIESING IN BEELD: 

voting station

Werkersdag in Mosselbaai is vandag so uiteenlopend gevier soos die politieke verkiesingspraatjies wat hoogty vier op alle mediaplatforms.

Die rekordgetal van 48 politieke partye wat volgende Woensdag meeding om stemme in al nege provinsies is 'n goeie aanduiding van die verdeeldheid onder landsburgers en die soeke na goeie leierskap om die land uit die Zuma/Gupta-sinkgate van korrupsie en staatskaping te lig. 
As al dié partye se verkiesingsbeloftes net naastenby kon realiseer, sou ons oornag 'n Utopia hê . . 

https://web.facebook.com/mosselbayontheline/posts/2390920104472576?

 

7 Mei /May 2019: Verkiesingskoors en grappies; Geblikte leeubedryf opnuut onder soeklig.

 "Ons eet, kuier en drink maar nou voluit, want ons weet nie of ons ná Woensdag nog sal kan nie . . ." 

Op die vooraand van die belangrikste nasionale verkiesing sedert 1994 is dit asof die hele land in 'n staat van afwagting is . . . 
Eiendomsagente kla die mark is DOOD, want almal wag om te kyk wat ná Woensdag gaan gebeur om te weet of hulle moet koop, verkoop of vlug . . . en intussen duik die verkiesingsgrappies as teenvoeter vir die onsekerheid oral op . . . 

voting1No photo description available.

https://web.facebook.com/mosselbayontheline/posts/2394306794133907?

 

9 Mei / May 2019: Ná die verkiesing - Gekonkel met ink en weggooi-stembriewe en "dooies" mag glo nie meer stem nie

Dankie tog, die verkiesing is verby . . . Die mees ironiese geval was egter dat terwyl party mense blykbaar twee stembeurte bewimpel het, 'n Wes-Kaapse pensioenaris glad nie kon stem nie omdat hy volgens alle amptelike aanduidings reeds in Maart dood en begrawe is . . . 
Die "oorledene" en sy seun wil nou weet hoekom hulle nie eens van sy sterfte ingelig en na sy begrafnis genooi is nie . . . en wie het nogal betaal? 

piet van Zyl dooie wil stem

https://web.facebook.com/mosselbayontheline/posts/2395733163991270?

 

10 Mei /May 2019: Verkiesing rustig sonder groot skokke - kenners som op

Terwyl die laaste uitslae van die belangrikste verkiesing sedert 1994 getel word, slaak almal 'n effense sug van verligting dat ook dié verkiesing relatief rustig en geweldsvrye verloop het . . .

Die mense het gepráát en aan die hoë wegbly-syfer is dit duidelik dat die landsburgers redelik keelvol is vir die huidige stand van sake en positiewe verandering en sterk leiers wat nie blote lippetaal besig nie, dringend soek . . .

Cyril Ramaphosa1

https://web.facebook.com/mosselbayontheline/posts/2396550167242903?

 

11 Mei / May 2019 : Moedersdag, Mosselbaai se mooi in MEI en ontleders maak sin van verkiesingsuitslae: 

Image may contain: one or more people, people standing, sky, ocean, mountain, cloud, outdoor, nature and water

https://web.facebook.com/mosselbayontheline/posts/2397592750471978?

 

13 Mei / May 2019: Mosselbayontheline GROEI daagliks en bedank AL ons getroue lesers/ondersteuners - help ons so om ondersoekende joernalistiek te laat herleef:

Image may contain: screen

https://web.facebook.com/mosselbayontheline/posts/2398942023670384?

 

16 Mei / May 2019 : Misdaad/moord in Wes-Kaap ruk handuit - Misdaadkenner waarsku:

Sedert die begin van die jaar was daar reeds twaalf plaasaanvalle in die Wes-Kaap, waarin drie mense vermoor is. In die jongste plaasaanval is Tool Wessels (55) van die plaas Kapteinsdrif buite Bonnievale Maandag wreed gemartel en vermoor, terwyl sy vrou, Liezel (55) met 'n skerp voorwerp in die bors gesteek en met kookwater in haar gesig en lyf gegooi is.

Image may contain: 4 people, people smiling, people standing, mountain, outdoor and nature

https://web.facebook.com/mosselbayontheline/posts/2400660950165158? 

 

17 Mei / May 2019: Geliefde ou munisipale grasdak-gebou by De Bakke in puin gelê deur brand. 

Net 'n swartgebrande murasie met smeulende puin wat nog plek-plek rook, het oorgebly van Mosselbaai se nuwe jazz-kuierplek La-Belea Sport- en jazzkroeg wat in November verlede jaar sy deure op die De Bakke-parkeerterrein langs die see geopen het.

https://web.facebook.com/mosselbayontheline/posts/2402049830026270?

Image may contain: sky and outdoorImage may contain: 2 people, people smiling, outdoor

 

20 Mei / May 2019

Volmaan in kleur oor die Baai - en welkome nuwe inisiatief om die Suid-Kaap se riviere te herstel.

Goeie nuus is dat die belangrikheid om sensitiewe rivierstelsels in die Suid-Kaap te bewaar en van indringerplante en ander obstruksies te bevry, dalk uiteindelik nou nuwe momentum gaan kry danksy 'n nuwe program van die Suid-Kaap grondeienaarsinisiatief (SCLI).

Riaan Hammond sept2

https://web.facebook.com/mosselbayontheline/posts/2403456516552268?

22 Mei / May 2019: Ramaphosa en nuwe parlementêre leiers amptelik ingelyf terwyl moorde/plaasmoorde die land ruk. Moord op aktivis Annette Kennealy breek damwal oop. 

https://web.facebook.com/mosselbayontheline/posts/2405077236390196?

Image may contain: one or more people and cat Image may contain: 1 person, sitting

 

24 Mei / May 2019: Vrae/vrese oor peperduur  "Beyersstraat-opgradering" voortgaan ondanks beter opsies

Sal die mens ooit ophou om blindweg in die natuur te gaan krap waar dit nie jeuk nie . . . en dit vooruitgang noem?
Inwoners langs die ongerepte riviermond in Klein-Brakrivier weet die afgelope paar maande nie wát hulle getref het nie.

https://web.facebook.com/mosselbayontheline/posts/2406499676247952?

Image may contain: sky and outdoor

26 Mei / May 2019 : Land van kontras en uiterstes . . .

Terwyl dit plek-plek WOES gaan in die land met die nuutverkose president Cyril Ramaphosa wat orde uit die chaos en politieke binnegevegte moet probeer skep, en inwoners al hoe meer besef dat hulle sélf sal moet inspring om hul omgewing te beveilig en leefbaar te hou, lyk dit soms of Mosselbaai op 'n ander planeet sit . . . 

https://web.facebook.com/mosselbayontheline/posts/2408643522700234?

 

29 Mei / May 2019: SA kry drie nuwe beskerme Marienegebiede en Mosselbaai neem afskeid van geliefde Pieter Viljoen. 

 

 

 

Related Articles:

While an epic and costly legal fight is still raging along the West Coast to save the protected Langebaan Lagoon from the devastating effects of a  proposed 884-hectare aquaculture development zone, another international disaster has hit this blooming but controversial industry.

One can only hope this last multi-billion rand catastrophe in Norway and elsewhere will kill all aspirations of the Mossel Bay Municipality and the beleaguered department of fisheries to experiment with such a risky industry in Mossel Bay's pristine waters . . .   

kites

The pristine Langebaan Lagoon along the West Coast is a Marine Protected and accredited Ramsar wetland site of international importance and world destination for kite-surfing and water sport. However, this hot spot is still, despite several court cases, under threat of ecological degradation from plans by the Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (DAFF) to develop an industrial-scale, sea-based aquaculture zone (ADZ), spanning 884 hectares.

http://www.weskusontheline.co.za/2019/05/30/3712/

https://web.facebook.com/weskus123/posts/2536405589711800?__xts_

Similar plans for fish farming along Mossel Bay's coastline were also discussed last year at a so-called INDABA.  Mosselbayontheline questioned the reasons for and legality of the meeting with DAFF officials. 

http://www.mosselbayontheline.co.za/index.php/a-fishy-farce-is-mossel-bay-bullied-into-risky-fish-farming-experiments-by-the-powers-that-be

 This is why . . . 

Eight million salmon killed in a week by sudden surge of algae in Norway

Deaths come weeks after similar incident in Scotland: ‘We’re all pretty worried’ 

salmon farm norway

Norway exports over a million tonnes of farmed salmon every year ( Getty )

A sudden surge in algae has killed at least eight million salmon in one week across Norwegian fish farms, the state-owned Norwegian Seafood Council has said. The enormous algal blooms, due to recent warm weather, have spread rapidly around Norway’s northern coast, sticking to fishes’ gills and suffocating them.

 

Wild fish can swim away from the lethal clouds of aquatic organisms, but farmed fish are trapped.

 

 

The algae is continuing to spread, the Norwegian Directorate of Fisheries said. The organisation said on Tuesday that more than 10,000 tonnes of farmed salmon, with a sales price of some 620 million Norwegian crowns (£56m), had been killed, but the Seafood Council said the loss would be much greater.

“It’s too soon to say how big the losses will be for the producers. Preliminary numbers point to eight million dead fish, corresponding to 40,000 tonnes of salmon that won’t reach markets,” Seafood Council analyst Paul Aandahl said. This means the algae may already have wiped out over £200m worth of fish in total. Similar algal blooms have been reported on the west coast of Scotland in recent weeks, and experts told The Independent the algae, believed to have killed thousands of fish in Loch Fyne, had come very early in the year. Hundreds of tonnes of dead fish were removed following the bloom, according to the BBC. Norway is the world’s largest exporter of salmon and the effect of the millions of deaths will likely see half the expected growth in salmon volumes wiped out this year as a result, while prices are likely to rise, said Lars Konrad Johnsen, an analyst at Fearnleys, an investment bank which specialises in maritime industries.

fish farming 13

Fish tanks in the south of Australia (2017)

“Providing the net effect is something in the area of 20 – 30 thousand tonnes, this means you lose around half of the growth that was to come this year – and that will no doubt affect prices,” Mr Johnsen told Reuters. Norway exported 1.24 million tonnes of salmon in 2018, up 2.5 per cent from 2017, according to data from Statistics Norway. This year Fearnley had expected a volume growth of around 4 per cent.

The colossal death toll comes as Mowi, the world’s biggest salmon farming company, which is also Norwegian, is being investigated over claims it has misreported the volume of chemical medications it uses to fight disease at its Scottish salmon farms.

Overuse of chemicals has disastrous impacts on the surrounding marine environment. Farmed salmon stocks are already collapsing due to infestations of sea lice, which have in turn affected wild stocks.

Last month, Mowi revealed the amount of gutted salmon it produced from Scottish waters had fallen by 36 per cent in a year, with infestations of sea lice and disease blamed. Open-net salmon farms, alongside climate change and soaring demand for salmon are all blamed for impacting wild salmon populations, which have dwindled to the lowest levels ever recorded. There are now no commercial wild salmon fishing stations operating in the UK due to the collapse in numbers. “We had a major bloom here in upper Loch Fyne a fortnight ago,” Alastair Sinclair, the national coordinator for the Scottish Creel Fishermen’s Federation, told The Independent.

He said the overall impact of salmon farming was having a serious effect on the marine environment.

 

 

“It’s a huge risk to the inshore fishing industry in the sense that these farms are generally sited in sea lochs which historically have been known as breeding and spawning grounds for every species you could imagine.” “There’s basically no fish stocks left on the west coast. It’s become almost a marine desert, and the use of these chemicals (from the salmon farming industry) has not helped the situation – they are exacerbating it.” He added:

“There are many concerned communities on the west coast where salmon farming takes place, who are worried the future has not been thought of here… We’re all pretty worried.”

 https://www.independent.co.uk/environment/salmon-farming-norway-algae-killed-fishing-seafood-council-a8

 Also read the situation with DAFF in South Africa:

Fisheries department rots from the top

By Kimon de Greeff
 
A factional war lays bare a culture of corruption


"South Africa’s fisheries authority is in a state of crisis, paralysed by a factional war between its two most senior officials and hollowed out by a culture of corruption.

This has left the Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (DAFF) unable to perform many of its most basic tasks, including allocating fishing rights and enforcing regulations. An exodus of skilled staff, including top scientists, has aggravated the problem.

As a consequence, the fisheries sector, a critical pillar of the Western Cape’s economy, is plagued by deep dysfunction, a state of affairs that disproportionately affects poor people. Government programs intended to uplift fishing communities — now hotbeds for abalone and crayfish poaching — have repeatedly stalled.

The rot at the department, entrenched for many years, has been laid bare by a power struggle between director-general Mike Mlengana and his deputy, Siphokazi Ndudane. Even the minister for the department, Senzeni Zokwana, has become embroiled in the dispute, siding with Ndudane.

Kreefs

 

Over the last 18 months, their rift has played out in a bewildering sequence of suspensions, court cases and accusations of criminality. Reporters, law firms, unions and opposition politicians have been drawn into the fray, sometimes unwittingly being used for factional agendas.

The department has spent tens of millions of rands on legal fees for both officials, in some cases hiring opposing sets of counsel. In the last two years, the department has also commissioned at least three forensic reports into corruption, although even these have been tainted by allegations of improper influence.

From both sides, there are claims that the department has been “captured” by private interests, ranging from tenderpreneurs to abalone poaching syndicates. In this series, we review the evidence, based on court records, internal documents and more than a dozen interviews.

Instability and “looting”

A scientist by training, Siphokazi Ndudane was appointed deputy director-general of DAFF in February 2016, responsible for managing fisheries. She says she was the 11th person to fill the position in seven years. “My assumption is that the branch has to have instability for those who continue to loot the system,” she told GroundUp in a recent interview. “I was hoping to achieve order.”

This year, Ndudane was suspended for four months, accused by Mlengana of fraud, theft, extortion, forgery and other grave misconduct. Ndudane maintains that she is the victim of a smear campaign, orchestrated to sideline her and allow unfettered corruption at the department to continue. But some of the charges against her are troubling.

Mlengana himself was suspended last year on a range of charges, including allegedly steering a lucrative abalone processing contract towards his business partners. As soon as he returned to office, this April, Mlengana moved to oust Ndudane, but was temporarily blocked by Minister Zokwana.

Finally, in July, Mlengana placed Ndudane on precautionary suspension, revoking her access to the department. Ndudane took the matter to court — running up further legal costs — and returned to work, provisionally, in October. (The case is ongoing, but the judge ordered Ndudane to resume her duties.)

abalone1

Huge amounts of abalone worth billions of rands are almost weekly confiscated in the Western Cape. 

Beneath the tit-for-tat disciplinary and legal action is a deeper tussle for control of the department, which serves as gatekeeper to the fishing industry. Generating some R6 billion annually, fishing is big business in South Africa, with a wide array of companies and interest groups jostling for access. Then there is poaching, a shadow economy worth hundreds of millions more. According to Traffic, a nonprofit that monitors wildlife smuggling, poached abalone is South Africa’s third most valuable fisheries export, surpassed only by hake and squid.

With such vast sums of money at stake, the department has become a natural target for corruption. Like all government agencies, DAFF also issues tenders for big projects, ranging from construction to processing confiscated fish. At almost every level, the department has been compromised by graft, from low-paid fisheries inspectors right up to senior management. “There’s a fight to keep control of the network,” said Pieter van Dalen, the shadow minister for fisheries in the Democratic Alliance.

And in the battle between Mlengana and Ndudane, few people come out looking clean.

The abalone tender

Factions have existed within DAFF for years, industry insiders say. A “cabal” surrounding former minister Tina Joemat-Pettersson, for instance, was implicated in dodgy quota allocations and awarding a fraudulent fisheries patrol contract to Sekunjalo, owned by Iqbal Survé. Officials from that saga feature later in this series.

But the split between Mlengana and his deputy began with a suspicious abalone deal.

 

abalone

Since the mid-2000s, the national fisheries authority has sold off confiscated abalone, ostensibly to fund anti-poaching operations. Over time the process has become increasingly opaque, with little public oversight. In just the last decade, law enforcement agencies have reported some 4,000 abalone confiscations, averaging more than one daily. The bulk of that abalone, totalling several hundred tonnes each year, has been processed and auctioned to private firms.

In December 2016, DAFF awarded a contract to process and export 90 tonnes of abalone, priced at some R60 million, to a South African company called Willjarro. The department was to keep 70% of the money, paying Willjarro the rest. But Willjarro had no prior experience in the fishing industry, and had been added to the DAFF supplier database just a day before the tender was advertised. At the time, Willjarro also did not have necessary permits for processing or transporting abalone, technically disqualifying it from the bid.

On 19 January 2017, Willjarro’s importing partner, a seafood trader based in Hong Kong, deposited almost R7.5 million into a DAFF bank account — payment for the first batch of dried abalone. A day later, a rival South African company, Shamode Trading, launched an urgent application to review the tender, and within two days Minister Zokwana had suspended the contract.

What followed was a complex and acrimonious series of court cases involving DAFF, Willjarro and Shamode. In parallel, the department commissioned two separate investigations into the tender process.

One report, produced by a company called The iFirm, eventually implicated several senior DAFF officials in colluding with Willjarro, including the chief financial officer, Jacob Hlatshwayo, an acting chief financial officer, Zoliswa Lufefe, and two heads of supply chain management. In one email, sent after concerns were raised about the contract, an official named Noyoliso Pinda urged Willjarro to “destroy the evidence.”

The other report, by law firm Sizwe Ntsaluba Gobodo, found that the tender process had been “weak,” noting several troubling departures from protocol.

It was on the basis of these reports that Minister Zokwana suspended Mlengana, the director-general, in June 2017, among other things charging him with failing to disclose a business relationship with Wiljjarro’s boss, Gershom Ramazan. (Another company of Ramazan’s, Cropland Agricultural Equipment, has been implicated in a separate DAFF scandal, accused of misappropriating drought relief funds in 2017.)

But in return, Mlangana alleged that The iFirm had itself been appointed via an improper tender process, and that he had only been suspended for refusing to sign off on the contract. The iFirm report cost the department just over R500,000.

DAFF has now commissioned a third report into the Willjarro matter, by attorneys Cheadle Thompson & Haysom. Notably, to date no report has directly accused Mlengana of interfering in the Willjarro tender, or of being in business with Ramazan.

Meanwhile, in court, Willjarro was fighting to have its contract reinstated. The company’s Hong Kong buyers had paid for abalone that could no longer be legally exported, and Willjarro was in a difficult position. Four tonnes of product, already processed, was stuck at their factory premises in Gansbaai harbour.

Then, on 24 September 2017, the factory was robbed, with nearly 1.5 tonnes of dried abalone stolen. At standard export prices, or R2,500 per kg, the loss was worth more than R3 million. (The Willjarro contract had been priced at a substantial discount, possibly due to the large quantity of abalone involved.)

At the time, three separate sources connected to the abalone underworld told me that they suspected an inside job by Willjarro, using the pretence of a break-in to smuggle the abalone overseas. Willjarro has denied any involvement in the robbery and even accused Shamode, their rival, of arranging the heist. To date there have been no arrests in the case.

By mid-October, the remaining abalone was back in the department’s warehouse in Paarden Eiland, after DAFF obtained a court order forcing Willjarro to return it.

But the saga of Willjarro’s abalone — and the fight it provoked at DAFF — was only beginning.

Read more here:  

"https://www.groundup.org.za/…/fisheries-department-rots-t…/…

 

 

Related Articles:

The new regional Garden Route Port Festival will not be launched in April as speculated earlier, but during the weekend of 2 and 3 November 2019. The Port of Mossel Bay will also continue to support the annual Dias Festival.

Port Festival3

Port of Mossel Bay Corporate Affairs Manager, Sithembiso Soyaya, said TNPA had been in engagement with the district and local municipalities, which led to an expanded view that the Port Festival should be developed into a regional event that will boost tourism and social cohesion not only in Mossel Bay, but in the entire Garden Route Region. 

"The Garden Route community can look forward to a weekend of spectacular harbour highlights in November, as Transnet National Ports Authority (TNPA) firms up 2 and 3 November as the dates for its new-look Port Festival in Mossel Bay.

There was some speculation that the restructured Port Festival could take place at the end of April, but this would not be the case.

This means that the port landlord will continue to support the Mossel Bay Municipality’s annual Dias Festival in February with various waterside activities, but will now also stage a bigger port festival separately going forward."

port festival1

Port of Mossel Bay Port Manager, Shadrack Tshikalange said: “The Port of Mossel Bay has not withdrawn its support of the Dias Festival. As part of its long-term strategic port-city integration strategy, the Port will continue to align itself with the Mossel Bay Municipality’s value proposition of positioning Mossel Bay as a festival and tourism city, by hosting waterside activities at the port during the event to expose the public to the maritime sector.”

However, the regional approach to the upcoming standalone port festival will include the participation, partnership and collaboration of all port stakeholders, including the Garden Route District Municipality, the Mossel Bay Municipality and other public and private partners.

port festival2

“The port looks forward to delivering a quality event in collaboration with its partners, that embraces transformation and provides business opportunities to previously disadvantaged communities within the Garden Route District,” said Tshikalange.

Showcasing portside fun for all ages, the two-day Port Festival in November aims to help TNPA to bring communities closer to the port, in line with its ‘People’s Port’ focus.

The public can look forward to an array of family-friendly entertainment including tours of ships, boat rides, a careers and business exhibition, a sailing regatta, sea rescue displays, a special kids’ zone, craft and food markets, live music and entertainment by crowd pullers and emerging artists, plus an array of other waterside and landside activities. 
Further details will be revealed in due course. Watch the press and social media for information.

 

Related Articles: