jeff's blog
Green light given for N2 toll road
Related Article:
The N2 Wild Coast toll road project has been given another green light after a decade-long controversy, but final approval could still be thwarted by strong opposition from Durban, the KZN legislature and other interest groups.
The final environmental impact assessment (EIA) report, which will be released on Monday, recommends that the project should go ahead, despite findings that it would lead to several social, economic and environmental problems.
The decision to recommend approval follows strong opposition to the toll plan by eThekwini municipal manager Michael Sutcliffe, the KZN legislature and several business and industry leaders in Durban.
The opposition centres on a major new toll plaza near Amanzimtoti, which would raise the cost of commuting and doing business in Durban south.
Separate concerns about ecological damage and sense of place of the Wild Coast region have also been raised. The report, compiled by a consultancy group appointed by the SA National Roads Agency (Sanral), recognises that more than 7 000 people had voiced "overwhelming opposition" to the toll plan. In contrast, hundreds of Eastern Cape residents wanted the road to go ahead.
If approved, the project would shave about 75km off the distance between Durban and East London, but would also add more than 25 new toll-collection points on the N2, mostly in KZN. The environmental consultants who compiled the report concluded that the project would result in "substantial" - and in some cases irreversible - ecological damage to parts of the Wild Coast.
The final report has been submitted to the national Environmental Affairs Department following an EIA process that started nearly 10 years ago. The department is the official arbiter of the process and could take several months to reach a decision.
While the public consultation period has ended, the approval procedure also allows for a mandatory appeals process to Environment Minister Buyelwa Sonjica to cater for objections.
Sutcliffe said the official position of the eThekwini municipality and KZN was that the road "should not go ahead".
"The fact that the EIA recommends approval does not mean that the road will go ahead. It would be up to the leadership of the province to consider their response, but I'm sure they will remain against it."
In Sutcliffe's view, a more urgent priority for Sanral was to establish a dedicated trucking lane between Durban and Joburg.
The Wild Coast project was given the green light by the department in 2003, but that decision was overturned by former environment minister Marthinus van Schalkwyk a year later, when it emerged that the previous "independent" environmental consultants had financial links with companies that hoped to build the road.
The project was revived soon after, resulting in several proposals to change the original route favoured by Sanral. These proposals appear to have been given short shrift in the latest EIA.
According to an executive summary version of the report, the most significant economic benefits of the project would be felt in the Eastern Cape, but the consultants said it might be possible to make the project more acceptable by dropping the price of toll fees for KZN commuters and businesses. The report recognises the likelihood of widespread ribbon, strip or nodal development emerging along the new route, part of which would reduce the size of the proposed Pondoland Biosphere Reserve/National Park.
It would also lead to the loss or degradation of rare or threatened grasslands and other vegetation, as well as the reclassification of some species from "vulnerable" to "endangered" status.
"On the basis of the above criteria, the proposed new road is considered not ecologically sustainable." But it might be possible to mitigate against some of the more serious impacts by establishing a "biodiversity offset agreement", details of which are not in the report. It also recognises that several towns on the existing route would be bypassed by the new N2. These include Kokstad, Harding, Mount Frere, Qumbu and Mount Ayliff. These impacts are rated as being of "medium" significance.
However, the new road would also improve transport links in one of the poorest regions of the country and act as a catalyst for economic development.
"Along the section between Mthatha and the Mthamvuna River... the overwhelming opinions of people consulted was a need for greater access into the area... Overall, it is considered that the potential social benefits of the proposed project, as assessed along the entire route... would outweigh the potential negative impacts."
It suggests that economic benefits to agriculture, forestry, manufacturing, property development, real estate and other sectors could translate into around R15 billion in new business.
The release of the full report on Monday is expected to revive heated debates. Upper South Coast Anti-Toll Alliance member Ted Holden said the group had not had time to study the report. However, speaking in his personal capacity, Holden said the consultants' conclusions showed a "complete lack of independence".
"The consultants have also failed to highlight the many submissions made by our community, business and welfare organisations."
Xolobeni Hearing - Canceled
By: Christy van der Merwe
10th February 2010
The hearings involving interested parties appealing a decision to grant Transworld Energy Minerals (TEM) a licence to mine heavy minerals from the dunes near Xolobeni on the Wild Coast, scheduled to take place this week, were cancelled.
The committee of four people, which was appointed by the Mining and Minerals Board to oversee the presentations from all parties involved, could not proceed because it had not received the necessary documentation from the Department of Mineral Resources (DMR).
Committee chairperson Pathekile Holomisa told Mining Weekly Online that it had now received the documentation, which it would go through, and would decide in March whether or not hearings into the matter in fact needed to take place.
"Ultimately, our piece would be to advise the Minister, either to proceed with granting the license, or cancel or withdraw it, but that depends on our understanding of the issue. And we shall also decide whether there is a need to invite more oral presentations or not," he explained.
Grahamstown-based Legal Resources Centre (LRC) representative Sarah Sephton said that the cancellation of the hearings was "completely unsatisfactory', as the LRC had made the effort to submit its volumes of documentation on time to the DMR.
She added that the LRC, as well as representatives from the mining company TEM, and the company's black economic-empowerment partner, Xolco, travelled to the KwaZulu-Natal DMR offices for the scheduled hearings "at great cost", only to be told that hearings were not going to take place.
The LRC represented the Amadiba Crisis Committee (ACC), which was appealing the mining right, which the former Minerals and Energy Minister, Buyelwa Sonjica, granted in August 2008.
The LRC stated that one of the grounds for the appeal was that the mining right was granted to the Australia-based mining junior without sufficient and reasonable consultation with the Xolobeni community as an interested and affected party.
On September 28, 2009, the LRC submitted two expert reports to the Minister in support of the appeal to set aside the mining right. One of the reports provided that the heavy minerals mining operations planned by TEM had been discontinued in other jurisdictions, such as Australia and New Zealand.
Resolution on whether or not the licence to mine for titanium-bearing minerals would, in fact, be granted was expected by June 2009, however, little clarity on the matter had emerged.
Edited by: Mariaan Webb
http://www.miningweekly.com/article/xolobeni-appeal-hearings-cancelled-2...
Amadiba Crisis Committee submission to DME
The Legal Resources Centre's submission to DME on behalf of the ACC and Xolobeni community is rather long-winded and dry; but also interesting, and thoroughly convincing:
THE DEPARTMENT OF MINERALS AND ENERGY
INTERNAL APPEAL/REVIEW OF THE AWARD OF A MINING RIGHT TO TRANSWORLD
ENERGY AND MINERAL RESOURCES (SA) (PTY) LTD
Appeal/review instituted by:
THE AMADIBA CRISIS COMMITTEE
Directed to:
MINISTER OF THE DEPARTMENT OF MINERALS AND ENERGY
APPLICANT'S FURTHER GROUNDS OF REVIEW AND REPLY TO SUBMISSIONS FROM TEM AND XOLCO
Strong public opinion against mining Xolobeni
2 Recent print articles, which only appeared in the Daily Dispatch Online today, have already been published in the Weekend Post and on other environmental sites; proving conclusively that public perception is strongly against the mining:
The stories have been published at
http://www.weekendpost.co.za/article.aspx?id=527361
http://saweatherobserver.blogspot.com/2010/02/another-environmental-disa...
and
http://www.savingwater.co.za/2010/02/04/heavy-minerals-mining-in-environ...
and are also reproduced in full below:

2010/02/04
THE granting of a mining licence to Australian mining group Transworld Energy Minerals (TEM) to mine heavy minerals on the pristine dunes at Xolobeni on the Wild Coast was “clearly improper and ought to be withdrawn”.
...
Fishing permit fee increase from 1 May 2010
From page 76, Government Gazette 29 , January 2010
Annual & temporary permit prices with effect from 1 May 2010:
Fees payable in respect of issuing a permit to undertake Recreational Fishing (annual), and fees payable in respect of issuing short-term permits (only valid for 4 weeks) of:
NB. in addition to the permit issuing costs, on page 74 it states that:
Fees payable in respect of an application for a permit to undertake recreational fishing - R30 (additional)
(Furthermore, to apply for a permit to undertake subsistence fishing costs R6, and for the issuing of the permit, a further R40.)
Interested and affected parties may submit written comment to Revenue Management at the Department of Environmental Affairs:
Marine & Coastal Management
Private Bag X2
Roggebaai, 8012
Written comments may be posted by mail to the above address, or:
Fax: 086-613 6256
Email: revenue@deat.gov.za
All written comments must be received by the department by no later than 16h00 on 1 March 2010.
Subsistence Permits
Not to over-stress the absurdity in the first place, of bureaucratizing access to their coastal resources for the uneducated, impoverished, and already marginalized inhabitants of the Wild Coast; but there has been a recurring theme of blatant government incompetence played out over the past few years at Hole in the Wall.
DEDEA is responsible for enforcement of permits and quotas, and MCM is responsible for the issuing of subsistence permits. But the 2 government departments don't know what the other is doing, and several times we have had cases of local fishermen being fined heavily for not being in possession of a permit, whereas they had not yet been issued.
Yesterday, a local fisherman by the name of David was caught by the 'Green Scorpions' for catching a 16kg kob (kabeljou). The fish was confiscated and he was issued a summons to appear in court next month, and, if what I heard is correct, he could face a fine of about R2,000 or more.
The absurd irony is that MCM only issued the permits today. And he was carrying his permit, which expired on the 31 December 2009, with him!
Believe me, issuing the permits by the 25'th of January is an amazing feat and HUGE improvement over previous years. Vuyisani Jozana from MCM has really played an incredible role in improving delivery of permits over the last year. His predecessor managed to deliver the permits for 2008 in October that year - whereas the crayfish season closes for 4 months at the end of October.
I truly believe it is wasteful of resources, counterproductive, and completely ridiculous to even think about registering each and every coastal inhabitant to allow them access to the fruit of their own back gardens; and resources could be much more effectively deployed simply enforcing quotas.
Year before last year one poor chap was fined R200 and his gaff was confiscated, for fishing for red-bait without a permit, because they hadn't been issued yet; and he hadn't even caught anything.
Sad really.
UPDATE 1 Feb '10: I have a scan of the fine, and the new permit which was issued to David the very next day. It's actually a R250 fine, but the fish alone is worth the same amount. If not more. R20 per kg is about the going rate. The 'officials' confiscated his old/expired permit along with the fish.
In any case, the ±R2000 fine discrepancy comes from the grapevine, and in fact David, who is one of the very few locals with a vehicle, pulled off the road across from the youth project rondavels just outside Coffee Bay, to have a pee, and received a R2,500 fine from the 'scorpions' for being off the demarcated road.
The issue is that he was temporarily 6 feet off the road, proper, and was parked on a track running parallel to the road, which is often used because it is less rocky. But besides all that, he would have had no way of knowing about "letter of the law" enforcement to that pedantic extent.
UPDATE 2 February 2009: It turns out that it is the self-same department that issued the fine to David. MCM "Compliance" have had 4 officials staying at the Hole in the Wall hotel for the past 2 weeks. They gave the fine to David on the Sunday, and they issued the new permits on the very next day.
Also, it's an 8kg kob, not 16kg as I heard previously. At R30 a kilo it's still worth almost the entire amount of the fine.
And, hmm, let me see: 4 rooms at R450 per night, times 14 days = 25,200 of tax payers money on this debacle. That's excluding daily S&T.
Our project rented a 4 bedroom house in Coffee Bay for an entire year for about the same amount. Very efficient use of tax payer resources, I must say.
And furthermore, MCM are supposed to be working with local communities to create co-management committees to enforce their own regulations and quotas. DEDEA is supposed to be the enforcement arm at provincial level. Why the duplication of effort?
Regulatory hells
South Africa: Late Start For Crayfish Licences, Inter Press Service, Thursday, December 31, 2009 (posted by Global Issues)
Thembuland seceding from SA? WooHoo!
http://www.dispatch.co.za/article.aspx?id=367920
2009/12/19
We're Serious: Advocate Votani Majola, the man behind the Justice For King Dalindyebo Campaign, seems to be stopping an interruption at its launch at Bumbane Great Place near Mthatha. Picture: LULAMILE FENI
PRESIDENT Jacob Zuma was called on yesterday to apologise to the AbaThembu nation and order the State to pay the tribe R80billion for allowing the humiliation of their monarch.
And the State was also instructed to pay R900million – or else! – to the family of King Buyelekhaya Dalindyebo, who was sentenced to 15 years in prison after being convicted of serious crimes last week.
If the demands were rejected the AbaThembu nation would secede from South Africa and form its own independent State.
The bizarre demands and threats came in a discussion document which was revealed during the launch of “The Justice for Dalindyebo Campaign” at the king’s Bumbane Great Place.
Votani Majola, convener of The King Dalindyebo Justice Task Team (KDJTT), which heads the campaign, made the following demands with five-day deadlines:
Should the demands not be met, the discussion document also included several threats:
Majola said if, during the transition period when they were forming their independent State, the trial against Dalindyebo continued, then “the abaThembu will be persuaded to embark on rolling mass action until all charges are permanently and unconditionally withdrawn”.
The document, which the Dispatch has in its possession, also warned that the AbaThembu “will be persuaded to boycott all and any activity that is associated with the 2010 Soccer World Cup”.
And they would “make use of all the public platforms provided by the 2010 Soccer World Cup to register our complaints”.
Majola said the discussion document had been discussed with the king and his right-hand men until the early hours of yesterday morning.
The king apparently endorsed the discussion document but said the AbaThembu should make the final decision.
Dalindyebo was not part of the discussions later yesterday but was seen around the Great Place. Chiefs from AbaThembu in KwaZulu-Natal, Western Thembuland and AbaThembu bakaDalindyebo and some representatives from traditional councils endorsed the document. They maintain the king was a victim of political persecution by the ANC and that his case was not a criminal case. - By LUBABALO NGCUKANA
Mthatha Bureau
Volunteering
So here's a basic outline of the Volunteer programme I would love to get going: www.wildcoast.co.za/ict4d
Please contribute some constructive criticism and/or suggestions. I have this unshakable belief that it's important (even if only for the 2 percentile) and that it will work, but I've got zero resources, and even less confidence, at the minute.
8< --
To furnish the means of acquiring knowledge is "the greatest benefit that can be conferred upon mankind." - John Quincy Adams
&
"Those who pretend selflessness are constantly acting from self-interested motives but clothing them in various guises." - Ralph Steadman
Buyelekhaya sentenced to 15 years
Buyelekhaya Dalindyebo, the paramount chief[1], or king, of the Thembu tribe, has been sentenced to an effective 15 years imprisonment.
It's really suspicious that he was convicted for assaulting the deceased's 3 associates, but somehow wasn't involved in the actual assault that resulted in Saziso Wofa's untimely death. Also the media indicates that all 4 are now publicly suspected rapists, yet there's no case or evidence against them. Seriously WTF?
He was granted leave to appeal the sentencing, and the R6,000 bail has been extended pending the outcome which is expected next week Thursday (17 Dec.)
There is some heavy irony here as the "Comrade King" has been a loyal cadre carrying out the NDR and faithfully undermining the traditional patriarchy in the Transkei in the most callous manner.
Will he be the first to commit "class suicide" by abdication, and thus fall victim to (and simultaneously champion) the NDR "cause?"
Welcome to the paradox that is Mzansi.
He deserves his just deserts, no doubt, but I regret the implications for the tribal order. My feeling has always been that it is totally unfair to undermine the current status quo when the people have got no education, no jobs and, effectively, no land rights. The NDR is pitting revolutionary fervor against millenia of ingrained patriarchalism, and so far the outcomes we've witnessed have been devastating and tragic.
1] Historically, Paramount Chief is a title created during the Colonial era by Queen Victoria as a substitute for the word "king" in order to maintain that only the British monarch held that title.
...
See link for the story from the Dispatch. (pasted below)
http://www.dispatch.co.za/article.aspx?id=364841
2009/12/07
ABATHEMBU King Buyelekhaya Dalindyebo’s iron-fist rule came back to haunt him yesterday when he was sentenced to 15 years in prison following a marathon trial in Mthatha.
Rubbish!
There are arbitrarily 2 types of people on earth: upright dudes, and uptight bastards. Cats and Grinches, or those who grew up reading Dr. Seuss, and those who did not. (Not too sure about the last one, but I speak for myself, and books like The Lorax inspired several generations with a love of reading and a strong bias toward environmental conservation. Thanks to Theodore (Dr. Seuss) Giessel: www.wildcoast.com/lorax)
Most people don't like to think of themselves as uptight bastards, I guess, so they complain less than they should most times. I've come to realize that it's pointless getting worked up over bigots and other assorted idiots, but there are certain things that need to be said, and free speech does appear to be alive and well in Zantsi, even if sometimes the quality of said speech is less than appealing. Mine included.
Actually, I have in the past mentioned our ward councilor's dodgy dealings, but didn't really go into details because of a cowardly fear of repercussions with my state funded employment here. Which rubs precisely on the nub of the problem with employment in the area generally: out here in the lallies the ward councilors control job allocations. My dystopic viewpoint is blurry, but seems our leaders verge toward authoritarianism and imposing failed communist doctrines on us all; manufacturing dogma and principles based on "democratic centralism" and a "National Democratic Revolution" which is actually code-speak for undermining traditional culture and patriarchal leadership structures while simultaneously creating a disenfranchised proletariat who still won't have rights to their own land.
Sounds like histrionics, I'm sure, but there is no adequate way to convey the abuse of power that we witness, and I've lost my sense of humor.
Nkosinathi Mvunge, the very unpopular, but apparently invulnerable ANC councilor of Ward 23, stirs the trouble pot at Hole in the Wall time and again.
2 Years ago he stopped our project over the Christmas period because he felt that the majority of employees were UDM (United Democratic Movement) supporters. So he arranged a meeting for January and basically insisted that each person declare their political affiliation. Turned out it was pretty balanced, so he magnanimously allowed the project to continue. However, the approximately 40 staff members only received half salaries that Christmas.
The current issue is not as blatant: Coastal Care is responsible for creating employment and for the cleaning of our beaches; and as an EPWP (Expanded Pulic Works Program) sponsored project under Social Responsibility, Policy and Projects within the Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism, (which incidentally is in the process of a name change to Water & Environmental Affairs under Jacob Zuma's presidency) they owe our impoverished people here Social Responsibility Projects for several reasons; not the least of which is the fact that the people's land is held in "trust" and they are unable to buy sell or cede their properties. Another is the fact that the regulations governing subsistence fisheries are hellish and draconian. Mussels and other seafoods are a primary protein source for many of the poorest people here, and protein is an absolutely essential part of a growing child's diet. But the bag limit on mussels is only 30 mussels per permit per day. Which is really ludicrous when the reality is that people harvest between 5kg and 10kg on average, regardless of whether government has issued the permits or not. Even more mind boggling is government is actually considering an age restriction where no persons under the age of 18 would be allowed access to their shore and coastal resources.
However, to remain on the rubbish subject, the implementing agency controlling our area, Ikamva, had their contract terminated in about September 2008. 25 people who were the Hole in the Wall cleanup contingent lost their jobs abruptly, and since then we've had no cleanup teams here at Hole in the Wall. The contract was awarded to another company, and they got underway in Coffee Bay in about February this year. According to the project manager, only 15 positions were created for both Coffee Bay and Hole in the Wall. However the implementers were informed (I wonder by whom?) that they could not consult anyone in the Hole in the Wall region because of danger from the ongoing "political instability."
I've been in intermittent contact with the new implementers to try and get something to happen here. Not only for the sake of aesthetics and hygiene, but also for the local employment opportunities.
In September I was informed by a project manager at the implementing agency that they had seen the ward councilor and he was set to organize the allocation of positions; and they would be starting at the Hole on the 1st October. Then on the 7'th I received a phone call to say that they hadn't started yet because it had been raining, but they would be starting soon. The following week I got another call from the manager to say that the ward councilor was now claiming insufficient consultation, and they have had to refer everything back to the department for further, interminable, delays.
I can understand the impact of the 7 existing jobs at Coffee Bay which supposedly have to be forfeited to employ people at Hole in the Wall within the original budget; but the lack of communication and planning, and gaps between contract renewals?
Our councilor's list of accomplishments is becoming too vast to ignore, and he should be promoted to somewhere where he can exercise his deft oratory skills to his full potential. I vote we send him to parliament. In other parts of the country competent mayors and entire councils are removed by demagogues over lack of service delivery, presumably to be replaced with cronies closer to the new cadre deployments; and here we have a deployed cadre, complete with Robben Island credentials, actively destroying livelihoods in an ongoing onslaught by the "Ruling Party" to eradicate any opposition. So no jobs for UDM supporters. Sorry for you. What a fucking mess.
In the 3 and a half years I've been living here, our councilor has also succeeded in stopping the Mussel Rehabilitation and community gardens project in its tracks at Hole in the Wall; causing the loss of 20 jobs plus over a million rands worth of investment in the area.
He's also responsible for causing a near civil riot, when he led the process to give away a majority stake in a priceless tract of land, again at Hole in the Wall, without ever consulting the people to whom the land legally belongs. The foreign financed consortium led by an American tax lawyer with layers of non-profit companies (with the same members) was granted the right to build a 45 room hotel, but instead divided the land into 50 tiny erven, the cheapest of which was available for R690,000. Numerous fraud charges have ensued against the American developers. (www.wildcoast.com/node/96)
Furthermore I've personally seen the minutes from several meetings held at Bumbane "Great Place" - the "court" of our dear Comrade King Buyelekhaya Dalindyebo - wherein there were numerous complaints about the ward councilor's arrogance and heavy handed approach, his lack of delivery, allegations of misappropriation of funds belonging to the Tshezi Community Development Trust. If rumors are to be believed he actually spent a weekend in Mqanduli prison over the trust's funds incident. Many people at many meetings requested that he be suspended, but it appears that he and the king share a disconcerting bond. Strangely though, perhaps there is some hope for the future.
He also used grant money from foreign donors, some R360,000, to purchase 2 tractors which for the past 3 years have sat idly gathering rust at his home. Though I will attempt impartiality and concede that this year, since our spring rains he has actually been attempting to redeem himself and has been seen plowing some fields (himself) on behalf of the Tshezi tribe/community.
He has also, for about 3 years now, completely failed with the community youth center which was badly planned and built, and is already falling apart, on another priceless tract of land just outside Coffee Bay. The center has never been put to any useful purpose. All prospective ideas and comers are turned away; and he is rumored to have commandeered the place for his personal office. He's never actually there. though, so who knows for sure?
Sadly, he probably has been carrying out the mandate of "the party" as a deployed cadre engaged in the NDR. Backed by our Convict King Buyelekhaya, who will have sentencing handed down on 30th November 2009 for the 6 convictions out of the 34 charges he was facing, which ranged from assault, to arson (hut burning), and extortion. The charge of murder was reduced to culpable homicide. Though how ordering the beating of a man (the rumors are less kind, but nonetheless who can gainsay the testimony of witnesses who admit that they will kill, out of fear, at his order) can be seen as culpable homicide, like say accidentally killing someone in self-defence, is beyond my comprehension.
About a week before I heard about his convictions, I had come across the summary judgement document for the trial of the people accused of murdering the "headwoman", Nowinase, whom Cde. Buyelekhaya insisted, over the protests of the majority of local "subjects," be appointed as the successor to the late Mzoxolo (her estranged husband, who incidentally was murdered in cold blood before even being officially appointed as the headman of Mthonjana A/A) as an object lesson in "Equality" and "Democracy" or some or other inimical paradoxes.
Attending community meetings is a cogent peek at the state of the National Democratic Revolution out here in "the sticks." Traditionally, the women sit separately from the men at community meetings. At a recent meeting I attended a few weeks ago, one of the local chiefs (very well loved, respected, and all 'round good guy) boldly defied political correctness and stated quite publicly and unequivocally that, essentially, a woman's place is in the kitchen. Qa!
More to follow!
Here are some rubbish pictures:
Development
.desrever sthgir llA ;tfel ypoC)

WARNING: LONG
History
The infamously dangerous 300km coastline between East London and Port Edward known as the Wild Coast has been described by experienced seafarers as South Africa's own Bermuda Triangle; where ships disappear without a trace.
Freak waves which frequent this notorious coast have plunged untold ships to the bottom of the Indian Ocean, or sent them crashing onto the shore. The most famous victim was the SS Waratah, which vanished a hundred years ago, on the 29th July 1909, with all 211 passengers and crew aboard. (See www.wildcoast.com/shipwrecks for more info.)
The era of open communication
I posted the following comment on a local resort owners blog (http://chintsa.blogspot.com/) after he came out in favor of the N2 toll road. Needless to say it never went past moderation:
I believe your side of the argument is commonly known as "enlightened self interest": you own a resort on the coast and stand to benefit greatly from any infrastructural improvements and tourism opportunities. Fair enough.
What about the people that will actually have an 80m wide swathe of concrete and tarmac running through their back yards? Separating families and friends with a fenced off high-speed *toll* road that cuts them off from their pastures, fields and coastal subsistence livelihoods?
Never mind the environmental impact, it's the social impact that will be the most grievous. And considering the area, that's saying a lot!
Did you know that they plan to fence off the entire road to enhance safety? and that there will be limited on/off ramps? So if you want to get to, say, Port Grosvenor or Msikaba, you will still have to detour well away from the N2. It will be, if anything, more difficult and inconvenient to get to the remote areas.
No there aren't going to be taxi stops every 5km, or underpasses every 2 for the peasant's convenience.
Have you ever seen the people desperately taking life in hand trying to cross the N2 north of Hibberdene in holiday season? You can see how much they benefit from having access to a "freeway" just by the standard of their informal dwellings.
The worst part of this nightmare is that the existing road between Umtata and PSJ is one of the coolest drives in the country. They're not improving the road much in my opinion by simply forcing people to now pay to access it. And that will benefit the locals how? by sending up transport prices and the cost of /everything/ along with it?
PSJ may benefit, but it's not exactly a tourism Mecca, and the kind of tourists it attracts are backpackers. Umngazi certainly doesn't even need the marginal extra convenience.
The purpose of the toll road is 2-fold: to make money for the operators and for their government backers, and to open one of the most beautiful and pristine environments to commercial (industrial, agricultural) exploitation. Yes, that means mining, too. As inevitably as night follows day. And for what? to shave off half an hour on an already perfectly serviceable route between Port Edward and Port St Johns?
Something does not compute.
Regardless of how government presents the statistics, we have experienced a sharp decline in international tourists in Southern Africa since 2000. Our political outlook and alliances sees little hope for improvement there.
By all means upgrade the Jikeleza route, but leave the greenfields of the Pondoland Center of ENDEMISM the hell alone. Please.
September 21 - Flash Mob for Climate WAKE UP
Brink of extinction: Polar bear
From Avaaz:
Dear friends,
the results are in – more than 100,000 Avaaz members took part in the worldwide vote about whether we should go all out to organise a massive global wake-up call on climate change on September 21, and over 96% of us voted YES!
Now let’s get to work. More information about what will happen on the day is below, but the first step is to consider registering a climate wake-up call event to take place in your local area on the 21st. These will be quick, politically powerful, and a lot of fun. Our goal is to organise thousands of wake-up events (or "flashmobs") in public places all over the world -- showing a massive public demand for our lagging leaders to sign a fair and binding deal to stop climate catastrophe and unleash a new green economy this year.
The basic plan is so easy that anyone can register an event, and Avaaz technology will do the work of helping other people find one near them. We’ll send simple instructions about how to make these events successful: people will gather in groups at an agreed time on Sept 21st for a few minutes, and together make a phone call to their elected leader to press for climate action. Photos, videos and phone-calls from these events around the world will then be compiled into a powerful package and delivered to world leaders and the media at the UN climate summit the next day!
Click below now to register a climate wake-up event in your area, or keep reading to learn more:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/sept21_hosts
The climate wake-up events are based on the idea of “flashmobs” -- fun, peaceful demonstrations in which participants assemble suddenly in a public place, blending in with the crowd, perform an unusual action simultaneously for a few minutes, and then quickly disperse. They will be mostly self-organising, so should be easy for everyone involved.
On the morning of September 21, everyone participating will set our alarms and gather together a few minutes before the assigned time, at locations chosen by the hosts in our local area. When our alarms go off, we'll hold up our mobile phones and find each other, and then, as a group, call our leaders to urge them to go to Copenhagen and sign a fair, ambitious, and binding climate treaty this year. We'll make as much noise as we can, while recording videos and photos for the UN presentation -- then head back to work, school, or home to upload the results!
Zero Carbon Emmissions
Your role is straightforward: you just need to choose the location (a good public place near you) and register a Sept 21 event using our online tool, encourage friends to attend, and read through a short kit beforehand so you have all the information you’ll need. Get creative or keep it simple -- it's a fun way to contribute to the climate movement, and a great way to meet other Avaaz members.
Linux is gay because...
Heh. This is funny. I know it's a fact I'm scared as hell of posting to a Linux user forum or group. I always feel like an idiot.
Still. I loves the penguin.
SoOo. Linux is gay because:
[dm] I discovered that you'd never get an answer to a problem from Linux Gurus by asking. You have to troll in order for someone to help you with a Linux problem.
[dm] For example, I didn't know how to find files by contents and the man pages were way too confusing. What did I do? I knew from experience that if I just asked, I'd be told to read the man pages even though it was too hard for me.
[dm] Instead, I did what works. Trolling. By stating that Linux sucked because it was so hard to find a file compared to Windows, I got every self-described Linux Guru around the world coming to my aid.
[dm] They gave me examples after examples of different ways to do it. All this in order to prove to everyone that Linux was better.
* ion has quit IRC (Ping timeout)
[dm] brings a tear to my eye... :') so true..
[dm] So if you're starting out Linux, I advise you to use the same method as I did to get help. Start the sentence with "Linux is gay because it can't do XXX like Windows can". You will have PhDs running to tell you how to solve your problems.
[dm] this person must be a kindred spirit of mine
A N D . . . to show how much less painful it is to prove what an idiot you are, rather than ask for help on a n*x forum:
[Jon^D] I had to cat 8-9 seperate quote files, compare each line in each of them to make sure there weren't any duplicates then sort
[Jon^D] I wrote a nasty perl script to get it donw
[Jon^D] and it didn't work very well
[skank] cat quote*.txt |sort |uniq
*lol*
Our Shoreline on SABC2

Make a date, or set your PVR to record SABC2 at 7:30PM on Monday 14 September and Monday 21 September for a spectacular glimpse of the Wild Coast.
Shoreline is a South African documentary series commissioned by SABC 2. It is a multidisciplinary showcase of all the unique and diverse features along our coastline – geology, paleontology, history, settlement patterns, marine biology, ecology etc.
One of the main features of this series is that it is presented by a team of specialist presenters – archaeologist Gavin Whitelaw, historian Nomalanga Mkhize and marine biologist Eleanor Yeld. Anchor presenter Peter Butler and his dog Nujack guide our experts on the journey around the coast.
Shoreline consists of 13 episodes and in each episode we visit a stretch of coastline to get a sense of its character and stories to help build a picture of our unique coastline. We reveal how natural wonders and historic events have shaped the lives of coastal communities.’
The Shoreline DVD box set will be available after the series ends on 12 October 2009. SABC will also be giving away several DVD box sets of the series. See www.ourshoreline.co.za for competition details.
Episode Ten of Shoreline, on Monday the 14'th, features the Wild Coast from Cove Rock (East London) to Port Grosvenor. Click here: Episode Ten for an overview.
"This untamed wilderness is filled with rolling green hills and unspoilt beaches, secluded bays fringed with wild banana trees, tranquil lagoons and dense coastal forests, deeply carved valleys and precipitous cliffs where waterfalls plummet into the sea.
Violent storms and monstrous waves sometimes batter the coast, and many ships have met an untimely end here. Ancient myths and legends are rife, and the diverse peoples represent a rich cultural heritage. This is a shoreline truly deserving of its name – the Wild Coast."
Red Sands of XolobeniEpisode Eleven, On Monday the 21'st, will explore Mkambati to Amanzimtoti, including the Pondoland Centre of Endemism and the threatened Xolobeni area. See Episode Eleven for more info.
"A recent study of the flora of four sites in the PC has revealed 2253 different species, of which 196 were endemic to the PC. This level of floral diversity is truly impressive, considering that the whole of Great Britain contains only about 1400 species. Species density in the PC is also exceptionally high, with about 2500 species in 1900 km2 – compared to about 9 000 species in 90 000 km2 in the Cape Flora. Scientifically, the PC has been comparatively poorly surveyed, and new plant species are continually being discovered. The region is particularly rich in woody endemics, and contains more than 30 endemic species of robust creepers, shrubs and trees – the highest count for endemic tree species in South Africa. The PC contains many rare and unusual plants, and some are so rare that no local names are known, such as the so-called Pondo Bushman’s tea (Lydenburgia abbottii). This is the rarest forest tree endemic to South Africa, with only about 200-500 specimens in existence. The entire population occurs between the Amphitheatre in the Umtamvuna Nature Reserve and the Msikaba River – a total range of only 40 kilometres. It is estimated that many of the trees could be as old as 1000 years."
BUSTIN' DOWN THE DOOR
The movie Bustin' Down the Door is named after the controversial article written by Rabbit Bartholomew for Surfer Mag in 1977 - and is a compelling piece of modern history depicting the radical style Australian and South African surfers introduced to Hawaii in the 70's, turning surfing into a professional sport.
Man those guys done good! We used to hear about Shaun Tomson and realized that he was a world champion, but one never got the sense that he was a principle player amongst the vanguard of a new sporting sub-culture:
Shaun Tomson
"The Free Ride revolutionaries, the enfants terrible who threatened to unseat the Old Guard on Oahu’s north shore."
Even if you're not into surfing, the movie and the article are well worth checking out.
To see the original article, and links to the movie trailer, click here: BUSTIN' DOWN THE DOOR
Chappies
Sea SquirtsEverything I know today I learned from Chappies. ;)
Actually these were from Reddit. Also check out "Today I learned" on Reddit.
1 million dollars = ~12 days
1 billion dollars = ~32 years
1 trillion dollars = ~31,689 years
This is because we have more cone (color) receptors in the center of our vision; cones need more light to activate than rods do.
Semi-related vision trivia: It is better to scan an area from right to left; years of reading have taught your eyes to sweep quickly in the opposite direction, and thus you are more likely to miss small details.
A Simple Plan
(T-Shirt available from Threadless.)
Grammar Nazi























