Cape Town pilot jailed after arriving drunk for Mauritius flight

A British Airways pilot who lives in Cape Town has been jailed in the UK after arriving drunk to fly 300 passengers to Mauritius.

After serving his eight-month sentence‚ Julian Monaghan‚ 49‚ hopes to find work in South Africa by retraining as a drone pilot to take pictures of homes for estate agents.

Monaghan was removed from a Boeing 777 by armed police in January after failing a breath test in the cockpit. Ten minutes later he was due to fly 300 passengers from London to Mauritius.

Julian Monaghan.

Julian Monaghan. 
Image: Facebook

Monaghan had flown to London from Cape Town overnight‚ and spent the day drinking vodka at a hotel near Gatwick airport. Police boarded his plane after an airport technician reported smelling alcohol on his breath.

British Airways rules prohibit staff from drinking eight hours before work. Monaghan resigned from the airline before he was jailed on Tuesday at Lewes Crown Court in Sussex.

Judge Janet Waddicor said Monaghan’s alcohol level was four times the limit for pilots.

“The limits are pitched deliberately low because of the responsibility which attaches to the job. The lives of the people on board are in the hands of the pilot‚” she told Monaghan.

“The people who live on the flight path are entitled to feel they are safe. It may be you would have got away with it because you say you weren’t aware you were over the limit.

“You say you were staggered at the reading and when the police reading was confirmed you resigned.”

British Airways was warned seven years ago that Monaghan posed a safety risk after he was involved in a drunken argument in a bar.

School shock: Grade 5 pupil among 1,000 schoolgirls who fell pregnant in Ekurhuleni last year

“This information should shock every South African. Young girls‚ most under the legal age of 16‚ are having their futures undermined‚ likely through being taken advantage of or abused,” DA says. File photo.

“This information should shock every South African. Young girls‚ most under the legal age of 16‚ are having their futures undermined‚ likely through being taken advantage of or abused,” DA says. File photo. 
Image: Gallo Images/Thinkstock

A Grade 5 pupil was among the 1‚000 schoolgirls who fell pregnant in Ekurhuleni last year.

This was revealed by Mzwandile Masina‚ the mayor of Ekurhuleni‚ during a youth summit in Boksburg on Tuesday‚ the Sowetan newspaper reported on Wednesday. According to the newspaper‚ the mayor blamed “the cult of blessers” for the teenage pregnancies.

While no details were provided about the Grade 5 pupil‚ a typical pupil in that standard would be 11 or 12 years old.

Hlomela Bucwa‚ MP and Democratic Alliance member of the Portfolio Committee on Higher Education and Training‚ highlighted social ills and education failures during a youth day address in Parliament last month.

She cited statistics showing that between 2014 and 2016‚ a total of 42‚253 pupils from Grades 3 to 12 fell pregnant – noting that 193 of these pupils were in Grades 3‚ 4 and 5.

The DA commented on the pre-teen and teenager pregnancies in a previous release‚ stating: “This information should shock every South African. Young girls‚ most under the legal age of 16‚ are having their futures undermined‚ likely through being taken advantage of or abused.”

“These young girls cannot be lost to the system and the department must follow up to ensure that they continue to attend school. Keeping children in school should be our major priority if we are to ensure that every person‚ no matter the circumstances of their birth‚ are able to live a life they truly value‚ filled with opportunity‚” said the DA.

Traditionally‚ Mpumalanga and KwaZulu-Natal account for large numbers of school pregnancies.

Radio host Bongani Bingwa spotlighted the issue on his show on Wednesday morning‚ which saw listeners debate issues such as children’s exposure to explicit nudity and overt sexuality through popular music videos and other social media platforms.

For the first time Twitter takes the convict’s side on Yobe, here’s why…

Mahlatse asked for forgiveness from the family of his ex-partner on Yobe.

For the first time since reality TV show Yobe made its debut, Mzansi has shown some sort of sympathy for the convict featured on last night’s episode.

Although this was an unusual response from viewers, Mahlatse’s story may help you understand why.

Yobe, is a show that helps convicted criminals ask for forgiveness from the victims of their crimes or their families. It offers closure to the victims’ families, as well as, gives the convicts a chance to explain themselves.

Last night’s episode introduced Mzansi to Mahlatse, a female convict who killed her then partner, Ronnie.

Mahlatse claimed that she had been abused by Ronnie and that on the day she killed him, only one of them were going to make it out alive.

Tweeps were sad on Mahlatse’s behalf, saying it was because the system failed her that she ended up in prison.

Many sympathised with her saying Ronnie’s family didn’t deserve an apology from her. Especially after they found out that the Ronnie’s mother knew he was abusing Mahlatse but did nothing about it.

It was also revealed the gun that killed Ronnie, was a gun he bought to threaten Mahlatse with. Plus Ronnie’s mother’s attitude towards Mahlatse’s child left Twitter scared for the child.

Rats feed on corpse in KZN hospital

Jerome Khali was left fuming after finding out that his brother's body was eaten by rats.

Jerome Khali was left fuming after finding out that his brother’s body was eaten by rats. 
Image: Thuli Dlamini

When Bonokuhle Khali died in Nkonjeni District Hospital in Zululand, nurses left his body in a dimly lit corner in the male ward where rats spent hours eating the flesh on his face.

As his body lay just metres from sick patients in the ward, the rodents scurried under and over the sheet that covered it, chewing on his nose and lips.

“When I wanted to see my brother they first handed me a clear bag with rat droppings … that is how they told me my brother had been eaten by rats,” his furious brother Jerome Khali told the Sunday Times.

The body lay in the corridor for several hours on May 22 because no doctor was available to instruct that it be wheeled to the hospital morgue.

I can’t understand how this could have happened at a hospital – a place that is meant to be so clean,” Jerome said, standing at his brother’s grave at their family homestead in Nhlungwane in northern KwaZulu-Natal.

“The whole idea of him being eaten by rats is something they pieced together when they found the rat droppings on him.”

The 235-bed hospital has previously come under fire for poor levels of cleanliness and infection control when inspectors from the Office of Health Standards Compliance delivered a damning report on it in 2015.

The hospital, rated on cleanliness, infection control, management and availability of medicines, scored 52% – compared with the minimum acceptable rating of 80%.

DIRE STATE OF HEALTHCARE

Last week the same body tabled its latest report in parliament, detailing a grim picture of the country’s public healthcare system.

Only five of the 696 hospitals and clinics it inspected in 2016-17 met with the Department of Health’s norms and standards and achieved the 80% compliance level.

Bonokuhle, 38, was sent to the Nkonjeni hospital 35km from his rural homestead on May 18 when he complained of pain a week after being hit by a car.

Bonokuhle Khali.

Bonokuhle Khali. 
Image: Supplied

“When my family went to visit him he seemed fine, but then several days later they called to say he had died,” Jerome said.

“I wanted to gather everyone at home before I told them Bonokuhle had passed, and I went to the hospital to find out what happened.

“I went to the mortuary and saw his face like that … the rats had taken his lips and his nose. It is something I will never forget. I was so angry and demanded to see his whole body in case they had bitten him somewhere else.”

At Jerome’s insistence, the body was examined by state pathologists, who ruled that Bonokuhle had died of natural causes.

“Even so, we don’t know what happened to him,” Jerome said. “Before we could bury him we needed to cleanse his spirit after the horrible things that happened with his body.”

Jerome said he had met representatives of the hospital management in the days following his brother’s death and had been promised that an investigation would be conducted.

“They said they would tell me what they found and I have heard nothing since then. It feels like they didn’t care about his death because no one even came to the funeral. It was as if the rats had eaten something they were supposed to eat, they didn’t care.”

Ncumisa Mafunda, a spokeswoman for the provincial department of health, said a probe was under way.

“The demise of any individual is always a sad occasion. To this end, and without prejudice, the department wishes to convey its sincere condolences to the family,” she said.

Flood warning for Cape Town as cold front heads to SA

By Saturday‚ cold‚ dry air will spread to the interior of the country.

A strong cold front will bring heavy rain‚ gale-force winds and cold conditions to the Western Cape on Thursday.

Cape Town was basking in a sunny 25˚C on Tuesday‚ ahead of the arrival of the cold front that will see temperatures in the Free State‚ North West‚ Gauteng and Mpumalanga plummet by Saturday.

The South African Weather Service warned on Tuesday that heavy rain leading to flooding was expected over Cape Town‚ the Cape Winelands‚ and western parts of the Overberg and West Coast districts on Thursday and extending into Friday. There is a possibility of flash flooding. The cold front will also affect the Northern Cape

Significant rainfall amounts can be expected from Thursday morning‚ where spells of heavy downpours are likely from late morning into the afternoon‚” said the weather service.

There will be very rough sea conditions along the west coast between Cape Columbine and Cape Agulhas‚ where wave heights are likely to reach 4-6m on Thursday afternoon‚ coinciding with the spring high tide.

“Coastal damage may occur along the south-west coastal regions. Small vessels should ideally remain in port during this period.

“Gale-force north-westerly winds (65-70km/h) are expected between Cape Columbine and Cape Agulhas on Thursday‚ moderating overnight.