Thursday, December 18, 2008

MERRY XMAS








Wishing you a magical season
May all your secret wishes be fulfilled
And
May the enchantment of Christmas be Yours
Wishing you a very Merry Christmas and

a prosperous New Year ...

GOD BLESS













Happy Holidays to you, your friends, and your families.
I hope you are enjoying the seasonal activities and festivities and that they bring warmth and love to your hearts.







DANKIE! THANK YOU!
TEBOGO! DITEBOHO! UMBELELO! UKUBONGO!
DANKE! GRACIAS! MERCI! ARIGATO! GRAZIE!

With the year drawing to a close and every-one almost in holiday mode

I would like to extend my gratitude to all my friends for sharing your thoughts with me this year.

Your friendship has been truly appreciated and without you it would not have been a wonderful year filled with ups and downs but most of all the new relationships that were formed.

We are flying to Walvis Bay, Namibia this morning – first from Durban to Johannesburg and then to Windhoek.
We’ll be back in the new year… (DV)

May we meet up again in 2009 with great enthusiasm for a prosperous year and may we all have a superb BLESSED year.

Best Wishes and God Bless



Christianity

Why is it that almost all wars in history started due to the difference in religions?

On this day - 17 December in history...
Japan 1637 - Tokugawa rule

37 000 Japanese peasants were beheaded in the Shimabara Rebellion; an uprising due to the discontentment with heavy taxation and the effects of famine; although historians see it as a religious uprising…

These peasants were supported by ronin (masterless samurai); they gathered on the site of the Hara castle.











These are the remains of the Hara castle or Hara fortress.

The Tokugawa government requested aid from the Dutch, who first gave them gunpowder and then guns. Nicolas Koekebakker, head of the Dutch trading station even sent a vessel, de ryp, which he personally accompanied. They bombarded the castle from the shore guns as well as from the vessel; but without great results.
The ship withdrew at the request of the Japanese after a contemptuous message by the rebels to the besieging troops.

"Are there no longer courageous soldiers in the realm to do combat with us, and weren't they ashamed to have called in the assistance of foreigners against our small contingent?"

By April of 1638, there were over 27,000 rebels facing about 125,000 soldiers.

Captured survivors and the fortress's rumored sole traitor, Yamada Uemonsaku, revealed the fortress was running out of food, ammunition and other provisions.

That was the final straw and the fortress was stormed and taken.

After the castle fell, the shogunate forces beheaded an estimated 37,000 rebels and sympathizers.
The Commander, Amakusa Shirō's severed head was taken to Nagasaki for public display, and Hara Castle was burned to the ground and buried together with the bodies of all the dead.



Remainds of Hara Castle as seen from the sea...
Can you ever imagine this in your wildest dreams??

Because many of the peasants were converts to Christianity; their rebellion strengthened the Tokugawa governments determination, to isolate Japan from foreign influence and vigorously enforced an already *existing ban on the Christian religion and all activities. (*Restrictions against Christian religion started in 1616 with 120 missionaries and converts executed in 1620. Between 1624 and 1629 thousands of Christians were executed in Japan).

Christianity in Japan survived only by going underground.

This formal persecution of Christians continued until the 1850s.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Miss World

Russian crowned Miss World 2008














Miss World 2008, the 58th Miss World Final was held at the Sandton Convention Centre in Johannesburg, South Africa, on Saturday, December 13, 2008.

I watched it on our local SABC station and enjoyed it thoroughly.
I love to watch these kinds of competitions. We had our Miss SA 2008 at Sun City last night and Miss Russia attended and helped with the crowning...

Originally, the pageant was going to take place in Kiev, Ukraine for October 4, but because of the ongoing crisis/conflict between neighbours Georgia and Russia in neighboring South Ossetia; the Miss World Organization decided to move the pageant away from this Eastern European nation over security concerns.















Miss Russia Kseniya Sukhinova has won the Miss World 2008 contest in Johannesburg, South Africa, after beating 108 contestants in a glittering extravaganza in South Africa on Saturday.















The second runner up was Gabrielle Walcott of Trinidad and Tobago and the first runner up Parvathay Omanakuttan of India.

The 21-year-old blue-eyed blond beauty (who used to be a brunet at the crowning of Miss Russia in 2007), declared shortly before her win, that being nervous made her "feel stronger” - "I think I can help people and I want to help people and today if I walk away with this crown I will do that," Sukhinova told judges through a translator after being asked why she should be crowned the winner.

Hailing from Nizhnevartovsk in the north west of Siberia, Sukhinova was dressed in a purple gown, with a decorative neckline and flowing skirt.
She is a student pursuing a science degree as an engineer of administration from the Tyumen Oil and Gas University.











Miss Russia 2007 Ksenia Sukhinova (2nd L Front with dark brown hair - 20 years old) and Miss Russia 2006 Tatiana Kotova (L Front) pose after Sukhinova won the Miss Russia 2007 beauty contest in Moscow, Russia, on Dec. 14, 2007.

Sukhinova becomes the second Miss Russia to go on and win the global event after Julia Kourochkina took the crown in 1992.















India's Omanakuttan wooed the crowd by greeting them in Afrikaans, and referring to heroes such as Mahatma Ghandi and South Africa's first black president Nelson Mandela, who was also quoted by Trinidad and Tobago's Walcott.

Contestants, aged 17 to 25, were dressed by South African and Jamaican designers for the final show after a month of galas, rehearsals and even a safari on the tip of the African continent as well as a visit to Soweto...

Trading glamour for the bush, the beauties donned T-shirts and sneakers as they gamely tramped into the bush to see lions and giraffes, play African drums, sleep in Zulu huts and cook traditional Zulu meals.

Johannesburg sought to use the event to boost its image as a world class city, despite being known for its high crime rates, while the country also hopes to benefit from the publicity ahead of staging the football World Cup in 2010.
South Africa’s alarming crime rate and the threat of terrorist attacks are the number one priority of 2010 World Cup organisers, but they insist that fans need not worry.
Since South Africa was awarded the tournament four years ago, critics have roused rampant speculation over the country’s readiness to host it — not least because of the incidence of crime, with some 50 murders a day. Rapes and violent robberies have also reached a level which other African nations recently classified as intolerable.

SA desperately needs this booster, especially with the high crime rates; FARM MURDERS and problems with Zimbabwean aliens crossing our borders in their thousands....















Beauties from 109 countries were whittled down to 15 semi-finalists, with India, Russia, Trinidad and Tobago, Angola and Tansey Coetzee of South Africa among the five finalists.














South Africa's Tansey Coetzee had her home crowd on their feet shouting support as her name as a finalist was announced. Pretty girl but by far too vein and arrogant to my liking...

The winner of the event, broadcast live to millions of viewers in 187 countries, has to espouse "beauty with a purpose", with charity being one of the main focuses of the pageant.

Over the years the crown that is worn by the winner is a symbol for fund-raising.

Miss World 2007 Zhang Zi Lin of China raised over $US30 million [$45 million] in her year in office according to Julia Morley.














So perhaps from anything else it does a lot of good things for needy children and old people, which I think is important too.

Friday, December 12, 2008

Cholesterol Lowering Drugs - Porphyria

I’ve tried ‘statins’ many years ago which caused severe ‘acute attacks’!

April 2000
Started with Lipitor 10mg (Atorvastin) which caused an Acute attack

Then used Baycol 0,2mg (Cervastatin) which caused terrible leg pain and fatigue, I couldn't walk properly - caused a terrible acute attack!!
FDA NEWS DIGEST AUG 31, 2001
Cholesterol-Lowering Drug Baycol Being Withdrawn –
BAYER PHARMACEUTICAL DIVISION is voluntarily withdrawing Baycol (Cervastatin) from the market following reports of
sometimes-fatal rhabdomyolysis, a severe muscle adverse reaction. Baycol was approved in 1997 to treat elevated cholesterol levels.

Last try was in AUGUST 2001
Lurselle (Probucol) - Which is supposed to be safe (USE on SA and NAPOS lists) I discontinued use after Acute attack in September; and have never tried anything again for cholesterol!!

Lipid lowering agents (SA LIST)

Acebutolol Use
Acipimox Use, but with caution
Bezafibrate Use, but with caution
Clofibrate Use
Colestipol Use
Colestyramine Use
Fenofibrate Use only with extreme caution and if no alternative
Fluvastatin Use only with extreme caution and if no alternative
Gemfibrozil Use only with extreme caution and if no alternative
Nicotinic Acid Use, but with caution
Pravastatin Use only with extreme caution and if no alternative
Probucol Use
Simvastatin Use only with extreme caution and if no alternative

LIPID LOWERING AGENTS info…

The first line of therapy are diet, weight loss and exercise. Where drug therapy is indicated, the following points should be considered

DRUGS FOR GENERAL USE: THOUGHT TO BE SAFE
Probucol (Tried got sick),
cholestyramine and colestipol are safe and may be used.

FIBRATES
The fibrates are a class of drug particularly useful for reducing triglyceride levels. Most appear to be safe. We suggest that clofibrate, fenofibrate, bezafibrate, and gemfibrozil may be used with caution, but this suggestion is tentative and care must be exercised.

STATINS
These drugs are very useful for reducing cholesterol levels. Most of these are metabolised by the cytochrome P450 system ( a marker of potential porphyrinogenicity), but recent evidence suggests that some may not however induce this enzyme system (which is a good thing, and will lead to increased safety in porphyria). Furthermore, there have as yet been no actual reports of adverse consequences in porphyria, despite their use in patients. We suggest that in each patient the potential benefits are weighed against the risk of aggravating porphyria and an individualised decision made.
Experimental evidence suggests that rosuvastatin may be the safest, since only 10% is metabolised in the liver, the rest is excreted unchanged, followed by pravastatin (though it is metabolised by cytochrome P450, 50% is excreted unchanged in the urine, and it does not however appear to induce cytochrome P450.

Some of the others, notably simvastatin, atorvastatin (Tried acute attack), fluvastatin and cerivastatin (Tried acute attack), do appear to induce cytochrome P450 and may theoretically be less safe.

NO DATA
There is no information on acipimox, and it is best avoided at present.

PRECAUTIONS TO FOLLOW WHEN INTRODUCING DRUGS OF UNPROVEN SAFETY
Particularly with reference to the statins, the doctor should:: Introduce agents one at a time.
Warn the patient that the agent is not guaranteed safe; obtain their consent for its use; warn them to cease medication and report back to him or her immediately in the event that they develop abdominal pain.
Take particular care in patients with AIP and in those with a history of more severe porphyria, especially those who have suffered acute attacks within the past few years

SA CONCUR WITH N.A.P.O.S. AS WELL…
NAPOS WEBSITE (DRUG DATABASE FOR ACUTE PORPHYRIA)

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

FARM MURDERS IN SOUTH AFRICA

It’s ironic that …

On this day, December 10, 1948 the General Assembly of the United Nations adopted and proclaimed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights…

"All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.

Everyone has the right to life, liberty, and security of person.

No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment.”

The most translated document in the world….

The document is there in black and white, but does it mean anything for Africa?

What is happening in Zimbabwe at the moment is also happening in South Africa and the world turns a blind eye…

Farm murders in South Africa

On a mountain slope between Potgietersrus (Mokopane); and Pietersburg (Polokwane), in the Limpopo Province, South Africa; passers-by can see a big cross consisting of more than 1 800 small crosses.

Each of these crosses represents a farmer that was killed over the past ten years.

There are no names on the crosses.

Apart from family and friends, South Africa and the World do not know the names of these victims.

Statistics on Farm Murders in South Africa
January 2008 – December 2008

Gauteng - 33
Mpumalanga - 17
North West – 22
Free State – 8
Western Cape – 6
Eastern Cape - 5
KwaZulu-Natal – 8
Limpopo – 8
Southern Cape – 1
Northern Cape - 2

Statistics on farm attacks are, like most crime statistics, almost impossible to source.

Source TLU SA – North;
Beeld
SA Police (2006)

Easy targets

Most farm attack victims are older than 40, and 28,4% are older than 60. More than 50% of black victims are older than 50. They are regarded as easy targets and are forced to provide information on the movements and security of the farmer. Violence is used to force farm workers to give the attackers access to the farmhouse. The children of farm workers are also used as a source of information. Earlier this year it was reported that a teacher at a farm school near Carolina instructed the children to draw a map of the farm on which they live. They also had to answer a number of questions, among them information on the farmers’ neighbours and their movements. These questionnaires have been distributed among the children of black workers since 1990 and it is thought that the information is used in the planning of attacks.

Current statistics

Lukas Swart, an expert on farm murders, recently reported that 17 – 18 farm attacks occur every week. 17% of these attacks end in murder.
150 people are murdered on South African farms every year.

The effect of farm murders on the South African economy

Conclusive statistics are not available, but it is estimated that approximately 25 000 farmers left the agricultural sector during the past 15 years.
2 017 people have been killed on farms, of which 70% were the owners of farms.
The loss of 1 411 farmers, holds serious consequences for the economy.

“Everyone has the right to life” – And this also applies to farmers and farm workers.

Report of the Investigative Committee into Farm Attacks.
Available at www.saps.gov.za.


The constitution of the Republic of South Africa guarantees the following

LIFE
Everyone has the right to life


FREEDOM AND SECURIY OF THE PERSON
Everyone has the right to freedom and security of the person, which includes the right to be free from all forms of violence from either public or private sources; not to be tortured in any way; and not to be treated or punished in a cruel, inhuman or degrading way


FREEDOM OF MOVEMENT AND RESIDENCE
Everyone has the right to freedom of movement



We have been seriously deprived of these rights over the past years…

We have FREEDOM DAY on 27 April a PUBLIC HOLIDAY – on that day the ANC and other members of the ruling party celebrates the start of the new democratic South Africa…

But we have no freedom in South Africa, we lost our freedom…

The freedom to come and go as you wishes…

You can’t leave your house for fear of being burgled…

You must reinforce your house like criminals in prison…

We live in prisons. Our house has a set of bars 2,5cm thick on the outside of the windows and verandah’s. We have two Alsatians patrolling the yard. Our house looks like Fort Lauderdale (1838 - Seminole & Tequesta Indians, who largely disappeared by the middle of the 18th century).
We had big; remote-controlled gates installed at all our entrances.
You now see individual homes with security guards.
Walls over eight feet tall are common, with barbed wire or spikes on top.
Across the street, my neighbors put an electric fence on the wall—now a commonplace sight. People are armed and have hired private security companies. Following all these precautions would be considered paranoid elsewhere in the world, but here it's average.

You can’t visit friends, family or go to shops for fear of being attacked, robbed or murdered… (I have been robbed at a local Spar)

Innocent citizens of South Africa are attacked and murdered in their own houses; in some cases they are tortured…

This is the fate of the majority of South Africans…

Crime increased alarmingly…

The SA Police is responsible for the application of the law and to protect us from these crimes and actions…
But, we only see an incompetent, unqualified, clumsy, untrained police force that must protect our rights as guaranteed by the Constitution. Corruption, case files disappearing and everyday bribing is the norm…

We do however acknowledge the SA Police members who still give their best under extreme circumstances…

The Government does not carry out its responsibilities…

Farm attacks on the farming community are increasing at an alarming rate…

On the other hand, criminals are free to go as they wish, with a very slim chance of being arrested and prosecuted...

The citizens of South Africa became so accustomed to the high crime and murder rate, that they are accepting this situation as normal.

This is life in South Africa today. I've lived in South Africa my whole life and I've seen a lot of changes. Even a few for the good, but the standard of living has declined and people’s attitudes have changed. Hope is gone, replaced by fear, anxiety and horror…

There is a joke going around: “Americans have Bill Clinton, Johnny Cash and Bob Hope. South Africans have Nelson Mandela, no cash and no hope.”

South Africa will most likely walk the same road to misery, corruption, despair and destruction as Zimbabwe. Give it time. It won't be any different here than in the rest of Africa.









Mbeki has been supporting Mugabe nonstop…

When asked why he refuses to get rough with Robert Mugabe, the Zimbabwean tyrant across his country’s northern border, South African president (at that stage) Thabo Mbeki has a stock reply: Threaten Mugabe and he’ll only shut his door in your face; cut off his lights and he’ll govern by candlelight. We are the only people Mugabe talks to, Mbeki likes to point out. Close off this line and there’s nothing left.


Zimbabwe was once the most beautiful country with the friendliest Shona ethnic group; a wonderful country to visit…

We have been there a couple of times and it’s a shame that there is nothing left…


LIONS WERE SUPPOSED TO PROTECT THEM (Zimbabwe)

An eight-year-old Zimbabwean girl has been mauled by two lions that were supposed to protect her from war veterans intent on claiming her family's farm…
Courtney's parents told Rapport that the medical care at the hospital was so poor, they didn't even have painkillers. They then decided to airlift their daughter to Netcare Milpark Hospital, Johannesburg, a day after the attack.


Latest news articles…

Mr President, we're scared
26/11/2008 Elana Carstens, Beeld

Pretoria - About 2 400 children gathered on a rugby field in Suiderberg on Tuesday to honour all South Africans who had lost their lives because of crime...








SA AMONG TOP 20 MOST DANGEROUS PLACES

Karyn Maughan December 01 2008 at 06:06AM

Terror-reeling India and South Africa have something in common: both are rated as one of the world's 20 most dangerous countries.Backed by travel advice issued by the UK's Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO), London's The Telegraph newspaper has placed South Africa alongside Iraq, Afghanistan, Chechnya, Sudan, Zimbabwe, Colombia, Haiti, Eritrea, Pakistan, Burundi, Nigeria and the DRC in terms of danger to travellers.According to the FCO, South Africa has "an underlying threat from terrorism".



Robbers cut off mom's fingers

Mookgophong - Robbers used pruning shears to lop off four fingers of an elderly Limpopo woman and her husband's life is hanging by a thread after he was repeatedly struck on the head with a panga. The horrifying attack and plunder of the couple's home lasted for about eight hours.
When Theuns Janse van Rensburg, 72, lost consciousness, his attackers undressed him and placed him on the couple's bed. ...


READ THIS BLOG...

Die Nuwe Suid-Afrika blogspot.com attempts to chronicle the extreme violence and secret genocide being committed against the white minority of South Africa. Tens of thousands of whites have been murdered since 1994. Brutal torture and rape is common and not even the young or elderly are spared.
Quotes by ANC members
"Kill the Boer, Kill the Farmer" - Peter Mokaba (ANC).
"When Mandela dies we will kill you whites like flies" - Mzukizi Gaba (ANC).
"We the members of MK have pledged ourselves to kill them, the whites" - Nelson Mandela.


Source:
http://www.africancrisis.co.za/Article.php?ID=38721& http://www.dienuwesuidafrika.com/ http://www.farmmurders.com/ http://www.plaasmoorde.com/ http://dienuwesuidafrika.blogspot.com/ http://www.plaasaanvalle.co.za/

The Savagery of South African Crime

SOUTH AFRICA BULLETIN

from the headquarters of
TAU SA in Pretoria

Web: www.tlu.co.za
Tel.: + 27 12 804 8031 Fax: + 27 12 804 2014
E-mail: info@tlu.co.za

May 9, 2008

The Bulletin attached hereto is provided as a means to inform stakeholders of agricultural developments in South Africa. These Bulletins are distributed every two weeks and can also be found on TAU SA’s website at www.tlu.co.za.

TAU SA is the oldest agricultural union in South Africa and has been in existence since 1897. The mission of the union is to ensure a productive and safe existence for its members on the land they own. Current reality in South Africa indicates that this is not possible at the moment due to a variety of actions and threats against commercial farmers.

Your comment regarding the Bulletins and other information provided to you is valuable and will be appreciated. However should you prefer not to receive information from TAU SA, please respond by e-mail to info@tlu.co.za.

SIERRA LEONE SYNDROME MOVES SOUTH
The Savagery of South African Crime

Lien Gronum was an energetic and attractive South African woman who moved with her husband to a small farm outside Brits in the North West province of South Africa from their house in suburban West Rand after their children left home. While her husband took some farm workers to the town, Mrs. Gronum was attacked, savagely beaten and eventually brutally murdered with a breadknife and a sharp letter-opener by members of her staff. Her husband der husband came upon her body when he returned to the farm an hour or so later.

This is but one example of the spate of vicious murders and attacks which have seared South Africa’s rural communities over the past few months.

Farm attacks in South Africa have never been pretty – only last week, Qatar-based TV station Al Jazeera told of what SA farmers are up against. The programme showed graphic photos of the bloodied and dismembered bodies of farmers and their families – photos rarely if ever seen in South Africa’s media. What sickens people is the utter brutality and barbarity of the attacks. But then South Africa is part of a savage continent which no public relations patina can really hide.

Underneath it all lurks the Sierra Leone syndrome, like a shark moving through water. Human Rights Watch issued a report in 1999 detailing atrocities committed by black against black during that country’s civil war, where RUF rebels slaughtered humans in a manner which stunned the world. Says the report: “The rebel occupation of Freetown was characterized by the systematic and widespread perpetration of all classes of gross human rights abuses against the population. Civilians were gunned down within their houses, rounded up and massacred on the streets, thrown from the upper floors of buildings, used as human shields, and burned alive in cars and buses. They had their limbs hacked off with machetes, eyes gouged out with knives, hands smashed with hammers, and bodies burned with boiling water. Women and girls were systematically sexually abused and children and young people abducted by the hundreds”.

Certainly South Africa hasn’t reached that point yet, but the savagery endemic to South African crime is making news. Over the past few months, terrible things have happened in our country. A Groblersdal farmer was shot stone dead in his living room while watching television. An Indian woman from Ottosdal was brutally murdered in her home. The assailants were arrested, escaped from police custody and then proceeded to break into farmhouses outside the town, finally killing a farmer by sawing his throat until his head was attached to his body by the skin only. His wife was repeatedly raped and then shot dead.

Another farmer outside Pretoria was attacked by twelve men, his family tied up and brutally assaulted. A recently-released parolee murdered a young man of 27 in front of his three year old son in Kempton Park, east of Johannesburg. An elderly couple on a farm outside Lichtenburg were murdered – he was shot and his wife had her throat cut.

A widow (70) from North West was murdered by a man who had been sentenced to death, then released. Her throat was cut and the murderer raped her dead body.

South Africa’s newspapers are replete with crime: old people savagely beaten and killed for a cell phone, a young dancer suffocated and shot in her house. Later the complex’s security guard was arrested for the murder.
Violent crime stalks our hospitals – doctors and nurses are “working in fear” declared a Sunday newspaper as criminals have declared hospitals “their new hunting ground”.
The Johannesburg Hospital has effectively been turned into a “fortress”, yet a senior doctor was attacked after coming off night shift with a gun to his head in a lift. In the Cape, a recent survey revealed that 30% of general nurses, 22% of midwives and 54% of psychiatric nurses have been seriously assaulted. Young student doctors and nurses have been raped.

Rape is endemic to South Africa – rape has always been a tool of war in Africa, yet South Africa’s rape rate is the highest in the world, and we are defined as a peaceful nation. In early April a young woman and her husband attended an Emigration Expo and on the following day the woman was raped while lying next to her six year old son. Her tear-filled face filled the newspapers. Needless to say the family of four cannot wait to leave the land of their birth.

Parents collecting children from school in broad daylight have been robbed and hijacked. A family of four emigrated to America six years ago after the father was shot in the back during a hijacking. Refused a further stay, they were repatriated to South Africa where in early April, they were again hijacked and the wife’s brother was shot dead by the hijackers, in front of two small children.. The brother’s daughter had been killed seven hours before in a motor accident with a taxi.

People are regularly killed in their houses – in Garsfontein, Pretoria, serious crime has increased by 40% over the past year. An eighteen-year-old Pretoria girl was shot five times in her house and left for dead. Paralysed, she is now trying to walk Security complexes are no longer secure – criminals rent houses within the complex and conduct their operations from the house.

In Craighall Park, Johannesburg, the help of a witch doctor was sought to kill the employer of a domestic who had worked for the house owner for thirteen years. The lady divorcee was killed by deep knife wounds to her head. In Rustenburg in March, a man was given a 20-year sentence for torturing a house owner by burning him with boiling water, cutting open his forehead, garotting him with a shoelace, then assaulting his family – three children – with a knife. The murderer had already committed crimes of assault and robbery and had been out on early release.

In another instance, an elderly Johannesburg man received third degree burns over 60% of his skin when he was tortured for hours with boiling water repeatedly poured over his body. He died ten days later. This month, a man from Knysna in the Western Cape was found guilty of murdering two young women. One was smothered to death in a flower bed and a month later he murdered and raped another girl, and set her car alight. Her burnt body was found near the wreck, raped and covered with assault wounds.

HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH
It is interesting that the international organization Human Rights Watch makes no mention of the brutality of these crimes on their website and in their reports, especially the murder and assaults against the commercial farming community of South Africa. According to the Al Jazeera TV programme “No White in the South African Rainbow”, South African commercial farmers are the most murdered group outside a war zone. But no special attention is paid either to this phenomenon by the US State Department’s “Country Report on Human Rights Practices”

The Human Rights Watch latest report on human rights in South Africa covers HIV abuses, “institutionalized racial inequality”, the mistreatment of people at the Johannesburg Methodist Church, sexual violence, abuses in political asylum procedures, the targeting of lesbians for murder, migrants abused by farmers, the non-granting of full marriage rights to gay and lesbian couples, children threatened by AIDS, the rights of rural schoolchildren, and the lack of basic services for farm workers, especially housing. Nowhere is there anything specific said about the gory murders and assaults on the commercial farming sector in South Africa.

The US State Department’s March 2007 Report on Human Rights in South Africa sends out the same message. One lone paragraph in a 45 page report is devoted to farm murders, and these are explained as “motivated by financial gain”. There are no descriptions of the killings. But Mr. Mark Scott-Crossley, the man who was convicted of placing a black person’s body in a lion enclosure, is called “a white farmer” which he definitely is not. Other white farmers who have been involved in killing people trespassing on their farms are given prominence, but there is nothing to show what is happening to white farmers themselves. Scores of other human rights abuses in South Africa are itemized by the State Department including human trafficking and HIV problems, but the onslaught on the commercial farming sector is missing.

It could be said that the endemic violence is simply a continuation of the violence and the rendering of South Africa as “ungovernable” by the ANC/SACP alliance in the run up to their revolutionary takeover of South Africa. What you reap, you sow.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Outing to the farm 'Driefontein'









Pumba's Rock

Outing to the Farm...

Sunday was a beautiful sunny day and we decided to go and have a picnic on our farm ‘Driefontein’ (Three Fountain –direct translation). The number ‘THREE’ being symbolic to the men in my family.

My hubby’s Springbok rugby jersey is number 3; JC’s U19 Baby Springbok jersey is number 3 and Jules is wearing the number 3 as well in his rugby squad…

We load the quad bikes; Jules Yamaha Raptor 700 (Way too fast) and the Yamaha Grizzly 450 4x4 (Much better and more studier) on the trailer and left home...

My husband bought the farm two months ago… I love farms but I don’t know if it’s a good idea???!!!







If you search ‘farm murders’ on www.youtube.com you’ll get the shock of your life…

‘Kill the Boer, Kill the farmer.’
What was once a distasteful political slogan has become a frightening reality and is still used in hate speeches up to the present, even though the slogan was publicly condemned by Mbeki in 2002…


Driefontein, is a 900hectare farm, surrounded by mountains; but with no house on it yet, only a cow shed. (Planning a home). This area is dairy cows (Clover milk -jersey farmers) and red meat country, beef cattle (livestock for meat)










The distance from our home, Shelly Beach to Kokstad is 142km and then on to Matatiele another 18km tar road till the turn-off to the farm with the last 8km being a gravel road...

This N2 freeway inland towards Harding and Kokstad (in the East Griqualand region) is a dangerous road to travel on; very busy, because it’s the main road to the East Coast, East London, Port Elizabeth and the old Transkei; but you are travelling through beautiful country and Nature Reserves like the Oribi Gorge Nature Reserve. And Weza-Ngele Forest.

The Umtamvuna River flows from the Engeli Mountains near Harding, dividing the Eeastern Cape from KwaZulu-Natal; it meets the sea just south of Port Edward our Gateway to the Wild Coast. Harding is situated in amongst the Mzimkulwna River Valley (Western Part of the South Coast region).

About 30km past Harding and North of the small forestry town of Weza, you’ll find the beautiful Weza-Ngele Forest.; which is under state control. It is one of the largest and most accessible tracts of Afromontane mistbelt forest in KwaZulu-Natal. It is 80km inland from the coast and the altitude of the forest spans about 1250-1550m above sea level. This forest is a prime site for the much sought after Cape Parrot and offers fantastic birding. I am an avid bird watcher. (More about that later). The N2 goes directly through a large part of the forest.










Highly endangered Cape Parrot

At the gravel turn-off; we stopped and my hubby and Jules took the gravel road to the farm on the quads and I followed them with the 4x4 and trailer.










They crisscrossed the farm on the quads, planning where exactly will they start with our home, etc.










Jules tried out his dad’s .357 magnum, but the echo was so loud, that we decided against continuing with that …










We had a super picnic in the shade of a big tree, don’t know the name yet, will have a search in my Sappi tree spotting book. We had gammon, chicken mayonnaise, bread rolls, avocado/Greek and potato salad. It was so relaxing… although we had some cows bellowing for company as well as some unwanted bees. Luckily they didn’t bother us, neither did we…?
The beehive was in this big old tree... They were very active...











We followed the same routine back towards the tar road; but hubby had a small accident with Jules Raptor 700 when he flipped it while trying to load it on the trailer. I have some of it on video; before I stopped the video and Jules and myself tried to help my hubby with the quad coming down on him…. That was very scary and unbelievable!!
My hubby is normally so safe with rules and driving, leading the boys by example…

Like he said afterwards: “You must never relax, you must always be alert and on your guard.”

He was bleeding a lot from a gash above his left eye-brow; we stopped at the Private Hospital at Kokstad where he received a couple of stitches; a very expensive 30 minutes (R830) …

He was so cross with himself, but luckily we could joke about it on our way home… We reached home safe and sound by late afternoon and I thanked God, that my hubby was fine with no serious injuries…

Hubby’s fall with one of the quads was the third one… JC had the first tumble, Jules the second accident, a bad one at Folly Bridge. Also a very expensive outing - It cost R30 000 to repair his Raptor and now hubby’s little mishap… They were all lucky, no serious injuries!!











Let’s hope it’s the last one!!

I think I’ll stay off the quads, because I don’t think I’ll be as lucky as them…

Men with their playthings…

Sunday, December 7, 2008

JC's Pacemaker results...






JC 2004 -

Kearsney College






JC was fitted with a portable Holter monitor on Tuesday and had to wear it for 24 hours. This device is supposed to record the ECG via a cable attached to the electrodes on his chest. However two of the electrodes which were attached to his chest came dislodged during the night. So only time will tell if this recording, stored on tape, is enough to be analyzed on a computerized system and if they could pick up any symptoms or not…

It’s a non-invasive procedure and the monitor were disconnected 24hours later at the rooms in Port Shepstone on Wednesday afternoon.

So, JC went back to the cardiologist in Umhlanga today (Friday 5 Dec), to have his pacemaker checked by the cardiac technologist and to pick up his latest Holter monitor print out/results to take with to the Centre for Sports Medicine.

At the Sport Centre he saw Dr. Bruce Biccard MBChB, FCA(SA), FFARCSI, MMedSc and JC got all his answers on all his questions!!
What a brilliant Dr/man!!

He did the following:
Lung flow volume test inspiration / expiration. Cardiopulmonary exercise testing for *dyspnoea of unknown origin - JC completed a ramp protocol test with 3 min unloaded cycling and a ramp of25W per minute, until exhaustion.
Effort ECG with special ergometer, monitoring apparatus

His results were a NORMAL exercise test with no evidence of exercise-induced asthma which was a major concern for JC.

SO AT LAST THIS WAS CLEARED UP!!

The positive result is that his heart is 100% and that he can continue with his daily gym exercise routine, which is his joy in life…

An additional concern at this stage is JCs rugby and his pacemaker from a physical contact point of view.

This rugby issue will be explored further in 2009, should JC decide or wish to continue competitive rugby… (I don’t want him to play anymore!!) His health is much more important to me!!

It was a very expensive exercise, but worth every single cent … (R1730)

POST SCRIPT
A Physician and 3 Pulmonologists confirmed since September 2007 that he has exercise-induced asthma. He was treated with several asthmatic pumps and tablets, etc (Singulair & Symbicord) – which was clearly a horrible waste and unnecessary chemical input!! They all missed the boat completely with their misdiagnoses.
He saw 4 Cardiologists since Sept 2007 and nobody picked up the problem!! On JC’s insistence on wearing the Holter monitor in April 2008, only then did they diagnose him with Sick sinus syndrome (SA Node – Bradycardia). His heart rate dropped to 30 and 2 days later on 10 April 2007 he had a Dual-chamber pacemaker implant. (Medtronic Adapta ADDRO1) ‘The Rolls Royce’…

*Dyspnoea
Laboured breathing that usually causes some distress because it seems out of proportion with the demands being placed on the body. Dyspnoea occurs when the airways are restricted, as in bronchitis and asthma; when circulation to the lungs is impaired, as in heart failure; or if the blood cannot carry enough oxygen, as in anemia

Friday, December 5, 2008

Shelly Beach

Shelly beach is a resort town just south of Port Shepstone  and north of Margate, on KwaZulu-Natal’s South Coast.

It’s a very popular holiday  resort and has one of the busiest ski boat bases on the South Coast as well as being the base of the NSRI (National Sea Rescue Institute).










From the Sonny Evans Ski Boat Club – 7km off the shore you’ll find Protea Banks –      One of the top shark and  game-fish spots in the world.

This magnificent reef includes underwater caves and amphitheatres and the reef teems with oceanic life…

We have four Blue Flag beaches here on the South Coast for 2008/9

  • ·         Hibberdene Beach
  • ·         Margate Beach
  • ·         Marina/San Lameer Beach
  • ·         Ramsgate Beach
Uvongo Beach was one in 2005...

We have been living here on the South Coast for the last 22 years and have  a beach front property. There are several ‘holiday  homes’ in the vicinity.

Their owners are all from Johannesburg and they all have Zulu care-takers who stay on their properties through-out the year. 

This can and have been a problem over the years, with either them having a shebeen(an unlicensed drinking establishment) on the property or running some kind of prostitution business, not to mention all the girlfriends/friends visiting… 

On Tuesday evening at 23h50 the one Zulu guy got drunk and had a fight with his girlfriend. She locked him in; in the double door garage they were living in and left him.  He fell asleep with a candle burning…  The place caught fire and he couldn’t get out, however somehow he kicked the one garage door open and fled the scene. 

Luckily the fire-brigade could control the fire and saved the rest of the house adjoining the garages.  The garages and 'tile roofing' burnt down with all their belongings… 

This house is a 100m from our house...











The poor owners will have to face this mess when they arrive for  their annual holiday here on the South Coast…






So we had this horrible smell in the air for the last couple of days. This ‘unhealthy smoke/smell’ is not helping my Porphyria and today I have this horrible migraine and brain fog due to this pollution in the air…









On the picture you can see a Cadac gas bottle, must have been empty; otherwise it could have been worse...

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Yesterday was another crazy day…

We left for Durban just after six for JCs appointment with the new cardiologist at Umhlanga (which means the ‘place of reeds’ in Zulu).
It’s a resort, commercial and residential town just north of Durban in KwaZulu-Natal. A beautiful and posh area…

The normal procedure at the Drs is the ‘waiting procedure’ and your patience is stretched to the ultimate..

We arrived just after eight and the normal ECGs and Sonar’s etc. were done by eleven…

We left the Umhlanga hospital to cross the road to the new building to have an evaluation done at the Umhlanga Ridge ‘Centre for Sports Medicine’

Umhlanga Ridge is a new retail, office and residential node situated on a hill overlooking the Indian Ocean. Located on the ridge are the Gateway Theatre of Shopping and other shopping centres and many offices.
Gateway is one of the largest shopping centres in the southern hemisphere. (130,000 sq metres)

The mall sees more than 1.30 million visitors coming through its doors per month and was modeled on the Mall of America and West Edmonton Mall centres.



It was another long wait for us, but luckily they had a stunning view over the sea-coast line. There were a bevy of ships lying in wait to enter the Durban harbor, I presume…
A lot of the ‘Sharks Academy’ rugby players were there as well, being treated for injuries received during the rugby season with several physiotherapists in attendance… JC recognized some of the players and physiotherapists… A severe/heart-breaking reminder of his rugby-playing days!! Don’t know if that was a good or bad experience for him… I think it was not good!!

When we saw the Biokineticist at last, an appointment was made for this Friday the 5th of December.

He first must have another ‘Holter’ monitor (Ambulatory ECG) fitted for another 24hours. This machine makes a graphic record of his heart’s electrical currents as he goes about his normal daily life.

ONLY with the previous Ambulatory ECG/EKG his abnormal electrical activity was documented (SA Node/Bradycardia) . It didn’t show with any other ECGs or Stress tests.

So we went back to the cardiologist rooms at Umhlanga Hospital and then travelled to St Augustine Hospital in Durban to have the ‘Holter’ fitted.

This was another long drive in traffic to Durban; another long wait at the cardiologist rooms at St Augustine’s Hospital and another long wait for a room to open and then at last the fitting, which luckily didn’t take long.

We decided not to stay over at our flat in Durban and took the road to the South Coast, HOME.

We were exhausted by the time we got home…


Luckily, the ‘cardiologist group’ has rooms in Port Shepstone – so it will be a 15minute drive from home to have the ‘Holter’ monitor removed today…

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

AIDS

Today is World AIDS Day.

"Let us not look back in anger, nor forward in fear, but around in awareness." - James Thurber

Pink ribbons are meant to raise awareness of breast cancer;
Red ribbons remind us of AIDS;
Blue ribbons symbolize the fight against child abuse, prostate cancer and second-hand smoke;
Yellow ribbons welcomed home the US hostages in Iraq and await deployed US soldiers today.

AIDS stands for Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome and is caused by the human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV.

HIV/AIDS damages a person's immune system and leaves him/her vulnerable to otherwise harmless infections and certain other diseases.
People have different symptoms depending on whether they are recently infected with HIV, have a weakened immune system due to HIV (but don't yet meet the criteria for AIDS), or actually have AIDS-related illnesses or infections.
People who have recently been infected with HIV may experience a condition called Acute Retroviral Syndrome (ARS), primary HIV infection, or conversion sickness.
Symptoms of ARS include swollen lymph nodes, fever, headache, fatigue, malaise, joint pain, and/or a rash.
These generally appear within one to two months after infection and disappear as the body's immune system begins fighting back.
The symptoms usually last no longer than a month. For people who are at low risk for HIV, however, it's more likely that people with these problems have a more common infection, such as the flu, which has similar symptoms.
After the initial infection, people generally go through a period where they have no symptoms.
Such a period varies in length and can be extended by HIV medications.
However, HIV continues to weaken the immune system throughout this asymptomatic period, which may eventually end.
Once symptoms do appear, they can include swollen or painful lymph nodes, unexplained weight loss, persistent diarrhea, lack of energy, shingles, dry cough, yeast infections, and even memory loss.
Often, these symptoms keep coming back and are more severe than what a typical non-infected person might experience.
Finally, HIV infection can progress into AIDS. Because their immune systems are weakened; people with AIDS are susceptible to many different infections and illnesses, both common and uncommon.
For example, the most common AIDS-defining illness is known as PCP (Pneumocystis pneumonia), which has symptoms that include cough, fever, trouble breathing, and chest tightness.
PCP is caused by a fungus that many HIV-negative people carry without becoming ill.
Another disease seen in people with AIDS is Kaposi's sarcoma, an otherwise rare form of cancer. Kaposi's sarcoma produces purple or brownish lesions that resemble bruises but are painless and do not heal.

Other signs of AIDS-related illnesses or infections may include:
· nausea
· vomiting
· abdominal pain
· loss of appetite
· losing more than ten percent of one's body weight (also known as "wasting")
· headache
· sore throat
· rash
· night sweats
· confusion
· memory loss
· loss of muscle strength
· fatigue

These symptoms are usually persistent and severe in people with AIDS. E.g. (parasites – pneumonia; Bacteria – Tuberculosis; Fungi – Meningitis; Viruses – Gastrointestinal disease)
Opportunistic infections and cancers are currently the cause of most of the deaths in AIDS patients.
Treatment of most opportunistic infections has improved radically in the last ten years.
The only way to know for sure that a person has HIV is by testing, and AIDS must be diagnosed by a professional.

HIV INFECTION CAUSES AIDS

Early in the course of the AIDS epidemic, there was some controversy about whether HIV is the cause of AIDS.
Now AIDS experts have demonstrated conclusively that HIV is the cause of AIDS.
However, a handful of dissenters ("HIV denialists") continue to claim HIV is not the source of AIDS.

HIV denialists often argue that drug use and other sexually transmitted disease in people who are "promiscuous" are the cause of AIDS.
According to the World Health Organization, 33 million people around the world are infected with the AIDS virus, mostly in the sub-Sahara Africa.
Some two million people died worldwide of AIDS in 2007.

Study estimates Mbeki AIDS 'death toll'
Study estimates Mbeki AIDS 'death toll'
A study by Harvard University researchers claims the policies of former South African president, Thabo Mbeki, contributed to the deaths of 365,000 HIV positive people. The study, published in the New York Times, said the South African government could have saved those lives by providing antiretroviral drugs. Mr. Mbeki insisted antiretroviral drugs were toxic and said they were being promoted to further the interests of western drugs companies. He also claimed Aids was caused by malnutrition rather than a virus. According to UN figures, South Africa today has 5.7 million people - almost one in five adults - who are HIV positive. The current South African health minister Barbara Hogan says the days of Aids denialism is over. (PANOS LONDON NEWS UK)