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08/04/2025

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🎬 ITTFF 2025 CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS NOW OPEN! ✨The International Township TV & Film Festival (ITTFF) is thrilled to announ...
25/03/2025

🎬 ITTFF 2025 CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS NOW OPEN! ✨
The International Township TV & Film Festival (ITTFF) is thrilled to announce that film submissions and public registration for the 2025 festival are officially OPEN!
📌 2025 Festival Theme:
"Echoes of Fear" — Celebrating Township/Rural Horror Stories 🩸👻

✅ Submission Categories:
•⁠ ⁠Best Horror Short Film
•⁠ ⁠Best Horror Feature Film
•⁠ ⁠Best Documentary with Horror Elements
•⁠ ⁠Experimental (Web Series, Animation, or Mixed Media)
•⁠ ⁠DUT Video Technology ALUMNI films
•⁠ ⁠Rural/Township Filmmakers Spotlight

🔥 Important Dates:
📅 Opening Date: 10 February 2025
⏳ Closing Date: 11 April 2025 (23h00)

📣 How to Apply:
Submit your film or register to attend the festival by clicking the link below:
👉 Submit or Register Here https://forms.gle/AhqZj4Sb8k7VTD2t9
OR visit the link in our bio!

📩 For Queries:
📧 Film Submissions & Registrations: Mbali Ngcobo — [email protected]
📧 General Inquiries: Khanyi Buthelezi — [email protected]
📞 Contact: +27 73 931 2410/ +27 6 583 6873

🕯️ Step into the Shadows… and let your horror story be heard.
Join us in Clermont Community Hall, KwaZulu-Natal, from May 27th-29th, 2025 — where the screams echo louder than ever!

03/03/2025

President Ramaphosa has tabled a compromise VAT hike to satisfy opposition parties in the GNU, who have vowed to fight tax increases in the budget and instead called for spending cuts.

03/03/2025

Eskom warned although the loss of the 930MW unit did not necessitate load-shedding, generation capacity remained constrained.

28/02/2025

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SOUTH AFRICA
STATE OF THE PROVINCE
Alan Winde calls on Western Cape to ‘stand for what is right’ in shifting global order
Premier Alan Winde of the Western Cape during the announcement of the new government cabinet at the Premier's Office on June 13, 2024 in Cape Town, South Africa. (Photo:Gallo Images / Brenton Geach).
By Suné Payne26 Feb 2025Follow 2
Western Cape Premier Alan Winde says the message this year is to ‘step up’ as the province grapples with not only provincial, but global issues.

Listen to this article
8 min
‘We are in uncertain times,” said Western Cape Premier Alan Winde twice on Wednesday evening, as he spoke not only of local issues such as a Budget deadlock, but of the global order.

Winde was speaking at the opening of the provincial legislature on 26 February during his 2025 State of the Province Address (Sopa).

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“We have to step up more than ever before,” said Winde, calling on leaders and residents to meet present challenges.

“As I make this speech, we are in very uncertain times – no clarity on our Budget…” he said, referring to the postponement of the national Budget over the contested VAT increase from 15% to 17%.

Read more: Government planned to spend VAT on civil servant pay hikes, Grade R

Touching on global affairs, with a nod to the impact of Donald Trump’s US presidency, Winde said: “ International markets are in distress and elections are resulting in massive policy shifts across the world. Aid is being cut and free trade is being replaced by trade barriers and tariffs.”

Serjeant-at-Arms Wayne Naidoo, Secretary to the Provincial Parliament Romeo Adams, Premier Alan Winde, Speaker Daylin Mitchell and Director: Parliamentary Support Services Lubabalo Stemele preparing to enter the NG Church Hall for the State of the Province Address. (Photo: Western Cape Provincial Parliament)

The premier said while he thought about the negatives, there were also opportunities, such as the G20 and associated business meeting, the B20, being hosted in South Africa.

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He noted how he had been “sitting in those B20 meetings, understanding that the world is in turmoil and talking about how business is going to find its way in this new, uncertain environment”.

Winde said the province would stand “against the attempts to reshape the world in a paradigm of might is right… It seems that the very foundations of democracy are at risk, and we must make sure that we stand for what is right.”

Winde’s speech took place at the NG Church Hall in Beaufort West. In 2024, the DA, the governing party in the province, gained control of Beaufort West’s hung council after the party won three hotly contested by-elections.

Read more: Opposition parties call for Alan Winde to take action on education crisis and crime epidemic

Winde highlighted projects under way, including infrastructure builds and efforts to promote energy security. He also praised the Western Cape’s unemployment rate of 19.6%, the lowest in the country.

Port of Cape Town
As Daily Maverick reported in June 2024, the Port of Cape Town came last – 405th – in a ranking of ports across the world based on vessel time in port.

Winde said a “critical part” of the Presidency’s Operation Vulindlela had to be to “dramatically improve” the performance of the port and develop other ports such as Saldanha and Mossel Bay.

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“We are facilitating the establishment of a task team comprising multiple stakeholders, among them Wesgro and Transnet National Ports Authority, to develop solutions to operational challenges in and around the Port of Cape Town,” said Winde.

He confirmed the province was meeting Transport Minister Barbara Creecey to help get the port on track, but also called for private-sector collaboration.

Reflections on his first term
This is Winde’s second and final term as Western Cape premier. Addressing his first term, between 2019 and 2024, he said: “Speaker, as I stand here today, I first reflect on the last term and thinking about that last term, it was a term of difficulties, it was a term of crisis”.

This was in reference to the Covid-19 pandemic and other natural disasters that forced the world to think and adapt, and issues around budget cuts.

“It was a term that we had to step up, deal with things as we went through… I think of water shortages and droughts. I think of the pandemic, I think of floods and reactions to floods. I think of financially difficult times in the last term.”

He said that while the Government of National Unity (GNU) was beginning to address some of the challenges inherited from previous administrations, those challenges remained, and the next few years would be difficult for the country.

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Winde praised the province’s firefighters and said that looking back to February 2024, they had been fighting massive blazes at that time.

Read more: Taking stock — staggering scale of Western Cape wildfires as fire season continues to rage

Read more: Crucial lessons for future preparedness from the Western Cape fire season

“I think of this time last year, talking about those firefighters, those men and women that were out across our province fighting those massive blazes because we’re in February, and it hasn’t rained yet,” said Winde.

“And as I stand here today, exactly the same thing is happening.”

He said about ongoing fires in the Western Cape: “Our firefighters are out there in the city of Cape Town, in the Winelands, in Drakenstein, across our province, fighting blaze after blaze across our mountain ranges, fighting fires [to] make sure it doesn’t affect our citizens – and I want to say to them, thank you very much.”

“But thinking back at that time, we adapted, we innovated, and we responded to the matters at hand.”

Budgets – provincial and personal
Touching on budgets, Winde said: “While government funding is being squeezed, our residents are also struggling to make ends meet… We are all feeling the squeeze of escalating food, electricity and fuel prices.”

Provincial budget cuts had forced a shortfall in frontline services, particularly in education. As Daily Maverick has reported, there have been protests over the cutting of 2,400 teacher posts.

The Western Cape has faced a R3.8-billion budget shortfall partly because it received only 64% of the nationally negotiated wage agreement for public workers from the national government.

“Ongoing budget cuts – driven by a growing national fiscal crisis – have left us with far less funding than we need to maintain our recognised high standard of service delivery and to support our most vulnerable residents,” said Winde.

While the province is facing cuts, as in other provinces, it is also facing influxes of new residents and a growing population. This, Winde said, was placing “greater pressure than ever on our frontline services”.

“The cuts to our Equitable Share and Conditional Grants are brutal,” he said.

“The coming years will be tough as we work to rebuild our economy. Yet, even as our funding shrinks, our responsibilities grow.”

“Over the next decade, the Western Cape is expected to grow by another two million people. Of course, we welcome those who are making the Western Cape their home and are willing to contribute to our success, but we must find ways to simultaneously build our services to meet their needs,” said Winde.

“We must find alternative ways to fund the critical investments needed to secure our future. That is why our provincial treasury is exploring new funding approaches,” he said

In closing, Winde said: “In 2025, all of us must step up for ourselves and each other. Many of our officials tell me of the pressures they are under, but they often say to me, ‘We do this because we care, and we support one another.’ This reflects the dedication of our officials.”

On Thursday morning, Winde’s speech will be debated in the legislature with the premier due to respond in the afternoon. DM


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Alan Windebudget cutsCrimeEducationFiresglobal orderjobsSOPAState of the provinceSuné PayneWestern Cape
Comments
All Comments 2

Jane Crankshaw
27 February 2025 at 06:49
Just imagine if the whole country was like the Western Cape – the majority need to consider this point when next they vote! The WC is not perfect but it’s a damn side better than the rest!

Fanie Rajesh Ngabiso
27 February 2025 at 07:34
Just a simple drive on the N7 from Cape Town to Clanwilliam will remove any doubt for naysayers.

The DA is the obvious choice for a working economy and jobs for all of us.

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28/02/2025

BUSINESS
Major retailer closing stores in South Africa
Staff Writer
·27 Feb 2025

Retailer SPAR has taken a hit in the 18 weeks ended 31 January 2025, recording a 1.6% drop in turnover across its operations.

The group is also continuing to close underperforming corporate stores in its portfolio, with the plan to close 13 grocery stores in its South Rand Region.

The group described the trading environment as “challenging”, noting lower sales due to constrained consumer spending in all regions.

However, it struck a more optimistic tone, saying that is seeing positive momentum, improving operating margin levels and results from cost controls and promotional activity.

SPAR CEO Angelo Swartz said that the group’s Southern Africa margin recovery is being bolstered by the improved performance of the KZN distribution centre, the disposal of non-performing corporate stores, and enhanced operational efficiencies.

Build It recorded 7.3% top-line growth, with similar growth seen at the retail level.

Meanwhile, SPAR’s pharmaceutical division continued its strong trajectory, posting 13.3% turnover growth, driven by robust performance in both wholesale and Scriptwise sales.

However, there was a significant drag from its Irish and Swiss operations, which saw turnover decline of 6.7% and 9%, respectively (1.6% and 5.2% declines in local currency).

Looking at SPAR South Africa specifically, retail sales grew by 3.4% across the group’s 2,029 supermarket and liquor stores, with same-store sales growth of 3.0%, slightly ahead of national inflation.

“Growth was particularly robust in our lower-income grocery stores with subdued growth in our middle- and higher-end stores,” it said.

Operating losses from corporate grocery and liquor stores were reduced during the period due to improved performance and the closure of non-performing stores.

SPAR’s on-demand shopping platform, SPAR2U, delivered solid growth in order volumes of 285% compared to the prior comparative period.

28/02/2025

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Energy
Cape Town seals R2.9 billion electricity deal
Bloomberg • 26 February 2025

Cape Town is set to accelerate its switch to green energy and limit reliance on erratic supply from the state power utility after winning a €150 million (R2.9 billion) loan from Germany’s KFW Development Bank.

The loan, which was agreed in December and will be announced this week at a ceremonial signing, will be used to bolster the power grid of South Africa’s second-biggest city to allow the transmission of more renewable energy, the bank said.

It could also be used to help the municipality generate more of its own power, it added.

“The purpose of the investment is to improve the grid infrastructure of Cape Town to allow for the future integration of more renewable energy and an increase of grid-connected households,” KFW said in an emailed response to questions.

The loan comes as cities in South Africa are pushing to reduce their reliance on the state-owned utility, Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd., because of surging electricity prices and power cuts.

This week, the country was hit with its worst rolling blackouts in almost a year after units at some of Eskom’s coal-fired power plants tripped.

While feasibility studies are needed to determine how the money will be used, some of it could be earmarked for projects including revamping a hydro-power facility and building a solar plant, said Kadri Nassiep, Cape Town’s executive director of energy and climate change.

KFW declined to reveal the duration of the loan or the interest rate that will be charged.

Nassiep has previously said that Cape Town, a city of four million people, could double the size of its 180 MW Steenbras hydropower plant. The city has held tenders for the provision of power from private producers.

KFW has previously lent money to Cape T

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