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MONDAY - 24 JULY 2023 DAY 5

MONDAY - 24 JULY 2023 DAY 5

by Mr V DLAMINI -
Number of replies: 0

RHS ESSENTIAL

This term, we will discuss the qualities of highly successful teenagers. Read the posts daily and attempt to engage with the trait for the day. After all, the aim of your education is to guarantee your success in the future.

Success Quality 3: LOVE OF READING

Research indicates that the most important thing parents can do to ensure their children’s success in school is to nurture a love of reading. This process begins while your child is still an infant. Although a baby may not understand the story at this young age, he will quickly learn to enjoy the act of cuddling together and hearing his parent’s voices read aloud every day. Now that you are a teenager, you can keep books at various places in your home to make reading easier. Start by reading easy and short passages. Reading is a habit that must be developed. Start reading today!

Today's Birthdays:

Lethabo Kortjass (Grade 9)
Zinhle Langa (Grade 12)
Nthabeleng Madiba (Grade 11)
Boikanyo Mkhize (Grade 9)
Tshegofatso Mkhize (Grade 8)
Ofentse Mmopo (Grade 8)
Tshimologo Shoai (Grade 8)
Thobile Sibiya (Grade 12)

history

2007Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, the final book in J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter series, was released.

1983: The world's lowest recorded temperature, −128.6 °F (−89.2 °C), was measured at Vostok Station, Antarctica.

1081Umkhonto We Sizwe, military wing of the ANC, claims responsibility for power station blast

1967Albert John Luthuli, president of the African National Congress (1952–60) and the first African to be awarded a Nobel Prize for Peace (1960), died after being struck by a train.

1901Three cases of Buboinic plague are reported in Cape Town

1798Napoleon's Army of Egypt used a new military tactic, the massive divisional square, to defeat the Egyptian forces of Murād Bey this day in 1798 at the Battle of the Pyramids during Napoleon's Egyptian campaign.


news

Ramaphosa ally Sisisi Tolashe beats Bathabile Dlamini to be elected as ANCWL president

Ramaphosa ally Sisisi Tolashe beats Bathabile Dlamini to be elected as ANCWL president

Bathabile Dlamini failed to garner enough support to be re-elected as ANC Women’s League president, leaving Sisisi Tolashe and her slate to win in a clean sweep.

The ANC Women’s League conference elected new leadership at the weekend which saw Sisisi Tolashe take over the reins. The league’s former leader Bathabile Dlamini, who once enjoyed significant support from members, managed to get only 170 votes.
The first sign of Dlamini’s demise was her obvious non-alignment with ANC President Cyril Ramaphosa’s faction in the party, which gave Tolashe, who is also a deputy minister in the Presidency, the upper hand.


Tolashe was elected with 1,756 votes from the 2,962 delegates gathered at the conference, which was held at Nasrec, Johannesburg.
Another sign was when Dlamini’s close allies, such as Sisi Ntombela, decided to pull out of the leadership race at the 11th hour. Ntombela previously served as Dlamini’s deputy in the ANCWL and was also vying for re-election.
Dlamini was also approached by Thembeka Mchunu, who is seen as one of Ramaphosa’s allies, and her lobbyists at the last minute in an effort to persuade her to withdraw from the contest and join forces to take on Tolashe instead.


This followed a decision by KwaZulu-Natal branch delegates who decided to ditch Dlamini and vote for Mchunu. It dealt a blow to Dlamini’s campaign as KwaZulu-Natal had the highest numbers, with 588 delegates, followed by Limpopo and the Eastern Cape.
They were not able to broker the deal, which could have seen Tolashe facing stronger opposition.
The new ANCWL leadership elected at the conference also comprises Deputy President Lungi Gcabashe, Secretary-General Nokuthula Nqaba, Deputy Secretary-General Dina Pule and Treasurer-General Maqueen Letsoha-Mathae.
Pule was the only candidate who was nominated from the floor. She comes back to the forefront of politics years after she was axed as communications minister, which was prompted by her involvement in the ICT Indaba scandal in 2012.
Speaking after the announcement of the new ANCWL leadership on Sunday, Ramaphosa encouraged the league to fiercely champion the rights of women and to never allow men in the party to impose themselves on their affairs.


“Young women must be able to stay in school, proceed to higher education and study what they want. Young women should participate equally in any industry they want. You as the ANCWL must make sure that women in this country have access to financial resources. We must be promoting that there must be accessibility for women to occupy higher-paying jobs and get top positions,” he said.
On Sunday evening, the league was yet to elect 40 additional members to its National Executive Committee. The results are likely to be announced on Monday.


Four facts about Sisisi Tolashe


  • She is from the small town of Komani, Kwa Mlungisi township, in Eastern Cape and started her activism as a member of the Congress of South African Students. She was detained without trial for five years for her work as an anti-apartheid activist.
  • She previously served as the ANCWL Eastern Cape provincial chair and secretary and later as secretary-general of the national ANCWL.
  • She was first sworn in as an MP in 2016 and is the minister in the Presidency responsible for women, youth and persons with disabilities.