It’s Monday 22 February 2021, and this is The South African’s Daily News Wrap – with the latest news you really need to know.
Following the ArcelorMittal blast, the EFF wants the company to be nationalised and its operations to be put under the custodianship of the state.
The lesser-spotted Level 2 of lockdown could come into force ‘within the next two weeks’, as PWC analysts forecast lighter restrictions for March.
Workers on the Sunday shift were given an almighty scare, when a plane smashed into the roof of their warehouse in Alberton, near Johannesburg.
Sources have informed the South African that the amaBhaca leader, Thandisizwe Diko, was being treated for pancreatitis related complications on Sunday.
While President Cyril Ramaphosa does not mention Jacob Zuma by name, he makes mention of the former president’s utterances over the past week
It’s Monday 22 February 2021, and this is The South African’s Daily News Wrap – with the latest news you really need to know.
The release of the 2020 National Senior Certificate (NSC) exam results follows what has been an undoubtedly tough academic year for pupils, due to the COVID-19 pandemic
The circumstances surrounding Shepherd Bushiri’s daughters and mother-in-law being stopped from leaving Malawi remain unclear at this point
The wait for the matric class of 2020 is almost over as Angie Motshekga will announce the overall pass rate, after a year which saw limited classroom time
We’ve got all the major headlines for Monday 25 February. Jacob Zuma won’t leave the news cycle, and possible routes out of lockdown have surfaced.
A forecast published by PWC anticipates that South Africa *may* return to Level 5 lockdown restrictions this winter, before getting to Level 1 – and beyond.
Jacob Zuma has spilt the tea on Sunday, without putting the kettle on. The former president has had his say on the fractious atmosphere in SA’s Parliament.
A spate of near-fatal incidents off the Cape Town coast has put the NSRI on full alert, and visitors have been told to avoid the Bos 400 shipwreck.
Some extraordinary claims were made in Parliament this week, as SANDF representatives said they were responding to COVID-19 ‘as a chemical attack’.
Get in there: Lay’s has officially confirmed that the Salt and Vinegar flavour chips are back on sale in South Africa, after being absent for a year.
Officials in Gauteng are set to clampdown on alcohol abuse, by introducing new restrictions that will come into force after lockdown has ended.
There’s been an awful lot of noise in Cape Town on Sunday morning – and locals are wondering why, exactly, military jets are circling the city.
Catch her if you can: Despite being spotted in Bloemfontein over the weekend, ConCourt officials are having a hard time locating Bathabile Dlamini.
There reportedly two occupants in the vehicle.
Seven of the ten police stations with the highest reported murders in the country are located in the Western Cape.
“These boys were going to be our future”.
No arrests have been made at this stage.
The Zimbabwe High Court barred Econet Wireless from sending unsolicited COVID-19 texts.
Four suspects accused of killing 50-year-old Siyabonga Mbobo in 2016 were given life sentences this week.