CONSTANTIA | WYNBERG
TUESDAY 18 February 2020 | Tel: 021 910 6500 | Email: post@peoplespost.co.za | Website: www.peoplespost.co.za
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Men and women of steel came from far and wide, on Saturday 15 February, to show what they’re made of at the first Southern Peninsula Strong Man and Woman Challenge. The competition was held at Longbeach Mall in Sun Valley. “We wanted to bring awareness of the sport to the southern peninsula, as we normally host most of the competitions in the northern suburbs,” said Andre Engelbrecht, one of the organisers. The winners of the competition in the amateur category were Faith Totiyana and Jaco Schoonwinkel. The winners in the novice category were Lientjie Fourie and Reinu Kleyn. The next competition will be held on Saturday 21 March at Soneike Mall. Pictured is Nico Opperman who came from Gauteng to compete. PHOTO: RACINE ED-
Showing their gains
WARDES
WYNBERG
Efforts to end dumping NETTALIE VILJOEN
A
lthough inroads have been made in curbing illegal dumping since the launch of mayor Dan Plato’s Keep Cape Town Clean campaign in March last year, the war is far from over. On Thursday 6 February, Plato restarted his campaign in Fisantekraal to educate communities about the importance of keeping neighbourhoods clean. He said while he was glad about organisations and residents who carried out clean-ups in communities, he had noticed that some sites had returned to a filthy state. “I encourage residents to not litter and also urge members of the public to report ille-
gal dumping when they see it. Our solid waste staff work hard to keep areas clean, but we also need your support,” Plato said. The department of solid waste spends R340 million per annum removing illegal dumping throughout the city. Since July last year, the Wynberg Improvement District (WID) – in partnership with the City of Cape Town and its solid waste law enforcement department – has conducted two awareness campaigns in the Wynberg CBD. “Several businesses have been issued with compliance notices. Although matters are improving, dumping remains a problem that we continue to address,” says Gene Lohrentz, CEO of Geocentric – the management company of WID. In the past seven months, WID
has recorded 124 incidents of illegal dumping. In Lohrentz’s experience, offenders seem to target cul-de-sac, alleyways and areas close to and on the railway corridor. Public and private open land also end up being impromptu dumping sites. He says the extent of the refuse dumped ranges from just a few cardboard boxes and bags of household garbage to much larger quantities. “Dumping is, in principle, the same as illegal graffiti ‘tagging’ – if you leave it there for longer than 12 to 24 hours it sends a signal that it is ‘okay’ to dump more rubbish there. Our motto is to remove all illegal dumping as soon as possible to prevent it from becoming an ‘invitation’ to others to dump litter
at the same spot,” he says. Lohrentz claims businesses that do not follow the by-laws and policies of the City in terms of waste management are among the main offenders. According to the City’s bylaws, every business and property must have a waste management process – more so businesses that must either make use of the City-provided services and have a private service provider to perform waste removal from their premises. “We find many businesses – large and small – either have no or inadequate waste management facilities, including the number of wheelie bins or waste containers that can adequately serve their needs.”. V Continued on page 2.
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2 NEWS
PEOPLE'S POST | CONSTANTIA | WYNBERG Tuesday, 18 February 2020
SIMON’S TOWN
African penguin rangers on guard RACINE EDWARDES @RaeEdwardes
W People's Post is published by WP Media, a subsidiary of Media24. CONSTANTIA / WYNBERG 25 142 copies distributed Tuesdays to the following areas: Wynberg, Diep River, Plumstead, Southfield, Constantia, Hout Bay, Llandudno, Tierboskloof, Bergvliet, Dennendal, Dreyersdal, Heathfield, Kirstenhof, Meadowridge, Mountainview and Tokai. OTHER EDITIONS People's Post also has the following nine standalone editions: Woodstock / Maitland (14 825) Mitchell's Plain (69 503) Retreat (19 493) Grassy Park (18 418) Lansdowne (18 225) False Bay (24 824) Claremont / Rondebosch (27 756) Atlantic Seaboard / City (20 454) Athlone (29 825) Total print order: 268 465 WHOM TO CONTACT EDITOR: Thulani Magazi Email: Thulani@media24.com REPORTER: Nettalie Viljoen Email: Nettalie.Viljoen@media24.com SALES MANAGER: Shafiek Braaf Tel: 021 910 6615 Email: Shafiek.braaf@peoplespost.co.za MAIN BODY ADVERTISING: Michael Roberts Tel: 021 910 6526 E-mail: michael.roberts@media24.com CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING: 087 353 1328 Email: classifieds@peoplespost.co.za
hile the tourist-attracting Simon’s Town African penguin population may be one of the most stable at present, the aquatic bird is still under huge threat of extinction with less than 3% of its original population remaining. Marian Nieuwoudt, the City’s Mayco member for spatial planning and environment, says the African penguin population has been steadily declining, with only 1 000 breeding pairs left on the Simon’s Town coastline. “They are listed as endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).” Contributing to the decline are a number of factors, including reduced food sources due to overfishing, habitat destruction, pollution, oil spills and chronic oiling, disturbances, and the birds’ introduced and natural predators. Tourists and locals looking to have a moment with the birds also affect their habits and can prevent them from reproducing. “Penguins are susceptible to disturbance, especially during breeding. The peak season is January to March and molting season is from October to December. These seasons
FROM PAGE 1 As a result, he says, waste is dumped on the street – usually late at night or early in the morning – with the expectation that it will be collected. As an additional top-up to the services provided by the City, WID cleaning staff members clean the streets and sidewalks. They also empty overflowing green street litter bins. The filled bags (WID uses yellow
generally overlap with the peak tourism seasons in Cape Town,” explains Nieuwoudt “Penguins in molt are unable to go to sea for about 30 days as they replace their feathers. At this time, if they are disturbed and forced into the water, they are at risk of dying from exposure.” In addition, disturbances can prevent the penguins from returning to their nests, affecting the survival of their eggs or chicks as they become susceptible to attacks from predators. According to Nieuwoudt, the City of Cape Town and Table Mountain National Park (TMNP) have embarked on a project to manage the African penguin population in a holistic manner in Simon’s Town. “To achieve this, we have partnered with the Southern African Foundation for the Conservation of Coastal Birds (Sanccob) and the Cape Town Environmental Education Trust (CTEET) to employ penguin rangers,” she says. The rangers monitor the penguins daily; rescue sick or injured birds, eggs or chicks, stabilising them to be transported to the Sanccob rehabilitation facility in Table View; and remove penguins from areas where they may be at risk, for example, Main Road.
According to the City’s records, in 2018 Sanccob had an 85% success rate in rehabilitating and returning birds to the wild. This year they have started a new project with the Dyer Island Conservation Trust, the Institute for Maritime Technology (IMT) and their project partners to install and test new artificial nest boxes. “Over the next few years, the penguin rangers will monitor these boxes and record the breeding success rate of penguins utilising the boxes.” Nieuwoudt offers visitors to Boulders Beach some tips to help conserve the African penguin population: . Visitors, who approach birds too closely, will see them turning their heads. What is often associated with “cuteness”, is, in fact, a sign of distress. . Visitors should be respectful to the penguins’ territories and keep their distance at all times. Taking a selfie with a penguin is not cool. . Residents should keep their dogs on a leash and should respect areas were dogs are not permitted. . Be a responsible visitor and tread lightly in areas penguins inhabit. V Visitors who wish to assist with penguin conservation projects can donate to Sanccob or volunteer at its seabird rehabilitation centre.
bags) are stacked at strategic locations for pick-up. “We have found that these locations become an invitation for others to ‘add’ their litter to the heap or for bin-scratchers to tear open the bags,” Lohrentz says. To prevent this, WID now collects all these bags off the streets, three times per day. The solid waste department then collects the bags from WID. All business and property owners are
urged to make sure they have a proper waste management plan in place and that they responsibly dispose of their waste. “This includes waste minimisation through recycling, having enough wheelie bins for the amount of waste you generate and if your bins are broken or have gone missing, you can report this to the City and secure new or additional bins,” he says. Liz Brunette, councillor for ward 62, says refuse dumped illegally degrades residential areas. She says she receives about two to three complaints via email per month. However, she says it is best if residents log a service request directly. “I encourage residents to log service requests for almost everything,” says Brunette. Faults and service requests can be reported using the following options: . The City’s service requests website www.eservices1.capetown.gov.za . Email contactUS@capetown.gov.za; . SMS 31373 (no more than 160 characters); or . The City’s general call centre on 086 010 3089. According to a statement released by the City, vehicles used in illegal dumping can be confiscated and a release fee of nearly R16 000 will be charged, over-and-above the fines issued for dumping. Residents who have a culprit’s vehicle registration number or can identify him or her, can call 021 400 6157 or email solidwaste.bylaw@capetown.gov.za. V To report illegal dumping, call 0860 103 089.
PRESS CODE, CORRECTIONS People's Post subscribes to the South African Press Code and we are committed to journalism that is honest, accurate, fair and balanced. Under our editorial policy, we invite readers to comment on the newspaper's content and we correct significant errors as soon as possible. Please send information to the news editor at Thulani@media24.com or phone 021 910 6500. Alternately, please contact the Ombudsman of Media24's Community Press, George Claassen at george.claassen@media24.com or 083 543 2471. Complaints can also be sent to the SA Press Ombudsman on telephone 021 851 3232 or via email khanyim@ombudsman.org.za or johanr@ombudsman.org.za WID cleaning staff members clean the streets and sidewalks in Main Road, Wynberg. X1PUFET1-QK160118
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NEWS 3
PEOPLE'S POST | CONSTANTIA | WYNBERG Tuesday, 18 February 2020
HOUT BAY
Fisherwomen cry foul NETTALIE VILJOEN
W
hile last year’s announcement by the minister of agriculture, forestry and fisheries, Barbara Creecy – that small-scale fishing rights would be allocated by December 2019 – was good news for the Hangberg fishers who had qualified, for others it started a countdown that will end in them losing their interim relief fishing rights. For the past 13 years, the national department of agriculture, forestry and fisheries (Daff) has granted interim fishing rights to just over 90 people living in Hangberg while the process to implement small-scale fishing rights were being refined. Most of the people who were on the interim relief list did not qualify for small-scale fishing rights. According to Beatrice Yon, the chair of the First Indigenous Women group in Hangberg, of the 22 women who were on the interim relief list, not one of them were granted small-scale fishing rights. This season – the 14th – interim fishing rights and small scale fishing rights are running concurrently but once the small-scale fishing rights are fully implemented in the Western Cape, interim relief will fall away. When this happens, many families will be left without an income. Yon says despite the devastating financial blow, it’s also a huge setback for transformation in the industry. “For the past 13 years, we have fought for our rights as women in the fishing industry and to take it forward. Now the role we played all these years is not even being recognised.” The small-scale fisheries policy places emphasis on the need to recognise traditional fishers according to an agreed upon set of criteria. In addition, it also recognises and
Hout Bay Harbour. PHOTO: DALE STAPLES
promotes the inclusion of women, youth and people living with disability. According to Albi Modise, chief director of communications at Daff, of the fishers listed on the 2019/2020 small scale fishing rights list for Hangberg, 10 are women. Yon says she only knows of four women on the Hangberg list. “Of them, none were on the interim relief list and one, Vicky Holloway, has passed away,” she says. Yon claims that at various meetings through the years, Daff representatives told the women on the interim relief list they would automatically move to the small-scale list once it had been implemented. Modise, however, says this is not so. “According to the amended Marine Living Resources Act (MLRA) and the promulgated regulations, a small-scale fisher has to be verified and declared as such based on the legal framework. Hence, no individual can automatically become a small-scale fisher without being declared through the legally prescribed process,” he says. The verification process, which the fisher-
ies branch conducted during 2018, has been widely criticised by small-scale fishers throughout the Western Cape. Yon claims she was appointed as a verifier but on the day when the process took place, she was told to leave by a Daff official. “The women fishers were not fairly represented,” she claims. Modise says steps were taken to ensure the verification process was fair. “The department appointed an independent service provider to conduct the registration and verification process, with Daff providing an oversight role at every registration station.” He says Daff officials were stationed in every community during the registration and appeals period to assist applicants with the process and that various guiding documents were developed. Catch-all stations were also set up for any person who would have missed the day Daff visited his or her community. “The provisional list of successful smallscale fishers was signed off by the deputy
director-general as the delegated authority and the final list was signed off by the minister as the delegated authority in terms of the Act,” says Modise. Creecy instructed the department to implement an independent audit into the verification process in October last year. The purpose of the audit was to establish who was included and who was excluded from the Western Cape small-scale fishers; what verification process was followed; whether this process was consistently applied and whether the minister must take remedial action with regards to the existing list. “The draft audit report is in the process of being signed off for the minister’s consideration,” says Modise. At the Hout Bay Fisheries Stakeholders meeting last year (People’s Post, “Fishers voices heard, 15 October 2019), Creecy said the application process would be reopened in 2021. In the meantime, Modise said people who did not meet the five qualifying criteria, will have an opportunity to form part of the smallscale fishing cooperatives as employees or to be included into the cooperative once the process for cooperatives to take in new members is open.
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4 NEWS
PEOPLE'S POST | CONSTANTIA | WYNBERG Tuesday, 18 February 2020
WYNBERG EAST
Association digs in heels NETTALIE VILJOEN
W
ynberg East Civic Association’s (Weca) demand for copies of documentation pertaining to the administration of the Wynberg Youth Centre has gone unanswered. On Thursday 30 January, representatives of Weca hand-delivered copies of a letter to the board members of the nonprofit organisation (NPO) responsible for the management of the youth centre in Innis Road. In the letter, Weca asked for copies of the minutes of all the Wynberg Youth Centre’s annual general meetings and attendance registers since 2013; copies of the audited financial statements since 2013; a copy of the decision to sell the Wynberg Youth Centre and the attendance register of those who were present; as well as a list of all the members of the NPO to be handed over within seven days. Yunus Karriem, acting chair of Weca, says the letter followed unsuccessful attempts to engage with the board after the property was listed for sale online at the beginning of January. “This decision (to sell the youth centre) is not in the best interests of the community of Wynberg,” says Karriem. He says all of these documents fall in the public domain. “We are in the process of engaging with attorneys to determine the cost of legally pursuing the matter. Funds to cover legal costs will have to be raised.” Weca was given the mandate to oppose the sale at a community meeting held at Vigilance hall on Sunday 12 January. Since then, the Wynberg Youth Centre’s registration as an NPO has been flagged as under investigation by the national department of social development’s NPO directorate monitoring and compliance department. According to the department, the NPO has not submitted reports or audited financial statements since 2016 (“NPO under investigation”, People’s Post, 21 January). Furthermore, Karriem claims, it appears the board of management of the NPO have not complied with its constitution. He refers to point 17.2 in the NPO’s constitution which reads: “If upon dissolution of the Society, there remain any assets whatsoever after the satisfaction of all its debts and liabilities, such assets shall not be paid to or distributed among its members but
The Wynberg East Civic Association opposes the sale of Wynberg Youth Centre in Innis Road. PHOTO: NETTALIE shall be given to such other organisations authorised in terms of the Fundraising Act 1978 to collect contributions from the public welfare organisations preferably having similar objectives.” In an email sent to the national minister of social development (DSD) Lindiwe Zulu on Friday 24 January, Colin Arendse – a coopted member of Weca and a paralegal – asked the legal division of DSD to intervene by authorising an interim committee of ingood-standing residents of Wynberg to take over the day-to-day affairs of the NPO. At the time of going to print, DSD had not yet responded to Arendse’s email. Should Weca’s efforts to stop the sale bear fruit, Karriem hopes a new interim committee would breathe life back into the centre. Karriem (44) has been a resident of Wynberg East since birth. “I used to walk past the youth centre everyday on my way to Wittebome High School. In all that time, nothing changed; there wasn’t any new developments, no new brickwork, nothing.” People Post sent an email to the chair of the NPO, Joan Reagon, and called but she wasn’t available for comment. In a previous People’s Post report, Reagon had said they had no choice but to sell the property as the cost of maintaining the building far exceeded its income. Abubakr Petersen of Kyokushin Karate has been a tenant at the centre since 2012.
VILJOEN
In 2014, he registered an NPO, the Tsori Kyokushin Karate Association, to raise funds for his students. “My students often qualify for Western Province, national and even international tournaments but some can’t even afford the class fees or the uniforms. The youth centre’s hall was not in a good condition so I approached its board, suggesting we raise funds in conjunction. They looked at me and said, ‘No’,” he claims. In 2017, Petersen claims he again offered to help. “I told them, ‘Tell me what to do. I can paint, I can do the floors, I can replace the windows’.” He says his offer was turned down. “I eventually decided there was no point in keeping the NPO alive to assist the youth centre and I let it go dormant.” In May 2019, the tenants received a letter from the board, informing them the NPO was struggling and that the youth centre would be put up for sale. “As tenants, we wrote a letter to the board, offering our services, be it fundraising or whatever. We requested a meeting to discuss how we could help and was told we could meet in two weeks, but the meeting kept on being postponed,” says Petersen. He claims six months later, they were finally told the board wasn’t interested. “The chair is an elderly lady, so I even offered to pick her up if she couldn’t drive (to attend the meeting with the tenants). But she was adamant; she just wanted to sell.”
Facility to create and nurture entrepreneurs The launch of the Schools Entrepreneurial Programme (SEP) at Wynberg Boys’ High School (WBHS) last week comes hot on the heels of the official opening of phase 1 of the school’s new Engineering and Design Faculty. SEP, developed in partnership with EDGE Learning Media, will see learners participate in entrepreneurial studies as part of a fixed curriculum. Established in 2006, Edge Learning Media creates and delivers both print and digital learning experiences within the professional, occupational and educational sector. As part of its corporate social responsibility, Edge Learning Media took on the curriculum development and subsequent software development of SEP, at no cost to the school. Andrew Hibling, CEO of the company and an alumnus of WBHS, says the company aims to roll out the not-for-profit corporate social responsibility initiative at other schools. “Our success as a company has been as a result of working with amazing clients and great staff, and we are delighted to be able to turn this success into partnering for future generations,” he says. The new programme, housed in the WBHS’s Engineering and Design Faculty, came about as a result of Hibling visiting and collaborating with Greg Scott, the building’s architect, and Ben Thompson, head of academics for the school. Hibling identified that, in addition to the technical skills being taught at the fa-
cility, there was a need for empowering the learners with entrepreneurial skills. Learners participating in the programme will be exposed to real-life scenarios and opportunities to engage an entrepreneurial spirit. “We chose a blended approach, combining online learning with engagement in the classroom. The learning design is based on a collaborative constructive pedagogy or learning methodology, to build meaning, personally, and then to confirm that meaning collaboratively,” Hibling says. According to Thompson, enhancing the technical and design skill set with the entrepreneurship curriculum made perfect sense. “Our learners are being prepared for a future, that will see them enter further ed-
ucation and training, ultimately going on to be the employers of the future, through these essential skills.” The full programme consists of 42 modules over two years. Learners are taken through five learning activities per module, per week. Two of those learning activities are undertaken at school and three of those activities are undertaken at home. The course is for Grade 10 and Grade 11 learners, meaning the learners will do 21 topics per year. Grade 11 topics build onto the Grade 10 topics covered. Learners who complete the programme will receive a certificate of completion. Jan de Waal, principal of the school, says the launch of SEP forms part of the school’s commitment to preparing their learners for the future. “Providing great educational opportunities is the bedrock for the success of our country. Importantly, we know that we are going to need entrepreneurs to achieve this success and it is to this end that we are delighted to have the programme as part of our learners’ experience,” says de Waal.
WBHS learners Liam Zamanjah, Ethan Taylor and Hyeonwoo Lee with teacher Stephan Pretorius. PHOTO: PETER CATZAVELOS
PEOPLE'S POST | CONSTANTIA | WYNBERG Tuesday, 18 February 2020
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6 NEWS
PEOPLE'S POST | CONSTANTIA | WYNBERG Tuesday, 18 February 2020
TOKAI
Author shares power of truth NETTALIE VILJOEN
R
ecovery is sobriety and taking action, says Desiree-Anne Martin, author of We Don’t Talk About It, Ever. “Just because you are sober doesn’t mean it’s all going to be sunshine and roses. You take all your baggage with you into recovery.” Desiree-Anne, who has been sober for 15 years, gave a talk on her memoir at the Tokai Public Library on Thursday 13 February. The addictions and general counsellor says once she got sober
she realised she needed to work on herself. “I had to accept and address my mental health issues,” she says. Desiree-Anne is now on a mission to destigmatise addiction, abuse and mental health concerns. “It is preventing people from getting the help they need. They are afraid of the stigma, afraid of being judged, being vulnerable.” She says this is the reason why she wrote the book. “I felt compelled to tell the truth, to break the legacy of secret keeping.” Born in Cape Town, Desiree-
Anne grew up in a family were she was taught that “we don’t talk about it, ever”. In her book she recounts her childhood abuse, multiple addictions and toxic relationships. Her experiences resulted in her getting caught in a downward spiral of drug abuse. She says there were many psychiatric ward admissions, time spent in holding cells and being dragged to meetings. Even a threestorey drop through the window of her mom’s flat after an escape plan went wrong. Miraculously, she
was unharmed. “My motto was ‘I have to use’. And then when I couldn’t lie, cheat, steal or pawn my way to scoring drugs any longer, I became a sex worker. For me it was all I had left to bargain with. It made perfect sense.” Desiree-Anne says the mountain of shame that this buried her under drove the cycle of addiction. “But there is hope, always. I was given an opportunity by my mother to go to a treatment centre.” There she learnt the power of speaking the truth.
Author Desiree-Anne Martin reads the prologue from her book “We Don’t Talk About It, Ever” at Tokai Library. PHOTO: NETTALIE VILJOEN
SPORT 7
PEOPLE'S POST | CONSTANTIA | WYNBERG Tuesday, 18 February 2020
Falcons, Phillies share spoils NOORE NACERODIEN
K
enfac Phillies and Falcons shared the spoils in their Cape Town Softball Association women’s Super League game played at the Turfhall Softball Stadium in Belthorn Estate, on Saturday 15 February. Falcons were quick out of the starting blocks, scoring four runs in their first turn at bat. Young Tonique White was again in the forefront with two scattered singles and a sacrifice bunt. Phillies slowly clawed their way back to score single runs in three of their first four turns at bat with Falcons adding a further single run in the fourth innings. Phillies tied the score in the bottom of the sixth innings at 5-5. Westridge Yankees scored six runs in their first turn at bat against lowly Tantasport to set the trend for an easy day in the park. Yankees took 14 hits off Roxanne Albertyn and eventually ran out 13-3 run-ahead rule winners. Yankees’ offense was led by Nicole Williams and Megan Cable both batting 2-3. Nuraan Williams and Nicole Kannemeyer waded in with a three-base hit each. Results: Women: Super League: Heideveld Yankees 0, Lavender Hill 7; Tantasport 3, Westridge Yankees 13; Falcons 5, Kenfac Phillies 5 Major League: Kuils River Cougars 5, Table View Tornados 2; Belhar Dolphins 4, Falcons 12; Lavender Hill 0, Westridge Yankees 7 First League: Battswood 7, Khayelitsha Eagles 9; Blackheath 8, Lavender Hill 14; Panthers 5, St Martins 13; Glenthorn A’s 6, Crusaders 1 Second League: Kenfac Phillies 4, Tantasport 4; Table View Tornados 7, Battswood 0; Silvertree Titans 10, Devonshire Rovers 12 Third League: Strandfontein Mets 11, Thistles 11; Blackheath 7, Khayelitsha Superstars 0; Heideveld Yankees 3, Westridge Yankees 7; Table View Tornados 2, St Augustine’s 12; Stealers 12, Normies 14
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Primrose on promotion hunt GOOSAIN ABRAHAMS
P
rimrose is back in the hunt for promotion following the shock defeat by Rylands at the hands of Tygerberg by 47 runs in Western Province Cricket Association’s First Division A competition on Saturday 15 February. A century by the promising Quasim Salie (120) enabled Primrose to post the highest score this season with a mammoth 297/8 against the hapless Gugulethu. In reply, Gugs were skittled for 64 with the burly Justin Pringle (5/31) doing most of the damage for the Roses. Tygerberg gave an improved performance scoring 204/6 with Nabeel Abrahams top scoring with a score of 51 runs. Rylands lost wickets at regular intervals in their response, eventually being dismissed for 157 with Abrahams (4/40) completing a fine performance with both bat and ball. Kraaifontein is also in the running with an easy 8-wicket win over a depleted United side. While Milnerton completed the double over Ottoman with a 62-run win. Results: Premier League: Rondebosch beat WPCC by 174 runs Rondebosch 308/4 (Sean Hendriek 137, Grant Edmeades 106) WPCC 134 (Lehan Botha 66, Gavin Kaplan 32; Alistair Gray 4/7, Wesley Bedja 4/36) Durbanville beat Victoria by 3 wickets Victoria 155 (Robert van der Ross 89; JT Schoeman 3/16, Nathan Swartz 3/23, Jaco Castle 2/24). Durbanville 157/7 (Byron Boshoff 52*, Jean Marais 34, Tashwin Lukas 22*; Alistair Snowden 4/29, Byron Wyngard 2/25). Claremont beat UCT by 132 runs Claremont 271/6 (Brian Edwards 93, Mark Hendricks 76, Dale Stevens 38; Matthew Benning 4/50) UCT 139 (Gareth Beavan 26; Gavin Dickenson 3/29, Matthew Elsworth 2/14, Marvin Williams 2/34) Cape Town beat UWC by 113 runs Cape Town 214/5 (Matthew Goles 68, William Hantam 53, Clint Botha 37; Kyle Pluke 2/39) UWC 101 (Quinton Dreyer 35; Nicholas Scott 4/12, Geoff Dods 4/18) Strandfontein beat Bellville by 8 wickets Bellville 65 (Mpilo Njoloza 39; Rostill Wessels 4/20, Saliegh Jaffer 3/13 Strandfontein 66/2 (Justin Gilliland 25*) First Division A: Milnerton beat Ottoman by 62 runs Milnerton 207/9 (Damian Crowley 52, Dillon Smit 29, Justin du Toit 28, Grant Simon
23, Daniel Crowley 21; Nadir Samaai 3/41, Sadick Davids 2/29, Mujahid Isaacs 2/33). Ottoman 145 (Mujahid Isaacs 47, Nadir Samaai 31; Zarin Hardenberg 3/36, Damian Crowley 2/13, Malcolm Cloete 2/15, Ryan Milne 2/32). Tygerberg beat Rylands by 47 runs. Tygerberg 204/6 (Nabeel Abrahams 51, Curtley Louw 48, Jancan Adams 35*, Ronald Martin 31; Faheem Bedford 3/38). Rylands 157 (Faheem Bedford 33, Rushdi Jappie 30, Umar Anthony 27; Nabeel Abra-
hams 4/40, Aython Adams 3/22, Nathan October 2/18). United beat Kraaifontein by 8 wickets. United 57 (Craig Ephraim 4/11, Danie Bothma 3/34). Kraaifontein 59/2 (Robin Petersen 27). Primrose beat Gugulethu by 233 runs Primrose 297/8 (Quasim Salie 120, Zaeem Najaar 42, Zain Allie 42, Justin Pringle 24; Anele Mjezu 4/45). Gugulethu 64 (Mthwekhaya Nabe 22; Justin Pringle 5/31, Suhail Fortuin 3/4).
First Division B: Pinelands beat Glamorgan by 113 runs Pinelands 127(Bashier Vallie 69; Mikhail Barlow 6/15, Shaheed Benjamin 3/24) Glamorgan 113 (Byron Hendricks 24, Jonathan Schwerin 3/31, Mark Temple 2/16, Saait Govender 2/17) Bonteheuwel beat Avendale by 2 wickets Avendale 126 (Dylan Solomons 47; Clinton Barros 3/17, Brandon Canem 4/21 Bonteheuwel 128/8 (Marc Petersen 25, Clinton Barros 22; Keenan Mitchell 4/31)
William Hantam of Cape Town CC (left) plays a shot during their Western Province Cricket Association Premier League 50-over match against UWC at Boon Wallace Oval in Plumstead on Saturday 15 February. Hantam would go onto score 53 as CTCC reached 214/5 before bowling UWC out for 101 to record a 113-run victory. PHOTO: PETER HEEGER /GALLO IMAGES
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