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  • DURBAN - 23 January 2008 - Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) leader Mangosuthu Buthelezi, party chairperson Zanele Magwaza and the party's secretary general Musa Zondi attend the launch of the party's Purpose, Vision and Values Programme..Picture: Giordano Stolley/Allied Picture Press
    20080123gs_12958.jpg
  • DURBAN - 4 May 2016 - Nazir Alli, the chief executive of the South African National Road Agency Limited (Sanral) speaks at a business breakfast in Durban, where he informs businessmen attending that the South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province will not see the controversial electronic tolling systtem implemented unless the numbers of vehicles in the province increase dramatically. Commonly known as e-tolls, the system was implemented in Gauteng Province and there has been much opposition, including unsuccessful court challenges. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160504gs_8839_Nazir_Alli.jpg
  • DURBAN - 4 May 2016 - Nazir Alli, the chief executive of the South African National Road Agency Limited (Sanral) speaks at a business breakfast in Durban, where he informs businessmen attending that the South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province will not see the controversial electronic tolling systtem implemented unless the numbers of vehicles in the province increase dramatically. Commonly known as e-tolls, the system was implemented in Gauteng Province and there has been much opposition, including unsuccessful court challenges. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160504gs_8838_Nazir_Alli.jpg
  • DURBAN - 4 May 2016 - Nazir Alli, the chief executive of the South African National Road Agency Limited (Sanral) speaks at a business breakfast in Durban, where he informs businessmen attending that the South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province will not see the controversial electronic tolling systtem implemented unless the numbers of vehicles in the province increase dramatically. Commonly known as e-tolls, the system was implemented in Gauteng Province and there has been much opposition, including unsuccessful court challenges. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160504gs_8837_Nazir_Alli.jpg
  • DURBAN - 4 May 2016 - Nazir Alli, the chief executive of the South African National Road Agency Limited (Sanral) speaks at a business breakfast in Durban, where he informs businessmen attending that the South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province will not see the controversial electronic tolling systtem implemented unless the numbers of vehicles in the province increase dramatically. Commonly known as e-tolls, the system was implemented in Gauteng Province and there has been much opposition, including unsuccessful court challenges. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160504gs_8844_Nazir_Alli.jpg
  • DURBAN - 4 May 2016 - Nazir Alli, the chief executive of the South African National Road Agency Limited (Sanral) speaks at a business breakfast in Durban, where he informs businessmen attending that the South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province will not see the controversial electronic tolling systtem implemented unless the numbers of vehicles in the province increase dramatically. Commonly known as e-tolls, the system was implemented in Gauteng Province and there has been much opposition, including unsuccessful court challenges. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160504gs_8843_Nazir_Alli.jpg
  • DURBAN - 4 May 2016 - Nazir Alli, the chief executive of the South African National Road Agency Limited (Sanral) speaks at a business breakfast in Durban, where he informs businessmen attending that the South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province will not see the controversial electronic tolling systtem implemented unless the numbers of vehicles in the province increase dramatically. Commonly known as e-tolls, the system was implemented in Gauteng Province and there has been much opposition, including unsuccessful court challenges. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160504gs_8842_Nazir_Alli.jpg
  • DURBAN - 4 May 2016 - Nazir Alli, the chief executive of the South African National Road Agency Limited (Sanral) speaks at a business breakfast in Durban, where he informs businessmen attending that the South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province will not see the controversial electronic tolling systtem implemented unless the numbers of vehicles in the province increase dramatically. Commonly known as e-tolls, the system was implemented in Gauteng Province and there has been much opposition, including unsuccessful court challenges. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160504gs_8841_Nazir_Alli.jpg
  • DURBAN - 4 May 2016 - Nazir Alli, the chief executive of the South African National Road Agency Limited (Sanral) speaks at a business breakfast in Durban, where he informs businessmen attending that the South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province will not see the controversial electronic tolling systtem implemented unless the numbers of vehicles in the province increase dramatically. Commonly known as e-tolls, the system was implemented in Gauteng Province and there has been much opposition, including unsuccessful court challenges. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160504gs_8840_Nazir_Alli.jpg
  • DURBAN - 4 May 2016 - Nazir Alli, the chief executive of the South African National Road Agency Limited (Sanral) speaks at a business breakfast in Durban, where he informs businessmen attending that the South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province will not see the controversial electronic tolling systtem implemented unless the numbers of vehicles in the province increase dramatically. Commonly known as e-tolls, the system was implemented in Gauteng Province and there has been much opposition, including unsuccessful court challenges. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160504gs_8835_Nazir_Alli.jpg
  • DURBAN - 4 May 2016 - Nazir Alli, the chief executive of the South African National Road Agency Limited (Sanral) speaks at a business breakfast in Durban, where he informs businessmen attending that the South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province will not see the controversial electronic tolling systtem implemented unless the numbers of vehicles in the province increase dramatically. Commonly known as e-tolls, the system was implemented in Gauteng Province and there has been much opposition, including unsuccessful court challenges. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160504gs_8833_Nazir_Alli.jpg
  • DURBAN - 12 June 2007 - Super Zuma, the KwaZulu-Natal provincial secretary general of the National Educationa, Health and Allied Workers Union (Nehawu) fields questions from the media on the public sector workers national strike at a Cosatu press conference. Public sector workers are on strike and demanding 10 percent whereas Government is offering only 7.25 percent..Picture: Giordano Stolley/Allied Picture Press
    20070612gs_9158.jpg
  • INCHANGA - 4 February 2016 - Barbara Dlamini (left) listens as Sihle Zikalala (right), chairman of the African National Congress (ANC) in KwaZulu-Natal expresses his condolences over the death of her husband Philip Dlamini, who was gunned down two weeks earlier at an SA Communist Party (SACP) meeting in Fredville, Inchanga. Looking on (seated) are other senior members of the ANC and SACP while the press records the meeting. Tensions between the ANC and its traditional partners, the SACP, have been high in the area, with SACP members accusing the ANC of preventing them from participating in nominations for the upcoming local government elections. Picture African News Agency. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160204gs_1123_SACP_ANC.jpg
  • DURBAN - 8 April 2016 - Senzo Mchunu, the premier for South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province speaks at a press conference on the readines of the city of Durban to host the 21st International Aids Conference. The press conference together with other festivities marked 100 days to the beginning of the conference, which will be held from 18 to 22 July 2016. It is the second time the conference is being held in the city. South Africa has the largest number of people living with the disease in the world and one of the largest rates of infection. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160408gs_8388_Senzo_Mchunu.jpg
  • DURBAN - 8 April 2016 - Senzo Mchunu, the premier for South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province speaks at a press conference on the readines of the city of Durban to host the 21st International Aids Conference. The press conference together with other festivities marked 100 days to the beginning of the conference, which will be held from 18 to 22 July 2016. It is the second time the conference is being held in the city. South Africa has the largest number of people living with the disease in the world and one of the largest rates of infection. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160408gs_8374_Senzo_Mchunu.jpg
  • DURBAN - 8 April 2016 - Senzo Mchunu, the premier for South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province squints at the flashlights of press photographers while attending a press conference on the readines of the city of Durban to host the 21st International Aids Conference. The press conference together with other festivities marked 100 days to the beginning of the conference, which will be held from 18 to 22 July 2016. It is the second time the conference is being held in the city. South Africa has the largest number of people living with the disease in the world and one of the largest rates of infection. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160408gs_8328_Senzo_Mchunu.jpg
  • DURBAN - 8 April 2016 - The health MEC (provincial minister) for South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province speaks at a press conference on the readines of the city of Durban to host the 21st International Aids Conference. The press conference together with other festivities marked 100 days to the beginning of the conference, which will be held from 18 to 22 July 2016. It is the second time the conference is being held in the city. South Africa has the largest number of people living with the disease in the world and one of the largest rates of infection. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160408gs_8341_Sibongiseni_Dhlomo.jpg
  • DURBAN - 22 February 2016 - eThekwini Metro Municipality mayor James Nxumalo (right), speaks at a press press conference in Durban where it was announced that the Delangokubona KZN Business Forum had agreed to stop disrupting municipal services. The group had complained that the eThekwini Metro Municipality was excluding them from bidding for municipal tenders. Looking on is the African National Congress regional secrettary Bheki Ntuli (middle) and Zandile Gumede (right), the ANC's eThekwini regional chairperson. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160222gs_3570_Nxumalo_ANC.jpg
  • DURBAN - 30 December 2014 - South Africa's transport minister Dipuo Peters (Left) announces that in the first 28 days of December 1143 people were killed on the country's roads. Also in the picture are Free State transport MEC Butana Komphela (center) and Advocate Makhosini Msibi, the Road Traffic management Corporation chief executive (right). Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20141230gs_1802_Dipuo_Peters.jpg
  • DURBAN - 8 April 2016 - Senzo Mchunu, the premier for South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province speaks at a press conference on the readines of the city of Durban to host the 21st International Aids Conference. The press conference together with other festivities marked 100 days to the beginning of the conference, which will be held from 18 to 22 July 2016. It is the second time the conference is being held in the city. South Africa has the largest number of people living with the disease in the world and one of the largest rates of infection. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160408gs_8368_Senzo_Mchunu.jpg
  • DURBAN - 8 April 2016 - Senzo Mchunu, the premier for South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province speaks at a press conference on the readines of the city of Durban to host the 21st International Aids Conference. The press conference together with other festivities marked 100 days to the beginning of the conference, which will be held from 18 to 22 July 2016. It is the second time the conference is being held in the city. South Africa has the largest number of people living with the disease in the world and one of the largest rates of infection. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160408gs_8375_Senzo_Mchunu.jpg
  • DURBAN - 8 April 2016 - The health MEC (provincial minister) for South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province speaks at a press conference on the readines of the city of Durban to host the 21st International Aids Conference. The press conference together with other festivities marked 100 days to the beginning of the conference, which will be held from 18 to 22 July 2016. It is the second time the conference is being held in the city. South Africa has the largest number of people living with the disease in the world and one of the largest rates of infection. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160408gs_8340_Sibongiseni_Dhlomo.jpg
  • DURBAN - 22 February 2016 - The African National Congress's regional chairperson Zandile Gumede (standing) speaks at a press press conference in Durban where it was announced that the Delangokubona KZN Business Forum had agreed to stop disrupting municipal services. The group had complained that the eThekwini Metro Municipality was excluding them from bidding for municipal tenders. Looking on is the eThekwini Metro Municipality mayor James Nxumalo (left) and the ANC's eThekwini regional secretary Bheki Ntuli. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160222gs_3575_Nxumalo_ANC.jpg
  • DURBAN - 22 February 2016 - eThekwini Metro Municipality mayor James Nxumalo, at a press press conference in Durban where it was announced that the Delangokubona KZN Business Forum had agreed to stop disrupting municipal services. The group had complained that the eThekwini Metro Municipality was excluding them from bidding for municipal tenders. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160222gs_8109_James_Nxumalo.jpg
  • DURBAN - 22 February 2016 - Barbara Fortein, the treasurer for the African National Congress's eThekwini region, speaks at a press press conference in Durban where it was announced that the Delangokubona KZN Business Forum had agreed to stop disrupting municipal services. The group had complained that the eThekwini Metro Municipality was excluding them from bidding for municipal tenders. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160222gs_8126_Barbara_Fortein.jpg
  • INCHANGA - 4 February 2016 - The SA Communist Party's provincial general secretary Themba Mthembu speaks to the widow of Bongani Dladla as African National Congress provincial chairman Sihle Zikalala looks on. Tensions between the ANC and its traditional partners, the SACP, have been high in the area, with SACP members accusing the ANC of preventing them from participating in nominations for the upcoming local government elections. Dladla who had been nominated as a potential candidate for the ANC was gunned down outside his home in Fredville, Inchanga. Picture African News Agency. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160204gs_7886_SACP_ANC.jpg
  • DURBAN - 4 January 2017 - Mxolisi Kaunda, the MEC (provincial minister) for Transport, Community Safety and Liaison in South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province speak at a press conference where he revealed that traffic authorities stopped and checked 100,000 cars and fined more than 25,000 drivers during the festive season. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20170104gs_1166_Mxolisi_Kaunda.jpg
  • DURBAN - 18 February 2016 - Edwin Mkhize (left), the KwaZulu-Natal provinciaal secretary of the Congress of South African Trade Unions makes a point duing a joint press conference of the alliance betweent Cosatu, the African National Congress (ANC), the South African Communist Party (SACP) and the South African National Civics Organisation (SANCO). Looking on are ANC provincial secretary Super Zuma (2nd from left), SACP provincial secretary Themba Mthembu (3rd from left) and  Richard Mkhungo, the KwaZulu-Natal provincial secretary of Sanco. Earlier the four organisation's leaders had met to address divisions in the alliance that had resulted in a number of deaths in the campaigning ahead of the country's upcoming local government elections. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160218gs_3439_Alliance_Leaders.jpg
  • DURBAN - 12 August 2016 - National Freedom Party cting chairman Bheki Gumb makes a point during a press conference in a bid to explain how the party will come back from failing to participate in recent local government elections after its treasurer failed to pay the required registration fees to the Electoral Commission of South Africa. - Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160812gs_6402_NFP_Executive.jpg
  • DURBAN - 12 August 2016 - Senior National Freedom Party leaders former eThekwini councillor Bhungu Gwala, acting chairman Bheki Gumbi and acting  secretary Thuli Nhlebela hold a press conference in a bid to explain how the party will come back from failing to participate in recent local government elections after its treasurer failed to pay the required registration fees to the Electoral Commission of South Africa. - Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160812gs_6400_NFP_Executive.jpg
  • DURBAN - 8 April 2016 - Nomusa Dube-Ncube, the Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs MEC (provincial minister) for South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province attends a press conference on the readines of the city of Durban to host the 21st International Aids Conference. The press conference together with other festivities marked 100 days to the beginning of the conference, which will be held from 18 to 22 July 2016. It is the second time the conference is being held in the city. South Africa has the largest number of people living with the disease in the world and one of the largest rates of infection. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160408gs_8326_Nomusa_DubeNcube.jpg
  • DURBAN - 8 April 2016 - Patrick Mdletshe, an Aids acivist from the Treatment Action Campaign speaks at a press conference on the readines of the city of Durban to host the 21st International Aids Conference. The press conference together with other festivities marked 100 days to the beginning of the conference, which will be held from 18 to 22 July 2016. It is the second time the conference is being held in the city. South Africa has the largest number of people living with the disease in the world and one of the largest rates of infection. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160408gs_8332_Patrick_Mdletshe.jpg
  • DURBAN - 8 April 2016 - The health MEC (provincial minister) for South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province speaks at a press conference on the readines of the city of Durban to host the 21st International Aids Conference. The press conference together with other festivities marked 100 days to the beginning of the conference, which will be held from 18 to 22 July 2016. It is the second time the conference is being held in the city. South Africa has the largest number of people living with the disease in the world and one of the largest rates of infection. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160408gs_8347_Sibongiseni_Dhlomo.jpg
  • DURBAN - 8 April 2016 - The health MEC (provincial minister) for South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province attends a press conference on the readines of the city of Durban to host the 21st International Aids Conference. The press conference together with other festivities marked 100 days to the beginning of the conference, which will be held from 18 to 22 July 2016. It is the second time the conference is being held in the city. South Africa has the largest number of people living with the disease in the world and one of the largest rates of infection. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160408gs_8323_Sibongiseni_Dhlomo.jpg
  • DURBAN - 30 March 2016 -Bheki Shandu, the South African Democratic Teachers Union's KwaZulu-Natal deputy provincial secretary at a press conference in Durban, where the union criticised the failure of the national education department to allow it to make submissions over allegations that some of its members were involved in a jobs-for-cash scheme. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160330gs_8256_Bheki_Shandu.jpg
  • DURBAN - 22 February 2016 - eThekwini Metro Municipality mayor James Nxumalo (right), speaks at a press press conference in Durban where it was announced that the Delangokubona KZN Business Forum had agreed to stop disrupting municipal services. The group had complained that the eThekwini Metro Municipality was excluding them from bidding for municipal tenders. Looking on is the African National Congress regional secrettary Bheki Ntuli (middle) and Zandile Gumede (right), the ANC's eThekwini regional chairperson. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160222gs_3569_Nxumalo_ANC.jpg
  • DURBAN - 22 February 2016 - Bheki Ntuli, the general secretary of African National Congress's eThekwini region, speaks at a press press conference in Durban where it was announced that the Delangokubona KZN Business Forum had agreed to stop disrupting municipal services. The group had complained that the eThekwini Metro Municipality was excluding them from bidding for municipal tenders. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160222gs_8115_Bheki_Ntuli.jpg
  • DURBAN - 17 February 2016 - The premier of South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province, Senzo Mchunu, speaks at a press conference where he revealed that more than 13,000 government employees had yet to pay back their student loans to the National Student Financial Aid Scheme. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160217gs_7980_Senzo_Mchunu.jpg
  • DURBAN - 17 February 2016 - The premier of South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province, Senzo Mchunu, speaks at a press conference where he revealed that more than 13,000 government employees had yet to pay back their student loans to the National Student Financial Aid Scheme. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160217gs_7981_Senzo_Mchunu.jpg
  • INCHANGA - 4 February 2016 - Barbara Dlamini (left) listens as Sihle Zikalala (right), chairman of the African National Congress (ANC) in KwaZulu-Natal expresses his condolences over the death of her husband Philip Dlamini, who was gunned down two weeks earlier at an SA Communist Party (SACP) meeting in Fredville, Inchanga. Looking on are other senior members of the ANC and SACP. Tensions between the ANC and its traditional partners, the SACP, have been high in the area, with SACP members accusing the ANC of preventing them from participating in nominations for the upcoming local government elections. Picture African News Agency. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160204gs_1122_SACP_ANC.jpg
  • DURBAN - 21 January 2016 - KwaZulu-Natal health MEC Sibongiseni Dhlomo speaks at a press conference in Durban where he announces that South African medical students studying in Cuba promised to spend more time studying and less time praying. Behind Dhlomo is a poster of himself. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160121gs_1074_Sibongiseni_Dhlomo.jpg
  • DURBAN - 21 January 2016 - KwaZulu-Natal health MEC Sibongiseni Dhlomo speaks at a press conference in Durban where he announces that South African medical students studying in Cuba promised to spend more time studying and less time praying. Behind Dhlomo is a poster of himself. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160121gs_1081_Sibongiseni_Dhlomo.jpg
  • DURBAN, 14 January 2015 - Maliyakhe Shelembe (left), chairman of the National Freedom Party fields questions at a press briefing in Durban, where it was revealed that none of the party leadership had been in contact since the party's leader Zanele kaMagwaza-Msibi (seen in poster behind) reportedly suffered a stroke in November. Looking on is Alex Kekana, the party's deputy president. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20150114gs_1875_Shelembe_Kekana.jpg
  • DURBAN - 28 December 2015 - Phumlani Duma, the provincial chairman of the South African Democratic Teachers Union speaks at a press conference in Durban, where it was claimed that the country's largest education department in the province of KwaZulu-Natal has failed to pay salary increases to teachers who teach Grade R pupils -- the first year of schooling in South Africa. It was also claimed that several hundred markers had not been paid for marking the final school leaving exam papers of those pupils finishing school at he end of 2015. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20151228gs_7597_Phumlani_Duma.jpg
  • DURBAN, 16 December 2015 - Major General Berning Ntlemeza, the head of the South African  police's elite Directorate for Priority Crime Investigations answers questions at a press cnference where he had earlier told reporters that he has submitted a proposal that anyone convicted of being illegally in possession of a gun should be subjected to a minimum term of life imprisonment, which in South Africa is 25 years, before parole consideration. Ntlemeza was speaking at a press conference to launch the police's annual festive season crackdown. South Africa has one of the highest murder rates in the world, with  17,805 murders committed from April 2014 to March 2015 or an average of 49 murders everyday. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20151216gs_7568_Berning_Ntlemeza.jpg
  • DURBAN - 18 February 2016 - Advocate Moipone Noko, the Director of Public Prosecutions in KwaZulu-Natal speaks at a press briefing in Durban. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160218gs_8030_Moipone_Noko.JPG
  • DURBAN - 4 January 2017 - Mxolisi Kaunda, the MEC (provincial minister) for Transport, Community Safety and Liaison in South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province speak at a press conference where he revealed that traffic authorities stopped and checked 100,000 cars and fined more than 25,000 drivers during the festive season. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20170104gs_1167_Mxolisi_Kaunda.jpg
  • DURBAN - 30 October 2016 - LInda Zama, special adviser toWillies Mchunu, the premier of KwaZulu-Natal, at a press conference where Mchunu  spoke about the establishment of a Commission of Inquiry to investigate political violence in the province. In the run up to the country's local government (municipal) elections at least 20 local politicians were killed in 2016 alone. - Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20161030gs_0638_Linda_Zama.jpg
  • DURBAN - 12 August 2016 - National Freedom Party cting chairman Bheki Gumb makes a point during a press conference in a bid to explain how the party will come back from failing to participate in recent local government elections after its treasurer failed to pay the required registration fees to the Electoral Commission of South Africa. - Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160812gs_6398_NFP_Executive.jpg
  • DURBAN - 8 April 2016 - Nomusa Dube-Ncube, the Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs MEC (provincial minister) for South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province speaks at a press conference on the readines of the city of Durban to host the 21st International Aids Conference. The press conference together with other festivities marked 100 days to the beginning of the conference, which will be held from 18 to 22 July 2016. It is the second time the conference is being held in the city. South Africa has the largest number of people living with the disease in the world and one of the largest rates of infection. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160408gs_8358_Nomusa_DubeNcube.jpg
  • DURBAN - 8 April 2016 - Nomusa Dube-Ncube, the Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs MEC (provincial minister) for South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province speaks at a press conference on the readines of the city of Durban to host the 21st International Aids Conference. The press conference together with other festivities marked 100 days to the beginning of the conference, which will be held from 18 to 22 July 2016. It is the second time the conference is being held in the city. South Africa has the largest number of people living with the disease in the world and one of the largest rates of infection. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160408gs_8355_Nomusa_DubeNcube.jpg
  • DURBAN - 8 April 2016 - Nomusa Dube-Ncube, the Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs MEC (provincial minister) for South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province speaks at a press conference on the readines of the city of Durban to host the 21st International Aids Conference. The press conference together with other festivities marked 100 days to the beginning of the conference, which will be held from 18 to 22 July 2016. It is the second time the conference is being held in the city. South Africa has the largest number of people living with the disease in the world and one of the largest rates of infection. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160408gs_8348_Nomusa_DubeNcube.jpg
  • DURBAN - 8 April 2016 - Senzo Mchunu, the premier for South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province speaks at a press conference on the readines of the city of Durban to host the 21st International Aids Conference. The press conference together with other festivities marked 100 days to the beginning of the conference, which will be held from 18 to 22 July 2016. It is the second time the conference is being held in the city. South Africa has the largest number of people living with the disease in the world and one of the largest rates of infection. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160408gs_8373_Senzo_Mchunu.jpg
  • DURBAN - 8 April 2016 - Senzo Mchunu, the premier for South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province attends a press conference on the readines of the city of Durban to host the 21st International Aids Conference. The press conference together with other festivities marked 100 days to the beginning of the conference, which will be held from 18 to 22 July 2016. It is the second time the conference is being held in the city. South Africa has the largest number of people living with the disease in the world and one of the largest rates of infection. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160408gs_8329_Senzo_Mchunu.jpg
  • DURBAN - 8 April 2016 - The health MEC (provincial minister) for South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province speaks at a press conference on the readines of the city of Durban to host the 21st International Aids Conference. The press conference together with other festivities marked 100 days to the beginning of the conference, which will be held from 18 to 22 July 2016. It is the second time the conference is being held in the city. South Africa has the largest number of people living with the disease in the world and one of the largest rates of infection. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160408gs_8339_Sibongiseni_Dhlomo.jpg
  • DURBAN - 22 February 2016 - Zandile Gumede, the eThekwini regional chairperson of the African National Congress, speaks at a press press conference in Durban where it was announced that the Delangokubona KZN Business Forum had agreed to stop disrupting municipal services. The group had complained that the eThekwini Metro Municipality was excluding them from bidding for municipal tenders. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160222gs_8111_Zandile_Gumede.jpg
  • DURBAN - 22 February 2016 - Zandile Gumede, the eThekwini regional chairperson of the African National Congress, speaks at a press press conference in Durban where it was announced that the Delangokubona KZN Business Forum had agreed to stop disrupting municipal services. The group had complained that the eThekwini Metro Municipality was excluding them from bidding for municipal tenders. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160222gs_8110_Zandile_Gumede.jpg
  • DURBAN - 22 February 2016 - Bheki Ntuli, the general secretary of African National Congress's eThekwini region, speaks at a press press conference in Durban where it was announced that the Delangokubona KZN Business Forum had agreed to stop disrupting municipal services. The group had complained that the eThekwini Metro Municipality was excluding them from bidding for municipal tenders. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160222gs_8116_Bheki_Ntuli.jpg
  • DURBAN - 22 February 2016 - Bheki Ntuli, the general secretary of African National Congress's eThekwini region, speaks at a press press conference in Durban where it was announced that the Delangokubona KZN Business Forum had agreed to stop disrupting municipal services. The group had complained that the eThekwini Metro Municipality was excluding them from bidding for municipal tenders. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160222gs_8113_Bheki_Ntuli.jpg
  • DURBAN - 22 February 2016 - eThekwini Metro Municipality mayor James Nxumalo, speaks at a press press conference in Durban where it was announced that the Delangokubona KZN Business Forum had agreed to stop disrupting municipal services. The group had complained that the eThekwini Metro Municipality was excluding them from bidding for municipal tenders. Looking on is the African National Congress regional secrettary Bheki Ntuli. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160222gs_8118_Nxumalo_Ntuli.jpg
  • DURBAN - 17 February 2016 - The premier of South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province, Senzo Mchunu, speaks at a press conference where he revealed that more than 13,000 government employees had yet to pay back their student loans to the National Student Financial Aid Scheme. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160217gs_7974_Senzo_Mchunu.jpg
  • INCHANGA - 4 February 2016 - Barbara Dlamini (left) listens as Sihle Zikalala (right), chairman of the African National Congress (ANC) in KwaZulu-Natal expresses his condolences over the death of her husband Philip Dlamini, who was gunned down two weeks earlier at an SA Communist Party (SACP) meeting in Fredville, Inchanga. Looking on are other senior members of the ANC and SACP. Tensions between the ANC and its traditional partners, the SACP, have been high in the area, with SACP members accusing the ANC of preventing them from participating in nominations for the upcoming local government elections. Picture African News Agency. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160204gs_1127_SACP_ANC.jpg
  • DURBAN - 21 January 2016 - KwaZulu-Natal health MEC Sibongiseni Dhlomo speaks at a press conference in Durban where he announces that South African medical students studying in Cuba promised to spend more time studying and less time praying. Behind Dhlomo is a poster of himself. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160121gs_1068_Sibongiseni_Dhlomo.jpg
  • DURBAN, 14 January 2015 - The top leadership of National Freedom Party field questions at a press briefing in Durban, where it was revealed that none of the party leadership had been in contact since the party's leader Zanele kaMagwaza-Msibi reportedly suffered a stroke in November. From left are the NFP womens movement president Sindi Mashinini, the party's national chairman Maliyakhe Shelembe, the party's deputy president Alex Kekana, the party's national secretary Nhlanhla Khubisa and the  party's youth president Sibusiso Mncwabe.  Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20150114gs_1850_NFP_Leadership.jpg
  • DURBAN - 16 December 2015 - Lieutenant General Bonang Mgwenya of the South African Police service speaks at a press conference where Hawks boss Berning Ntlemeza said he had submitted a proposal that people convicted of being illegally in possession of a weapon should be to imprisonment for life, Mgwenya, Ntlemeza and KwaZulu-Natal provincial commissioner Betty Mmamonnye Ngobeni addressed press about the police's festive season crime combatting operations. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20151216gs_1036_Bonang_Mgwenya.jpg
  • DURBAN, 16 December 2015 - Major General Berning Ntlemeza, the head of the South African  police's elite Directorate for Priority Crime Investigations answers questions at a press cnference where he had earlier told reporters that he has submitted a proposal that anyone convicted of being illegally in possession of a gun should be subjected to a minimum term of life imprisonment, which in South Africa is 25 years, before parole consideration. Ntlemeza was speaking at a press conference to launch the police's annual festive season crackdown. South Africa has one of the highest murder rates in the world, with  17,805 murders committed from April 2014 to March 2015 or an average of 49 murders everyday. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20151216gs_7564_Berning_Ntlemeza.jpg
  • DURBAN - 5 November 2015 - Dignitaries cut the ribbon to officialy inaugurate  Turkish Airlines new route from Durban to Isttanbul. The Airbus A330-300 to arrived at Durban's King Shaka International Airport was the first flight of the service, which will see the airline operate four times a week between Durban and Istanbul via Johannesburg. Among those in the picture are the King Shaka airport manager Terence Delomoney (2nd from right) , eThekwini deputy mayor Nomvuzo Shabalala (3rd from right), the KwaZulu-Natal economic evelopment and tourism MEC Mike Mabuyakhulu (4th from right) and urkish Airlines chairman İlker Aycı. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20151105gs_7272_Turkish_Airlines.jpg
  • DURBAN - 14 August 2014 - Professor Malegapuru Makgoba, the vice chancellor of the University of KwaZulu-Natal, speaks at a press conference where it was announced that Dr Albert van Jaarsveld from the National Research Foundation would replace Makgoba when he steps down in 2015. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20140814gs_9919_Malegapuru_Makgoba.jpg
  • DURBAN - 24 November 2014 - Several people gathered outside the Chatsworth Magistrate's Court to protest against child abuse. The protests followed the death of a two-year old toddler (seen in framed picture held by woman) who was allegedly abused by her 55-year old grandmother and who was due to appear in the court. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20141124gs_1594_Toddler_Death.jpg
  • DURBAN - 11 November 2014 - South African police minister 20141111gs_1441_Nkosinathi_Nhleko answers journalists questions surrounding the police investigations into security improvements at President Jcob Zuma's personal residence in Nkandla. Nhleko was attending a conference of the Civilian Secretariat for Police when he was confronted by journalists over the investigations into the Nkandla upgrades. Police have been forced to investigate after oppoistion parties filed corruption charges with the police. Looking on in the picture is KwaZulu-Natal member of the executive council for Transport, Community Safety, and Liaison. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20141111gs_1424_Nkosinathi_Nhleko.jpg
  • DURBAN - 30 October 2016 - Willies Mchunu, the premier of South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province, speaks at a press conference about the establishment of a Commission of Inquiry to investigate political violence in the province. In the run up to the country's local government (municipal) elections at least 20 local politicians were killed in 2016 alone. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20161030gs_0629_Willies_Mchunu.jpg
  • DURBAN - 18 February 2016 - Advocate Moipone Noko, the Director of Public Prosecutions in KwaZulu-Natal speaks at a press briefing in Durban. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160218gs_8044_Moipone_Noko.jpg
  • DURBAN - 18 February 2016 - Advocate Moipone Noko, the Director of Public Prosecutions in KwaZulu-Natal speaks at a press briefing in Durban. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160218gs_8045_Moipone_Noko.jpg
  • DURBAN - 30 October 2016 - LInda Zama, special adviser toWillies Mchunu, the premier of KwaZulu-Natal, at a press conference where Mchunu  spoke about the establishment of a Commission of Inquiry to investigate political violence in the province. In the run up to the country's local government (municipal) elections at least 20 local politicians were killed in 2016 alone. - Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20161030gs_0631_Linda_Zama.jpg
  • DURBAN - 30 October 2016 - Willies Mchunu (left), the premier of South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province, speaks at a press conference about the establishment of a Commission of Inquiry to investigate political violence in the province. In the run up to the country's local government (municipal) elections at least 20 local politicians were killed in 2016 alone. Looking on is his spokesman Ndabesinhle Sibiya (right). Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20161030gs_0633_Willies_Mchunu.jpg
  • DURBAN - 30 October 2016 - Willies Mchunu, the premier of South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province, speaks at a press conference about the establishment of a Commission of Inquiry to investigate political violence in the province. In the run up to the country's local government (municipal) elections at least 20 local politicians were killed in 2016 alone. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20161030gs_0623_Willies_Mchunu.jpg
  • DURBAN - 8 April 2016 - Patrick Mdletshe, an Aids acivist from the Treatment Action Campaign speaks at a press conference on the readines of the city of Durban to host the 21st International Aids Conference. The press conference together with other festivities marked 100 days to the beginning of the conference, which will be held from 18 to 22 July 2016. It is the second time the conference is being held in the city. South Africa has the largest number of people living with the disease in the world and one of the largest rates of infection. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160408gs_8331_Patrick_Mdletshe.jpg
  • DURBAN - 8 April 2016 - Senzo Mchunu, the premier for South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province speaks at a press conference on the readines of the city of Durban to host the 21st International Aids Conference. The press conference together with other festivities marked 100 days to the beginning of the conference, which will be held from 18 to 22 July 2016. It is the second time the conference is being held in the city. South Africa has the largest number of people living with the disease in the world and one of the largest rates of infection. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160408gs_8362_Senzo_Mchunu.jpg
  • DURBAN - 8 April 2016 - The health MEC (provincial minister) for South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province speaks at a press conference on the readines of the city of Durban to host the 21st International Aids Conference. The press conference together with other festivities marked 100 days to the beginning of the conference, which will be held from 18 to 22 July 2016. It is the second time the conference is being held in the city. South Africa has the largest number of people living with the disease in the world and one of the largest rates of infection. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160408gs_8345_Sibongiseni_Dhlomo.jpg
  • DURBAN - 30 March 2016 -Nomorashiya Caluza, the KwaZulu-Natal provincial secretary for the South African Democratic Teachers Union speaks at a press conference in Durban, where the union criticised the failure of the national education department to allow it to make submissions over allegations that some of its members were involved in a jobs-for-cash scheme. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160330gs_8257_Nomorashiya_Caluza.jpg
  • DURBAN - 30 March 2016 -Bheki Shandu, the South African Democratic Teachers Union's KwaZulu-Natal deputy provincial secretary speaks at a press conference in Durban, where the union criticised the failure of the national education department to allow it to make submissions over allegations that some of its members were involved in a jobs-for-cash scheme. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160330gs_8274_Bheki_Shandu.jpg
  • DURBAN - 30 March 2016 -Bheki Shandu, the South African Democratic Teachers Union's KwaZulu-Natal deputy provincial secretary speaks at a press conference in Durban, where the union criticised the failure of the national education department to allow it to make submissions over allegations that some of its members were involved in a jobs-for-cash scheme. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160330gs_8272_Bheki_Shandu.jpg
  • DURBAN - 30 March 2016 -Bheki Shandu, the South African Democratic Teachers Union's KwaZulu-Natal deputy provincial secretary speaks at a press conference in Durban, where the union criticised the failure of the national education department to allow it to make submissions over allegations that some of its members were involved in a jobs-for-cash scheme. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160330gs_8271_Bheki_Shandu.jpg
  • DURBAN - 30 March 2016 -Nozipho Hlatshwayo, the gender convener for the South African Democratic Teachers Union at a press conference in Durban, where the union criticised the failure of the national education department to allow it to make submissions over allegations that some of its members were involved in a jobs-for-cash scheme. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160330gs_8255_Nozipho_Hlatshwayo.jpg
  • DURBAN - 22 February 2016 - Barbara Fortein, the treasurer for the African National Congress's eThekwini region, speaks at a press press conference in Durban where it was announced that the Delangokubona KZN Business Forum had agreed to stop disrupting municipal services. The group had complained that the eThekwini Metro Municipality was excluding them from bidding for municipal tenders. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160222gs_8127_Barbara_Fortein.jpg
  • DURBAN - 17 February 2016 - The premier of South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province, Senzo Mchunu, speaks at a press conference where he revealed that more than 13,000 government employees had yet to pay back their student loans to the National Student Financial Aid Scheme. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160217gs_7978_Senzo_Mchunu.jpg
  • INCHANGA - 4 February 2016 - The SA Communist Party's provincial general secretary Themba Mthembu speaks to the widow of Bongani Dladla as African National Congress provincial chairman Sihle Zikalala looks on. Tensions between the ANC and its traditional partners, the SACP, have been high in the area, with SACP members accusing the ANC of preventing them from participating in nominations for the upcoming local government elections. Dladla who had been nominated as a potential candidate for the ANC was gunned down outside his home in Fredville, Inchanga. Picture African News Agency. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160204gs_7884_SACP_ANC.jpg
  • DURBAN - 21 January 2016 - KwaZulu-Natal health MEC Sibongiseni Dhlomo speaks at a press conference in Durban where he announces that South African medical students studying in Cuba promised to spend more time studying and less time praying. Behind Dhlomo is a poster of himself. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160121gs_1069_Sibongiseni_Dhlomo.jpg
  • DURBAN - 19 January 2016 - Brian Tawana, a former member of the Economic Freedom Fighters from explains why he has decided to join the African National Congress at a press conference in Durban.  Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160119gs_7760_EFF_ANC.jpg
  • DURBAN - 19 January 2016 - Reggie Ngcobo, the former KwaZulu-Natal provincial convener of the Economic Freedom Front at a press conference where it was announced that he had defected to the African National Congress.  Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20160119gs_7743_EFF_ANC.jpg
  • DURBAN, 14 January 2015 - Maliyakhe Shelembe, chairman of the National Freedom Party fields questions at a press briefing in Durban, where it was revealed that none of the party leadership had been in contact since the party's leader Zanele kaMagwaza-Msibi reportedly suffered a stroke in November. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20150114gs_1849_Maliyakhe_Shelembe.jpg
  • DURBAN, 14 January 2015 - Maliyakhe Shelembe, chairman of the National Freedom Party fields questions at a press briefing in Durban, where it was revealed that none of the party leadership had been in contact since the party's leader Zanele kaMagwaza-Msibi reportedly suffered a stroke in November. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20150114gs_1847_Maliyakhe_Shelembe.jpg
  • DURBAN, 14 January 2015 - Sindi Mashinini, the the leader of the National Freedom Party's Women's Movement fields questions at a press briefing in Durban, where it was revealed that none of the party leadership had been in contact with the party's leader Zanele kaMagwaza-Msibi, who had reportedly suffered a stroke in November. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20150114gs_1880_Sindi_Mashinini.jpg
  • DURBAN, 14 January 2015 - Sindi Mashinini, the the leader of the National Freedom Party's Women's Movement fields questions at a press briefing in Durban, where it was revealed that none of the party leadership had been in contact with the party's leader Zanele kaMagwaza-Msibi, who had reportedly suffered a stroke in November. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20150114gs_1877_Sindi_Mashinini.jpg
  • DURBAN - 28 December 2015 - Phumlani Duma, the provincial chairman of the South African Democratic Teachers Union speaks at a press conference in Durban, where it was claimed that the country's largest education department in the province of KwaZulu-Natal has failed to pay salary increases to teachers who teach Grade R pupils -- the first year of schooling in South Africa. It was also claimed that several hundred markers had not been paid for marking the final school leaving exam papers of those pupils finishing school at he end of 2015. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20151228gs_7583_Phumlani_Duma.jpg
  • DURBAN, 16 December 2015 - Major General Berning Ntlemeza, the head of the South African  police's elite Directorate for Priority Crime Investigations answers questions at a press cnference where he had earlier told reporters that he has submitted a proposal that anyone convicted of being illegally in possession of a gun should be subjected to a minimum term of life imprisonment, which in South Africa is 25 years, before parole consideration. Ntlemeza was speaking at a press conference to launch the police's annual festive season crackdown. South Africa has one of the highest murder rates in the world, with  17,805 murders committed from April 2014 to March 2015 or an average of 49 murders everyday. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20151216gs_7565_Berning_Ntlemeza.jpg
  • DURBAN, 16 December 2015 - Major General Berning Ntlemeza, the head of the South African  police's elite Directorate for Priority Crime Investigations tells reporters that he has submitted a proposal that anyone convicted of being illegally in possession of a gun should be subjected to a minimum term of life imprisonment, which in South Africa is 25 years, before parole consideration. Ntlemeza was speaking at a press conference to launch the police's annual festive season crackdown. South Africa has one of the highest murder rates in the world, with  17,805 murders committed from April 2014 to March 2015 or an average of 49 murders everyday. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20151216gs_7555_Berning_Ntlemeza.jpg
  • DURBAN - 5 November 2015 - Dignitaries cut the ribbon to officialy inaugurate  Turkish Airlines new route from Durban to Isttanbul. The Airbus A330-300 to arrived at Durban's King Shaka International Airport was the first flight of the service, which will see the airline operate four times a week between Durban and Istanbul via Johannesburg. Among those in the picture are the King Shaka airport manager Terence Delomoney (2nd from right) , eThekwini deputy mayor Nomvuzo Shabalala (3rd from right), the KwaZulu-Natal economic evelopment and tourism MEC Mike Mabuyakhulu (4th from right) and urkish Airlines chairman İlker Aycı. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20151105gs_7271_Turkish_Airlines.jpg
  • DURBAN - 12 January 2015 - Elijah Mhlanga (left) spokesman for South Africa's Department of Basic Education speaks at a press conference about mass cheating that took place in KwaZulu-Natal province as Lucky Ditaunyane, the spokesman for Umalusi, the education monitoring body, looks on. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20150112gs_1832_Exam_Cheating.jpg
  • DURBAN - 12 January 2015 - Elijah Mhlanga (left) spokesman for South Africa's Department of Basic Education speaks at a press conference about mass cheating that took place in KwaZulu-Natal province as Lucky Ditaunyane, the spokesman for Umalusi, the education monitoring body, looks on. Picture: Allied Picture Press/APP
    20150112gs_1845_Exam_Cheating.jpg
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