10. The Mail & Guardian report on the "slow death of the Olifants River in Mpumalanga":
Yolandi Groenewald writes that the deterioration in the river's water quality "is endangering fish, crocodiles and one of South Africa's most important commercial farming regions, Groblersdal. Farmers in the area produce fruit, vegetables, maize, wheat and cotton worth an estimated R150-million a year, of which between R50-million and R100-million is sold to the European Union. But EuroGAP, the quality regulator for all agricultural imports to the EU, has repeatedly warned farmers to attend to the deteriorating quality of water in the Loskop Dam, which is fed by the Olifants River, or risk losing export deals."
9. The Sunday Times report on how the Western Cape cabinet, led by Premier Helen Zille, had appointed Kenny Africa as provincial police chief, despite serious outstanding allegations against him:
Caiphus Kgosana writes that "A damning forensic report detailing serious allegations of misconduct against the new Western Cape traffic police chief has ... Zille seething - because crucial information was withheld from her about the seriousness of the charges before the man was appointed. Kenny Africa, who was appointed last month by community safety MEC Lennit Max as the new provincial traffic police chief, was about to face serious charges of misconduct and even fraud committed while he was chief traffic offer at the George municipality - but he resigned before a hearing could be held."
8. The Mail & Guardian report on how the late Lolly Jackson "built an empire on the back of the strip-club industry and the way he went about it was as unethical as they come, with allegations of trafficking foreign girls, paying off contacts in home affairs and laundering money."
Ilham Rawoot writes that Jackson "hung out with the wrong crowds and corrupted the right ones. Finally, it killed him. On Monday evening he was shot, allegedly by one of the people helping him to launder money between South Africa and the Laiki Bank of Cyprus. But even before the fatal bullets, his past was catching up with him. Two sources have said that police were soon going to arrest Jackson for money-laundering. This first surfaced publicly in a case earlier this year in which Jackson was suing former local Laiki Bank boss Alekos Panayi for stealing money from him. Panayi shot back, saying that he had been helping Jackson to launder foreign currency since 2007."