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This article is more than 9 years old In November 2013, a list of 16 claims about South Africa under the African National Congress - all of them negative - began doing the rounds on Facebook. Within days the list had attracted more than 2,000 comments, been liked 1,600 times and had been shared on the Facebook pages of more than 12,000 people. The list appears to be a shortened version of a blog post published on 8 May 2013 which derisively referred to the the ANC’s list of achievements . A version of the list also appears to have been circulated via email. In August 2013, Business Day reported that a Democratic Alliance councillor in South Africa’s Eastern Cape province, Stanford Slabbert, had been expelled from the party after forwarding an offensive and racist email that included some of the claims contained in the blog post. So what are the facts? Is there any truth to the claims? Africa Check readers asked us to investigate. Africa Check debunked this claim in March 2013. An article in South Africa’s Sowetan newspaper had reported incorrectly that [a]t least 28% of schoolgirls are HIV positive while only 4% of young boys are infected with the virus in the country. The most recent study reveals that HIV prevalence among young women aged between 15 and 19 is around 12.7%.
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This article is more than 9 years old In November 2013, a list of 16 claims about South Africa under the African National Congress - all of them negative - began doing the rounds on Facebook. Within days the list had attracted more than 2,000 comments, been liked 1,600 times and had been shared on the Facebook pages of more than 12,000 people. The list appears to be a shortened version of a blog post published on 8 May 2013 which derisively referred to the the ANC’s list of achievements . A version of the list also appears to have been circulated via email. In August 2013, Business Day reported that a Democratic Alliance councillor in South Africa’s Eastern Cape province, Stanford Slabbert, had been expelled from the party after forwarding an offensive and racist email that included some of the claims contained in the blog post. So what are the facts? Is there any truth to the claims? Africa Check readers asked us to investigate. In November 2013, South Africa’s health minister, Aaron Motsoaledi, told parliament that between April 2012 and March 2013 there were 82,920 legal abortions in public hospitals. He did not make clear how many of the patients could be classed as schoolgirls. But a 2010/11 annual school survey suggested that 36,702 pupils fell pregnant that year.
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This article is more than 9 years old In November 2013, a list of 16 claims about South Africa under the African National Congress - all of them negative - began doing the rounds on Facebook. Within days the list had attracted more than 2,000 comments, been liked 1,600 times and had been shared on the Facebook pages of more than 12,000 people. The list appears to be a shortened version of a blog post published on 8 May 2013 which derisively referred to the the ANC’s list of achievements . A version of the list also appears to have been circulated via email. In August 2013, Business Day reported that a Democratic Alliance councillor in South Africa’s Eastern Cape province, Stanford Slabbert, had been expelled from the party after forwarding an offensive and racist email that included some of the claims contained in the blog post. So what are the facts? Is there any truth to the claims? Africa Check readers asked us to investigate. Professor Loren Landau, director of the African Centre for Migration and Society at the University of the Witwatersrand, told Africa Check that it is impossible to accurately estimate how many undocumented migrants are currently in South Africa. Anyone who claims to know how many there are is lying, he said. He recommended using census data on the number of foreign-born nationals in South Africa to determine how this demographic has grown. The 1996 census revealed that 958,187 people living in South Africa were born outside of the country. The 2011 census revealed that 4.5% – or about 2.3-million – of the country’s 51.7-million people were born outside of South African. This amounts to an increase of 238% over the fifteen year period – not 1000%. It is unclear how many of those surveyed for the census were illegal immigrants but Statistics South Africa has stated in a 2011 discussion document that [s]ince a census is a total count of all persons in the country (at a given point in time), it is expected that all types of immigrants (including illegal/irregular immigrants) will be enumerated.
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This article is more than 9 years old In November 2013, a list of 16 claims about South Africa under the African National Congress - all of them negative - began doing the rounds on Facebook. Within days the list had attracted more than 2,000 comments, been liked 1,600 times and had been shared on the Facebook pages of more than 12,000 people. The list appears to be a shortened version of a blog post published on 8 May 2013 which derisively referred to the the ANC’s list of achievements . A version of the list also appears to have been circulated via email. In August 2013, Business Day reported that a Democratic Alliance councillor in South Africa’s Eastern Cape province, Stanford Slabbert, had been expelled from the party after forwarding an offensive and racist email that included some of the claims contained in the blog post. So what are the facts? Is there any truth to the claims? Africa Check readers asked us to investigate. South Africa’s education department is not ranked 140 th out of 144 countries. This ranking refers to the World Economic Forum’s global information technology report which ranked the quality of South Africa’s education system 140 th out of 144 countries. It received a score of 2.2 out of a possible seven. However, the ranking system offers little insight into the quality of any country’s education system. Martin Gustafsson, a researcher in the economics department at Stellenbosch University, told Africa Check that the report does not make use of any standardised testing in producing the ranking. In the case of South Africa, six respondents, all from the business sector, are asked to rate the quality of education along a seven-point scale from very good to very poor, he said. The ratings are therefore subjective and drawn from a small pool, with no effort made to cross-reference ratings so as to compare countries properly. Africa Check has previously looked at claims that South Africa has the worst education system in Africa. But the available data shows that while South Africa lags behind a number of African countries including Kenya and Swaziland, there are many with worse education systems.
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This article is more than 9 years old In November 2013, a list of 16 claims about South Africa under the African National Congress - all of them negative - began doing the rounds on Facebook. Within days the list had attracted more than 2,000 comments, been liked 1,600 times and had been shared on the Facebook pages of more than 12,000 people. The list appears to be a shortened version of a blog post published on 8 May 2013 which derisively referred to the the ANC’s list of achievements . A version of the list also appears to have been circulated via email. In August 2013, Business Day reported that a Democratic Alliance councillor in South Africa’s Eastern Cape province, Stanford Slabbert, had been expelled from the party after forwarding an offensive and racist email that included some of the claims contained in the blog post. So what are the facts? Is there any truth to the claims? Africa Check readers asked us to investigate. South Africa’s latest crime statistics show that 9,990 cars and 943 trucks were hijacked in 2012/13. However, Africa Check was unable to find recent comparative data on car hijackings around the world. With regard to car theft, South Africa doesn’t have the highest number of cases in the world. In 2011/2012 , nearly 60,000 cars and motor cycles were reported stolen in South Africa, while just over half a million cars were reported stolen in the United States of America, giving the US a higher rate of car theft per head of population.
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This article is more than 9 years old In November 2013, a list of 16 claims about South Africa under the African National Congress - all of them negative - began doing the rounds on Facebook. Within days the list had attracted more than 2,000 comments, been liked 1,600 times and had been shared on the Facebook pages of more than 12,000 people. The list appears to be a shortened version of a blog post published on 8 May 2013 which derisively referred to the the ANC’s list of achievements . A version of the list also appears to have been circulated via email. In August 2013, Business Day reported that a Democratic Alliance councillor in South Africa’s Eastern Cape province, Stanford Slabbert, had been expelled from the party after forwarding an offensive and racist email that included some of the claims contained in the blog post. So what are the facts? Is there any truth to the claims? Africa Check readers asked us to investigate. South Africa’s unemployment rate is certainly high when compared to many countries. The latest statistics put South Africa’s unemployment rate at 24.7%, which is at the high end, though differing definitions of unemployment and a lack of reliable data makes comparisons between countries extremely difficult. The International Monetary Fund, for example, is one of a number of organisations that monitors unemployment rates. In some cases, where data is unavailable, it provides estimates. According to the IMF’s most recent figures , South Africa has the sixth highest unemployment rate behind Macedonia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Serbia, Greece and Spain. However many African countries are not included in IMF figures and anecdotal evidence suggests unemployment levels across the continent are high. In Zimbabwe, for example, President Robert Mugabe’s party claims unemployment is hovering around 60 percent.
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This article is more than 9 years old In November 2013, a list of 16 claims about South Africa under the African National Congress - all of them negative - began doing the rounds on Facebook. Within days the list had attracted more than 2,000 comments, been liked 1,600 times and had been shared on the Facebook pages of more than 12,000 people. The list appears to be a shortened version of a blog post published on 8 May 2013 which derisively referred to the the ANC’s list of achievements . A version of the list also appears to have been circulated via email. In August 2013, Business Day reported that a Democratic Alliance councillor in South Africa’s Eastern Cape province, Stanford Slabbert, had been expelled from the party after forwarding an offensive and racist email that included some of the claims contained in the blog post. So what are the facts? Is there any truth to the claims? Africa Check readers asked us to investigate. The Democratic Alliance manages a crooked comrades monitor , an archive of those people appointed to key positions in the public service in spite of a dubious track record which suggests them unfit for public office. It lists nine current members of parliament that have criminal convictions. However, Michael Mpofu, a Democratic Alliance research and communications officer, told Africa Check that he was unsure how recently it had been updated. Neither Luzuko Jacobs, the head of the parliamentary communication service, or parliamentary secretary Michael Coetzee, responded to questions. In 2006, The Telegraph newspaper reported that Italy is...served by 25 MPs who have criminal convictions, the highest number ever recorded. Last year Italy passed a law which rendered politicians convicted of serious criminal offences ineligible to stand for parliament. In July 2013, The Times of India reported that 1,460 of India’s 4,807 sitting members of parliament and the legislative assembly have declared being the accused in criminal cases.
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This article is more than 9 years old In November 2013, a list of 16 claims about South Africa under the African National Congress - all of them negative - began doing the rounds on Facebook. Within days the list had attracted more than 2,000 comments, been liked 1,600 times and had been shared on the Facebook pages of more than 12,000 people. The list appears to be a shortened version of a blog post published on 8 May 2013 which derisively referred to the the ANC’s list of achievements . A version of the list also appears to have been circulated via email. In August 2013, Business Day reported that a Democratic Alliance councillor in South Africa’s Eastern Cape province, Stanford Slabbert, had been expelled from the party after forwarding an offensive and racist email that included some of the claims contained in the blog post. So what are the facts? Is there any truth to the claims? Africa Check readers asked us to investigate. The South African Reserve Bank keeps historical records of the rand-dollar exchange rate. On 3 January 1994, the rand was trading at R3.40 to the dollar. At the time of publishing this report is was trading at R10.23 to the dollar.
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This article is more than 9 years old In November 2013, a list of 16 claims about South Africa under the African National Congress - all of them negative - began doing the rounds on Facebook. Within days the list had attracted more than 2,000 comments, been liked 1,600 times and had been shared on the Facebook pages of more than 12,000 people. The list appears to be a shortened version of a blog post published on 8 May 2013 which derisively referred to the the ANC’s list of achievements . A version of the list also appears to have been circulated via email. In August 2013, Business Day reported that a Democratic Alliance councillor in South Africa’s Eastern Cape province, Stanford Slabbert, had been expelled from the party after forwarding an offensive and racist email that included some of the claims contained in the blog post. So what are the facts? Is there any truth to the claims? Africa Check readers asked us to investigate. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) provides homicide statistics from 1995 to 2011. According to the 2011 data, South Africa - with 15,609 murders - was ranked fourth out of 84 countries assessed. India, with 42,923 murders, was ranked first, followed by Brazil with 42,785 murders and Mexico with 27,199. However, comparing countries using the total number of murders fails to take into account varying population sizes. South Africa has a population of about 53-million. India, by comparison, has a population of 1,2-billion so the higher number of murders there is to be expected. To accurately assess crime figures across populations it has become standard international practice for crime data to be presented, not only in raw or total numbers, but in ratios. Normally these are expressed as the number of crimes committed per 100,000 people. In 2011, South Africa’s murder rate was 30.9 per 100,000 people. On this basis, according to the UNODC data, it was ranked eighth out of the 84 countries assessed. Honduras was ranked first with a murder rate of 91.6 murders per 100,000 people. According to the Institute for Security Studies, the murder rate in South Africa in 1994 was 66.9 murders per 100,000 people. Gareth Newham, head of the governance, crime and justice division at the Institute, told Africa Check that the Facebook post ignores the fact that in the past 19 years, the murder rate has more than halved. Recent crime statistics, however, show a reversal in the downward trend with worrying increases in the numbers of murders and other violent crimes in the 2012/2013 financial year.
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This article is more than 9 years old In November 2013, a list of 16 claims about South Africa under the African National Congress - all of them negative - began doing the rounds on Facebook. Within days the list had attracted more than 2,000 comments, been liked 1,600 times and had been shared on the Facebook pages of more than 12,000 people. The list appears to be a shortened version of a blog post published on 8 May 2013 which derisively referred to the the ANC’s list of achievements . A version of the list also appears to have been circulated via email. In August 2013, Business Day reported that a Democratic Alliance councillor in South Africa’s Eastern Cape province, Stanford Slabbert, had been expelled from the party after forwarding an offensive and racist email that included some of the claims contained in the blog post. So what are the facts? Is there any truth to the claims? Africa Check readers asked us to investigate. The claim is often attributed to Interpol . However, the organisation told Africa Check that they have never made that claim. Unfortunately these false reports have been repeated by various media, without verification with Interpol, Interpol’s General Secretariat said in an email. South Africa certainly has shockingly high levels of rape. The latest crime statistics show that there were 95 reported cases of rape for every 100,000 people. However, Lizette Lancaster, manager of the Institute for Security Studies crime and justice information hub, told Africa Check that with regards to rape: No international comparisons will be accurate. A high number of rape cases go unreported and differing definitions of rape make comparisons impossible. In other countries, for instance, rape of spouses is not an offence but it is in South Africa, Lancaster said.
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This article is more than 9 years old In November 2013, a list of 16 claims about South Africa under the African National Congress - all of them negative - began doing the rounds on Facebook. Within days the list had attracted more than 2,000 comments, been liked 1,600 times and had been shared on the Facebook pages of more than 12,000 people. The list appears to be a shortened version of a blog post published on 8 May 2013 which derisively referred to the the ANC’s list of achievements . A version of the list also appears to have been circulated via email. In August 2013, Business Day reported that a Democratic Alliance councillor in South Africa’s Eastern Cape province, Stanford Slabbert, had been expelled from the party after forwarding an offensive and racist email that included some of the claims contained in the blog post. So what are the facts? Is there any truth to the claims? Africa Check readers asked us to investigate. The first post-apartheid census was held in 1996 . It recorded that there were 1,453,015 households in informal settlements across South Africa. The 2011 census revealed that this number had increased to 1,963,096 households. Using this data, there are 1.4 times more people living in informal settlements than there were in 1996 – not ten times.
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This article is more than 9 years old In November 2013, a list of 16 claims about South Africa under the African National Congress - all of them negative - began doing the rounds on Facebook. Within days the list had attracted more than 2,000 comments, been liked 1,600 times and had been shared on the Facebook pages of more than 12,000 people. The list appears to be a shortened version of a blog post published on 8 May 2013 which derisively referred to the the ANC’s list of achievements . A version of the list also appears to have been circulated via email. In August 2013, Business Day reported that a Democratic Alliance councillor in South Africa’s Eastern Cape province, Stanford Slabbert, had been expelled from the party after forwarding an offensive and racist email that included some of the claims contained in the blog post. So what are the facts? Is there any truth to the claims? Africa Check readers asked us to investigate. The official unemployment rate in 1994, as recorded by Statistics South Africa, was approximately 20%. The most recent 2013 quarterly labour force survey reported an unemployment rate of 24.7%. It has been argued that Statistics South Africa uses a very narrow definition of unemployment which includes only people who are unemployed but actively seeking work. Statistics South Africa says it uses an internationally accepted definition of unemployment - the same definition used by the United Nations International Labour Organisation (ILO) . In addition, Statistics SA calculates an expanded rate of unemployment which includes people who do not have a job and are available to work but have not taken active steps to look for work. Calculations using the expanded rate put unemployment at 31.5% in 1994 and 35.6% between July and September 2013. A recent study conducted by researchers at the University of Kwazulu-Natal suggests that the broader definition provides a better reflection of the relationship between labour supply and labour demand in the South African labour market than the strict, or official, rate of unemployment. But Martin Wittenberg, a professor of economics at the University of Cape Town, argues that both the narrow and broader definitions have their uses. The broad definition is more useful if one is thinking about the scale of the social problem, while the narrow definition is more appropriate if you want to do international comparisons.
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This article is more than 9 years old In November 2013, a list of 16 claims about South Africa under the African National Congress - all of them negative - began doing the rounds on Facebook. Within days the list had attracted more than 2,000 comments, been liked 1,600 times and had been shared on the Facebook pages of more than 12,000 people. The list appears to be a shortened version of a blog post published on 8 May 2013 which derisively referred to the the ANC’s list of achievements . A version of the list also appears to have been circulated via email. In August 2013, Business Day reported that a Democratic Alliance councillor in South Africa’s Eastern Cape province, Stanford Slabbert, had been expelled from the party after forwarding an offensive and racist email that included some of the claims contained in the blog post. So what are the facts? Is there any truth to the claims? Africa Check readers asked us to investigate. There are few international rankings for corruption and those that are available have not escaped criticism . But the available rankings, suggest that South Africa’s government is not the most corrupt in the world. In 2012, Transparency International , a non-governmental organisation that monitors public and private corruption, ranked Somalia the most corrupt out of the 174 countries on its corruption perception index. It scored 8 out of a possible 100 points. South Africa is ranked 69 th on the index, with a score of 43. The World Bank produces annual worldwide governance indicators . In 2012, South Africa’s control of corruption was ranked 113 th out of 210 countries.
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