Drivetime

The 4-6 pm current affairs Drivetime Show is hosted by veteran journalist Shafiq Morton, winner of two Vodacom Awards, and an AfriCAN author’s award. Analytical and thought-provoking, Morton brings his decades of experience as a photo-journalist, historian and broadcaster to the show, added with his unique brand of humour and wit. The show has its own distinct local and global flavour and was nominated for the MTN Awards in 2014 and the Liberty Life Awards in 2016. The 5.10pm interview on Drivetime is its in-depth highlight and has covered stories in over 100 countries. During the show listener participation is encouraged via WhatsApp and SMS.
Daily English South Africa News
3,995 Episodes
3484 – 3504

Transitional Justice In Africa Fellowship

Last week we spoke to Ms Friederike Bubenzer, from the Institute of International Justice and Reconciliation who hosts the Transitional Justice in Africa Fellowship Programme. The programme has been designed to attract and bring together scholars and practitioners in the field of transitional justice to compare, reflect and write on…
16 Jun 2014 10AM 9 min

Youth Day with Shaka Sisulu

As we celebrate Youth Day and what it means, DriveTime Producer, Zahrah Isaacs, caught up with Walter Sisulu this morning about what youth day means to someone coming from a political background…
16 Jun 2014 10AM 9 min

Sudan Leaders agree to form new government

South Sudan's president and rebel chief have met in Addis Ababa in a bid to end six months of civil war, agreeing to forge a transitional government within a 60-day deadline, Ethiopia's prime minster says. President Salva Kiir and rebel leader Riek Machar met on Tuesday on the sidelines of…
13 Jun 2014 10AM 15 min

Platinum Strike: Agreement Reached

The five-month platinum strike could end on Friday if workers accept a new offer which would see basic pay increase by R1,000 a month for the lowest paid. The strongest sign of a deal is that this is the first time in two months that leaders of the Association of…
13 Jun 2014 10AM 6 min

Trojan Horse

The British government stepped up its anti-Muslim campaign this week by moving to put five schools in Birmingham, England’s second largest city, into “special measures”. The decision was taken by the official schools inspectorate Ofsted (Office for Standards in Education, Children’s Services and Skills). It came comes after a campaign…
12 Jun 2014 11AM 18 min

Welcome To The World Cup

The World Cup 2014 is upon us! Get ready for thrills, spills, colour, noise and some of the most tired football cliches known to man. What comes to mind when you hear the word Brazil? Is it soccer? the beaches of Rio? The beautiful women? While these are all common…
12 Jun 2014 10AM 6 min

ISIL: Rising power in Iraq and Syria

The city of Tikrit, hometown of late president Saddam Hussein, fell to the ISIL yesterday afternoon in less than 48 hours after the capture of Mosul, Iraq's second city. Tikrit, within Salahuddin province, is only 140 km away from capital Baghdad. Meanwhile, violence continued in other cities as eleven people…
12 Jun 2014 10AM 15 min

Up in the Arms Deal

A "one-sided approach" at the arms deal commission is leaving reams of contestable evidence unchecked and unchallenged, arms deal "critics" say. The commission is divided into two "phases": phase one consists of evidence mainly given by government officials, including the defence department and former ministers. Phase two consists mainly of…
12 Jun 2014 10AM 11 min

CAIR to Counter D.C. Anti-Islam Bus Ads

Bus ads linking Islam with Nazism have been circulating through Washington, DC - sparking a furious debate about the role of free speech. The ads, which are featured on twenty Metro buses, feature a photo of Adolf Hitler in conversation with "his staunch ally" Haj Amin al-Husseini, the grand mufti…
11 Jun 2014 11AM 12 min

Freedom From Violence

The Institute for Justice and Reconciliation (IJR) and The Hague Institute for Global Justice (THIGJ) are pleased to announce the convening of an annual Transitional Justice in Africa Fellowship Programme. The programme is being held in Johannesburg, Cape Town and The Hague from the 7th to the 27th of June…
11 Jun 2014 10AM 7 min

New Immigration Laws: The Real Cost

New immigration laws could cost South Africa R6.8 billion a year in loss of tourism, one organisation says. Several court cases are already pending as a result of the new regulations which came into effect on May 26. Western Cape Economic Opportunities MEC Alan Winde said the regulations presented “an…
11 Jun 2014 10AM 10 min

Bill to force-feed Palestinian prisoners

The Israeli prime minister is pushing for the approval of a bill that will allow doctors to force-feed up to 120 Palestinian prisoners. Inmates are hunger striking in protest of their indefinite detention and say they are ready to die for their cause. Although the bill is opposed by the…
10 Jun 2014 10AM 21 min

Black For Rohingya

According to the UN the Rohingya in Myanmar are the world’s most persecuted ethnic minority. The eruption of violence in 2012 is symptomatic of a long and oppressive history of discrimination for which the Buddhist-majority government is to blame. The Rohingya are labeled ‘illegal immigrants’ from Bangladesh thus rendering them…
10 Jun 2014 10AM 11 min

Unpacking The NPA

In the short, troubled and tumultuous history of the National Prosecuting Authority, chaos has reigned. Formed only in 1998, it has seen one head resign after being cleared of being an Apartheid spy, the next being fired after trying to charge the National Police Commissioner, a third suffering the humiliation…
10 Jun 2014 10AM 18 min

Karachi Airport Raid

The Pakistani Taliban has claimed responsibility for an assault on Karachi airport that has killed 29 people, and given warning that more attacks are on the way. Besides the dead, at least two dozen people were wounded and flights were suspended as a result of Monday's attack on Jinnah International…
9 Jun 2014 11AM 8 min

Photographers fought apartheid with cameras

A new documentary film chronicling local photographer’s lives during apartheid has raised questions about press freedom and preserving a visual archive of the struggle for liberation.Behind the Lens, directed by Liz Fish, premieres this weekend at the Encounters documentary film festival. During its 52 minutes, the film tells of how…
9 Jun 2014 10AM 5 min

Radical Economic Transformation

For two years now, political journalists have been trying to plough through ANC parlance to find out what exactly the ruling party’s plans are to achieve economic growth. The use of the term “radical” began at the ANC’s policy conference in June 2012, in the context of discussions of the…
9 Jun 2014 10AM 14 min

SAHRC launches Lwandle evictions probe

More than 800 families saw their shacks demolished and they were left homeless after roads agency Sanral was granted an eviction order by the Western Cape High Court earlier this year. The South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) says it intends to engage with all parties involved to investigate the…
9 Jun 2014 10AM 8 min

Syrian elections : Analysis

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad was re-elected in the country's first presidential vote since its civil war broke out three years ago. Al-Assad received 88.7% of Tuesday's vote, according to state media agencies. The election took place only in areas controlled by the government. Opposition groups and many Western countries have…
6 Jun 2014 11AM 17 min

G4S to end Israeli contract

We’ve been watching the developments on this story quite closely and today there is a breakthrough. British-Danish multinational security and prison firm G4S is to pull out of Israeli prisons completely, according to media reports. This of course is a significant victory for Palestine human rights campaigners and the global…
6 Jun 2014 10AM 8 min
3484 – 3504