Researchers at the Children’s Institute at the University of Cape Town say South Africa’s laws are now better positioned to help protect young people from abuse.Published on30 May 2018By Smile Staff ReporterFacebookTwitterWhatsApp Smile Staff ReporterLatestManhunt launched after Harare, Khayelitsha mass shootingHill-Lewis calls for probe into gang links in central line reconstructionWCED: 2027 on-time school applications opensCity law enforcement sees increase in marine patrols and checkpointsSearch for American man missing at sea near Cape PointLatest articlesR28 000 Crystal Meth Seized in Police Raid on Delft Home 12 March 2026 South African travelers face higher airfares as fuel costs soar 12 March 2026 Western Cape exports have increased over the past few years 12 March 2026 WIN with Ryan’s R50 000 Noise 12 March 2026 Previous articleCapetonians have been encouraged to vote for their favourite Mother City tourist spot in the National Lilizela Tourism awards.Next articleThe City of Cape Town's budget for the 2018/2019 financial year was tabled today. The overall budget is 47-point 7 billion rand, much of which will be ploughed in to upgrading informal settlements, improving basic services and fine-tuning the city's plans to address the drought.“Real Housewives of Pretoria” stars arrested in Florida over alleged grocery theft Smile Staff Reporter - 12 March 2026 Controversial South African couple, Peet and Mel Viljoen, have been arrested in Florida in the US, on accusations that they have been running a...Sleep Census reveals: South Africans are sleeping enough… but still waking up exhausted Smile Staff Reporter - 12 March 2026 As March marks World Sleep Awareness Month and to mark World Sleep Day on 13 March, new national research is raising an important question:...The wait is almost over for PRETTY WOMAN: The Musical Smile Staff Reporter - 11 March 2026 The wait is almost over for PRETTY WOMAN: The Musical. This show opens at Artscape, Cape Town on 18 March! The classic ‘90s story...