HR by day, poet by night? 👀🔥
I chopped it up with Khotatso Tshabalala about juggling corporate life and creativity. We've got laughs, a tricky quiz and a fire playlist drop!
Tune in so you don't miss out! 🚨💈
Link below and in bio 👇🏽
https://t.co/mtE0V2qlG4
"An African cannot be illegal in Africa." That is the slogan of the deluded. That is the anthem of the entitled. That is the cry of those who refuse to accept that a continent of 54 sovereign nations has borders and those borders mean something.
A neighbour is not family. A neighbour is a neighbour. You can be kind to a neighbour. You can help a neighbour. But a neighbour does not have the right to walk into your home, eat your food, sleep in your bed, and tell you how to live simply because they share a street with you. That is not love. That is invasion.
Being African does not give you the right to cross any border you choose. It does not give you the right to bypass immigration laws. It does not give you the right to ignore the sovereignty of other nations. Every country has the right to decide who enters, who stays, and who contributes. That is not xenophobia. That is statehood.
If you believe that being African grants you automatic access to any African country, then you are not a Pan-Africanist you are a colonialist in reverse. You are demanding the same open borders that colonisers demanded when they carved up our continent. You are treating Africa as one big village with no rules, no boundaries, no accountability.
But Africa is not a village. It is a continent of nations each with its own laws, its own people, its own struggles. And we will not be shamed into abandoning our sovereignty just because someone shares our skin colour or our continent.
A neighbour is a neighbour. A citizen is a citizen. And no amount of rhetoric will change that. If you want to be family, act like family. Respect our home. Respect our rules. Respect our laws. Until then, you are just a guest and guests can be asked to leave. That is not hate. That is reality. And we will not apologise for it.
BREAKING NEWS: Three suspects have been arrested in connection with the mass shooting at Jumpers Informal Settlement in Johannesburg that left 13 people dead and 14 others injured earlier this month.
The suspects who are Lesotho nationals were arrested on Monday at the KwaMaiMai informal settlement following an intensive police investigation involving specialised SAPS units and the SANDF. KH
#KayaNews
Thank you Sihle Lonzi 🤣🤣🔥👌🏿. So far the only person within the NYDA who has exposed what is happening within the organisation is Bonga Makhanya. Why do they want to know who is leaking info of corruption happening to the media? What are they hiding?!
Nah. 27-33 aren't your humbling years. They're your awakening years.
So many people misunderstand this phase of life.
That's when you start seeing things clearly. Everything suddenly dawns on you. You realize what you want, what doesn't matter, and how much time you've wasted.
Some people mistake that clarity for failure because they wish they had figured it out earlier.
But if you're determined, you can build more in those few years than you did in your entire early twenties.
It doesn’t matter how long they may have been in South Africa: anyone who is in the country illegally must leave.
You cannot enter our country illegally or overstay your visa after entering legally and then expect sympathy when you’re called out for it.
Our immigration laws are not mere suggestions. We are a sovereign country, and our laws must be obeyed, just like in any other country.
Given that the marches have revealed what South Africans have long suspected to be true, that there is a huge number of foreign nationals who are in this country illegally do you not think it is prudent, as the government, to issue a notice similar to the one issued by Kuwait in 2024 for illegal foreigners to leave the country voluntarily or face detention and deportation if after the deadline they are still in the country?
Government taking control of the situation in a way that shows commitment to enforcing our immigration laws will calm the anxiety caused by the looming 30 June deadline for locals, foreigners and the international community.