You can’t solve the immigration crisis in South Africa without directly calling out Zanu PF and FRELIMO.
They are the root cause of undocumented mass immigration in South Africa.
They have been enabled to stay in power by the ANC which has ignored rigged elections and developed relationships with these corrupt regimes and their crony capitalist crooks.
OPEN LETTER TO PRESIDENT MATAMELA RAMAPHOSA
President @CyrilRamaphosa — your private visit to Mnangagwa’s farm last week was, in its timing and in its company, a serious mistake. You arrived in the middle of our constitutional crisis: Mnangagwa is dismantling our 2013 constitution through Amendment Bill No. 3, backed by intimidation, state violence, and parliamentary hearings that have become pure theatre.
Look at who you broke bread with — Paul Tungwarara, Kudakwashe Tagwirei, Wicknel Chivayo. Men whose business empires are tethered to Mnangagwa’s political longevity. They are not patriots. They are passengers on a gravy train, and you were photographed boarding it with them.
If you endorse this constitutional coup, even by accident, get ready to receive more Zimbabweans at Beitbridge. You cannot help us by helping those who are suffocating us.
Read the full Open Letter ↓
https://t.co/2KUPaCTTmw
@PresidencyZA@CyrilRamaphosa I used to respect @CyrilRamaphosa but after this private visit to meet with the most corrupt people in Zimbabwe all the respect is gone, I now believe he is corrupt to the core and that Phala Phala scandal was not politically motivated nor a mistake but pure criminality.
South African politician and leader of that country’s Economic Freedom Fighters party, Julius Malema, delivers a forceful critique of xenophobic and Afrophobic violence in South Africa, challenging the narrative that blames fellow Africans for the country’s economic hardships.
He argues that such divisions are not accidental but are rooted in a historical pattern of manipulation, where black communities are turned against each other to distract from deeper structural inequalities and the legacy of colonial dispossession. Drawing parallels with apartheid-era tactics, Malema calls for critical thinking and unity, urging South Africans to confront the real sources of their struggles rather than targeting other Africans.
In His Own Words.
“After beating up fellow Africans, and you don’t realise that the same people who made you fight each other during apartheid are the same ones who are doing the same.
The provinces that are fighting black-on-black violence are the same that did during apartheid. The tribe that is fighting black-on-black violence is the one that did during apartheid.
At the center of black-on-black hatred is a state-sponsored and capital-sponsored hatred to distract you from giving you economic opportunities, to make you blame wrong people for your misfortune.
There is no Zimbabwe that took your land from you. There is no Zimbabwe that took your tender from you. There is no Zimbabwe that took your job from you. There are no jobs.
The jobs Zimbabweans are doing, you don’t want to do them. You are so educated enough to do those slave jobs. Not that you are lazy, you are not lazy, you know your worth, and you are refusing to do those jobs.
That is what I am hated for. The people who stole your land are white conquerors, are white colonialists. It is written in books, no Zimbabwean conquered you, no Nigerian conquered you.
Why are you turning your back on what is a true reflection of who we are to want to entertain sponsored contemporary politics that seeks to distract you from why you are unemployed?
They are moving you away. Apartheid did the same. It made the ANC fight with the IFP so that they are distracted from fighting for the liberation of South Africa. The script is the same. The writers of the script are the same people. Why are you not learning from your history that you are being made stupid, we are being taken advantage of?
They are repeating what they did in the past when they went into copper and made us to fight one another in the hostels and kill each other. Same people are doing it today. You are refusing to think. You are refusing to be critical. You are thinking about the next election. If I say this, I won’t get elected.”
Defending the Constitution must not only end at rejecting CAB3 it must also go further to ensuring an independent Judiciary. A compromised judicial system that allows pre- trial punishment by denying bail is the biggest threat to democracy. Where courts don’t work democracy dies.
@TembaMliswa Pataurwa zita remumnhu here, these are verses in the bible, why kuvhudhuka chati kwatara, one day uchapfeka apolojersey chete nedzungu rekuda mari.
I attended today's Politburo sitting as usual, as a man of conscience, not as a creature of convenience.Let me speak plainly, as soldiers do.
Constitutional Amendment Bill Number 3 this instrument dressed in the language of national necessity I rejected it. I sat in that chamber, I heard the arguments, and when the moment demanded that I stand on the side of the people and the Constitution, I did not flinch.
This Bill, in its present form and intent, is not a democratic exercise. It is a constitutional manipulation designed to serve the ambitions of a few at the expense of the many. I took an oath to defend this nation not a political faction, not a personal agenda, not a timeline invented to extend the tenure of any single man, however powerful.
What I find most troubling is not the Bill itself. It is the silence of those who know better and say nothing. That silence, comrades, is a form of betrayal. Now, to those who insist this amendment is the will of the people I issue a straightforward challenge: prove it. Go to the people. Call a referendum. Let the citizens of Zimbabwe the farmer in Uzumba, the vendor in Mbare, the teacher in Gwanda, the elder in Lupane let them speak. Not delegates. Not district coordinators with envelopes. The people.If Constitutional Amendment Bill Number 3 truly carries the democratic mandate its proponents claim, they should have no fear of a referendum. The only people who fear the people's voice are those who already know what the people will say.I am a retired soldier. I have no seat to protect, no ministry to lose, no patronage to guard. What I have is my name, my record, and my conscience. And on those foundations, I say this without hesitation No to Bill Number 3. Yes to a referendum. Let the people decide.
Zimbabwe belongs to Zimbabweans not to a committee, not to a faction, and not to a calendar.
Rtd. Lt. Gen. Winston Sigauke Mapuranga. Former Senior Officer, Zimbabwe National Army.