No African can be a foreigner in Africa.” – Mzwanele Nyhontso
A powerful truth. And a painful question.
The truth:
Our blood is the same blood that crossed the Sahara before borders existed.
Our ancestors were one people before Berlin 1884 drew lines with a ruler.
When a Zimbabwean child cries in Limpopo, Africa should feel it.
When a South African mother suffers in Accra, Africa should mourn.
Borders are on maps. Brotherhood is in bones.
So yes, spiritually and historically: No African is a foreigner in Africa. We are home.@Mzanziawake
@CdeNMaswerasei Rubbish, Chamisa is not Zimbabwe bro, Zimbabweans are just cowards simple, you included Cde,mapererwa now,makungoti Chamisa, what happened to your favourite Tyson? Talk about him as you used to.
@Tsombeni@freemanchari Even if you talk about the bill,it will still sail through, whether you like it or not,tiri magwara,simple,wasting time on Twitter and Chamisa,madununu.
The debate around #CAB3 is in @ParliamentZim is revealing something troubling: the shallowness of the arguments being advanced in its defence by the freeloaders.
We are getting nursery-rhymes that extending terms addresses electoral fatigue, its for development and that people somehow love the useless amendment.
If electoral fatigue is the problem, why not reduce the cost of elections? Why not improve service delivery? Why not strengthen democratic institutions? So somehow, citizens are supposedly tired of voting but not tired of unemployment and poverty? Not tired of hospital shortages? Not tired of corruption? Not tired of power cuts?? Kwanai!
If elections are such a burden as youclaim, the solution is not extending political terms. The solution is finding leaders who can survive regular accountability, not zealots masquerading as people's representatives.
They cheered when he said “I won’t apologize”.
Today they cry when the court says “You’re in contempt”.
we love fire on social media. We clap for the man who says “no retreat, no surrender”.
We call him brave. We call him “real”. We share the clip 1000 times.
But clout doesn’t appear in court.
Likes don’t pay legal fees.
“Amakwerekwere” tweets don’t argue for you before the judge.
Freedom of speech is not freedom from consequence.
The Constitution protects your voice. The law also protects another man’s name.
Ngizwe stood alone in that dock. The crowd that shouted “Don’t apologize!” was not standing next to him.
To the crowd: Don’t cheer a man into prison.
To Ngizwe: May this be a painful lesson, not a life sentence. A man falls, but a man also learns.@Mzanziawake
Remembering u today, dear brother, four years on.Your voice, your courage,&your passion for shaping a better future continues to inspire many.Though you're gone, your legacy lives on in the lives u touched and the change u stood for. You are deeply missed&never forgotten Wamai
He’s one of the most respected and popular politician of our time—he understands our country’s problems and believes in dialogue, peace, and faith in God. He supports peaceful solutions, refuses to endorse violence, and believes nothing is impossible, hadi zveropa mumaoko ake