In 1982, businessman and politician Enos Mabuza (1939 - 1997), who was then Chief Minister of the KaNgwane homeland, successfully blocked the apartheid government's plan to cede KaNgwane to Swaziland. When Pretoria dissolved the KaNgwane Legislative Assembly in June 1982 to force the transfer, Mabuza collaborated with lawyers like Mathews Phosa to sue the South African government. They won their case, and the Supreme Court ruled the dissolution and the land transfer null and void. Through his Inyandza National Movement, Mabuza mobilized the SiSwati-speaking residents of KaNgwane, who fiercely rejected being stripped of their South African citizenship and traded "like land without people". Source: UP, SAHO, Historical Association
South Africans are richer than Zimbabweans in statistics not reality. All These Cars you are seeing, in Harare were purchased with cash, no installments or bank ownership while 86% of Zimbabweans own brick houses with tap water, electricity, sewer, and title deeds.
Absolute chaos in the UEFA Conference League qualifier between Malta’s Hamrun and NSI of the Faroe Islands.
Hamrun were convinced the ball had gone out for a goal kick, so they picked it up.
Referee awarded a 91st-minute penalty.
Hamrun lost 2-1 and 3-2 on agg.
Incredible.
Last week I showed you the R350 000 car that actually costs R600 000.
Today, the big one. The R1 million house🏡
Financed the normal way, you will pay R2 355 944 for it.
Here's the maths the bank buries in page 9 of your bond documents 🧵
'From the Archives'
In 2008, the City of Johannesburg agreed to sell some of the most valuable land in central Sandton to a politically-connected consortium. 13 years later, the buyer has yet to pay.
But a handful of people made millions, including former mayor Park Tau’s brother-in-law and a mysterious trust with apparent links to the ANC.
AmaBhungane Centre for Investigative Journalism https://t.co/ayLpMzsJpI
Tell those aunties who complain that we don't greet them that their own children also don't greet our mothers. It is good to teach morals, manners, and good behaviour, but start with your own families.