@bla_bidza Nothing should be done to him. I guess he’s only exercising his democratic rights. His choices maybe stupid and idiotic, but nothing criminal about it. He’s not committing any crime, right?
@aristotledada@JDMahama President Mahama is on point. It’s a shame that there seems to be silence from the SA government (they’re complicit) while xenophobia is happening. Only the EFF seems to have a voice. Whilst we don’t condone illegal immigration, but a capable state can’t operate like that.
Zimbabweans have been voting, and Pretoria has been facilitating for ZANUPF to remain in power by going around the world defending its post-election massacres in 2008, 2018 and blatant rigging in 2023 using deceitful pan-African narratives.
When the international community pressured Zimbabwe with targeted sanctions, all your presidents except the great Nelson Mandela asked for those targets to be unsanctioned.
Ramaphosa was the first to go and dance, celebrating Mnangagwa’s stolen victory in 2023, which he got after rigging brazenly in front of international television cameras.
Your ruling party takes money from ZANUPF, ask them why they do so. This is the right moment for you to ask the right questions because of this xenophobic and afrophobia crisis, but you are burying your head in the sand and engaging in denialism.
Our problems in Zimbabwe are authored by ZANUPF, and it is protected by YOUR government and the ANC. Chasing victims away shows a lack of understanding of where your problem comes from.
You have been shouting “Abahambe” since 2008. A serious adult would not repeat the same thing over and over without taking stock of why things are not changing.
In the middle of celebrating an election that was rigged, Fikile Mbalula was shouting “Viva Mnangagwa” from Harare in 2023. Do you think they were doing that for nothing? For free?
Ask yourself why South African politicians continue to side with ZANUPF while ordinary South Africans are left to deal with the consequences of Zimbabwe’s collapse.
Your leaders have been attacking our opposition, calling it Western-sponsored, and when our people become desperate, you tell them to go back and fight. That is silly. How do they fight when your government defends election rigging and takes bribes from ZANUPF?
It is like telling Oliver Tambo to go back to apartheid South Africa and fight. It would have been stupid to say so then, and it is stupid to say so to Zimbabweans who were shot in 2018 in front of international media and massacred in 2008.
Your former president Kgalema Motlanthe pocketed a six figure payout from the Zimbabwean government in 2028 for chairing a silly commission of inquiry that sanitised the killings of innocent citizens by the army.
More than 600 Zimbabweans were killed in post-election violence in 2008, yet Thabo Mbeki came to Harare and declared that there was no crisis.
For years, South African leaders have dismissed the concerns of ordinary Zimbabweans while embracing the very people responsible for driving millions out of their country.
Then, when those same Zimbabweans seek refuge and opportunities elsewhere, they are told to go back and fight the system that your government helps to sustain.
You cannot help shield the architects of a crisis and then blame the victims of that crisis when they cross the border looking for survival. That is neither logical nor moral.
When I am in South Africa, I am there legally. I do not need a single penny from your government when I live there. I could be like many others who live in the leafy suburbs of Johannesburg, as I do, and keep quiet.
But I will continue to speak on behalf of my people who have no voice, who live in fear of violence, who are terrified, and who have been reduced to statistics. I will speak for those who are insulted, abused, and blamed for problems they did not create.
Silence is easy when you are comfortable as I am. Speaking out is harder when you know you will be attacked for doing so. But the fact that some people are uncomfortable with the truth does not make it any less true.
The people I speak for are human beings with families, dreams, and aspirations. They deserve dignity, respect, and the protection of the law, just like everyone else.
Wake up and live!
@mudharagee@Moreble404 To imagine that during his tenure he maintained visa requirements 4 🇿🇼 & he wants 2 pretend 2 be a champion of Pan Africanism 🚮🚮. He even enabled, sustained & perpetuated Zanuism in 🇿🇼 after its 2008 defeat. It was only ubaba, Jacob Zuma, who showed solidarity with Zimbos💕💕
@mcjnr15@Royalprecastzw You could be right. I called inquiring about pavers and Tsitsi said she’s checking with production, but it’s almost two hours, no feedback 🤷♂️🤷♂️🤷♂️
.@ProfJNMoyo wants me to explain to him in detail why I say #NoToCAB3. I don’t really have time to engage him individually, but if there’s sufficient interest from all of you, I’ll find time.
So if we can get 1k RTs, I’ll do a series of posts/videos explaining each issue. Deal?
1. Turn Off "Significant Locations" (Apple's secret diary of your life)
Your iPhone logs every place you visit: GPS coordinates, timestamps, how long you stayed, and how you got there.
An MIT study found 4 location points can identify you out of 1.5 million people with 95% accuracy.
→ Settings → Privacy & Security → Location Services → System Services → Significant Locations
→ Tap "Clear History"
→ Toggle OFF
It's buried 5 menus deep. Apple requires Face ID just to view it. They know this is bad.