@ntsikimazwai Wena sesi o vocal monate bjang, and then when they come for you "A few moments later" o rata gollaaaa!!!!! I tlhomola pelo sometimesππ€£ And ko rata bjang.
@teffo_ME@_simplyenny Wow Enny, lena mo this app and doing whatever it takes here to fill the bag from Elon. You call the man Skomota and he can also go to hell.ππ€£
My prayer to you General Mkhwanazi and General Khumalo πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦πΏπ¦
@Mmalenyalo_@ZizinjaAbelungu Sir now, do your work and be objective and stop being selective with incidences that favors your narrative, look at these backyard manufactures. You probably saw this and quickly skipped, this is what our communities are consuming and you guys aren't sayin shi{.
That is why South Africa is flooded with illegal foreigners and migrants because African countries rely heavily on the Europe while fraud and corruption continue to fill up their pockets and those of their friends and family.
A decade in their freedom and democracy, none of the African countries are doing better for their citizens.
1. Poor health care
2. Poor infrastructure, including roads
3. High employment rates
4. Poor education levels and structure
5. Hunger
6. Instabilities in their own countries
Flooding from one country looking for greener pastures is embarrassing to your nation and not solving the problems of your countries.
When South Africans retaliate and are frustrated about their high unemployment, they are called xenophobic. True African leaders need to sit down and solve African problems instead of blaming others for failure.
South Africa. When are you going to wake up. Every man for himself. Donβt let South African leaders lie to you. African countries have laws that put their people first. We have to share the little that we have all in the name of pan-Africanism. Why must pan-Africanism start and end in South Africa?
Under Statutory Instrument 215 of 2025, which took effect in December 2025, Zimbabwe implemented a sweeping economic policy reserving key sectors exclusively for indigenous citizens and imposing strict new conditions on foreign investors . Under this law, foreign participation is prohibited entirely in sectors including bakeries, artisanal mining, barbershops, beauty salons, advertising agencies, employment agencies, and pharmaceutical retailing . Where foreign investors are permitted in certain reserved sectors such as retail and wholesale trade, they must now meet a **minimum investment threshold of US25 million and 50 employees, while haulage and logistics demand US$10 million and 100 workers .
Existing foreign-owned businesses already operating in reserved sectors have three years to divest 75% of their equity to Zimbabwean citizens, with mandatory annual transfers of at least 25% per year, leaving foreign owners with no more than 25% shareholding . Failure to comply is a criminal offence carrying fines or imprisonment, with repeat offenders barred from government contracts for five years . The immediate impact has been severe: ZIDA reported a near 60% decline in projected new investment value, falling from US1.92 billion in Q1 2026, with new licences dropping from 214 to 146 over the same period .