@Yknip1@DMahonyiyo@CyrilRamaphosa@sellomonareng72 I wonder how you are jumping up and down from every corner and insulting people for simple question. Don't you think it shows your character? If all these are in you hidden and waiting for an opportunity to burst out, then sorry for your children. Do you pay tax?
@barkervogues It's your perspective that they are Christian because they attend church. The same way all those people who go to the Synagogue believe they are righteous.
@THESTATENEWSS This your report is bias. The person went there to take diesel, how? He went to steal or what? Security personnel and some Chinese attached him, are the personnel Ghanaian? Some of you reporters are big problems to this country.
@barkervogues@Manasseh_Azure Africa is not the middleman, but the architect. It's the whole booming business in the continent before the West entered this continent.
@TheGlobalPuls@wode_maya I don't think you are fair, not all of them walk out, so it means they can sanction those who walked out. Not to ripped off the title from them.
@asktelecelgh_@tech_twi Telecel you are funny ooo. Your network is poor everywhere. Even around your offices the network is bad. Why should I use other network to browse when I am in your office for service?
@ChoolweMulo@joseph_kalimbwe The problem in Africa is not necessarily the issue of borders, but rather wages and the cost of goods. e.g.: the price of a house in S.A. is similar to that in Ghana, yet rent in Ghana is cheaper than in S.A. So where to invest? I prefer to live in Zim while working in S.A.
@NguNxumalo@SaddickAdams But the real issue is this: why remove someone from power, only to return and do the very same thing? Is there truly no other person capable of becoming president of Zimbabwe besides him?
@NguNxumalo@SaddickAdams Don't compare China to Zim. Even though China system of control will backfire one day, but it's far better than Zim. Those who are tired are leaving the country, their investments help the country a lot. Most towns are like ghost town.
@wode_maya This shows that Africa was not truly united before colonialism. Yes, there were no formal borders, but there were deep divisions, greater than what we see today.
@wode_maya Within what we now call Ghana or South Africa, there were many clans and ethnic groups that did not easily cross into one another’s territories. The colonial powers brought these different groups together under single countries by force.