Simanga kaZondumbuzo Mchunu🏴🔻
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Simanga kaZondumbuzo Mchunu🏴🔻
@Simacoder
2X Tableau Ambassador | Data Science Enthusiast | Logician| Fact-Checker Ambassador |Black Conscious| Certified-ALX-Software Engineer | 'Data beats emotions'

Drip on their feet. Purpose in their game. 👟⚽️ Our GDL boys are stepping into a new era with @DRIP_rsa . Because how you show up matters, on and off the pitch. Let’s Create The Player of Tomorrow.🔥 #PMYF #GDL #DripCulture #creatingtheplayeroftomorrow⚽❤️

À la Une: la Russie impuissante au Mali rfi.my/CeiY.x

Happy Freedom Day to all our family and friends from South Africa 🇿🇦 @_ekeji


@Saw_Leyy Thank you for sharing your concerns. We understand the importance of addressing issues related to illegal foreigners and are committed to ensuring safety and order. Your feedback is valuable, and we will take it into consideration as we review and enhance our efforts.


Once signed a contract with a South African publisher, Thabiso Mahlape, who identifies as ‘black publisher.’ As soon as I had fracas at Oxford, she was the first person to terminate my contract, because she said I am ‘misogynist.’ The truth is that she was angry at me for not helping her with a loan. Imagine who wan cancel me? You need to have money to cancel me. A ‘white South African publisher’ would quickly reach out for the book. This hate for Nigerians reaches every part of the fabric of South Africa’s black community against Nigerians! One day, I will tell you how a South African university tried to not pay Professor Wole Soyinka’s teaching fee of $45,000, until I started visiting the VC for the money. I told them the things I would do publicly, if they didn’t pay. They are dubious all around. Both the educated and the illiterate.

Editor of @SundayTimesZA and Chair of SANEF, Makhudu Sefara placed on “special leave” after #SIU announces investigation 28 April 2026 | By Raymond Joseph Makhudu Sefara, the editor of the Sunday Times, was placed on “special leave” on Tuesday, hours after it was revealed that a company of which he was the sole director was linked to a lottery-funded project that is under #investigation by the Special Investigating Unit (SIU). His company, Unscripted Communication, received four payments from Todi Media Foundation totalling R550,000 between 21 November and 12 December 2018 for a lottery-funded “media” project, according to the SIU. A R1.5-million grant paid to Todi was meant to cover “journalists’ accommodation, car hire, catering, equipment rental, guest speakers, marketing, security, etc.,” according to the SIU. But the funds were not used for their intended purpose, the SIU said. Instead, R550,000 was paid to Sefara’s company, and a further R900,000 was paid to Black Danagaree, owned by Daniel Malatji, the father of former Sunday World acting editor Ngwako Malatji. The money was then transferred to attorneys handling the sale of a house in Bassonia Rock Extension, which was registered in the name of Ngwako Malatji and his wife, Martha. She is one of three directors of Todi. The payments to Sefara’s company were made months before he was appointed editor of Sunday World in July 2019. Unscripted Communications, which was bought off-the-shelf in May 2018, was deregistered in January 2024 for not filing statutory annual financial returns. Sefara, who is also chairperson of the SA National Editors Forum (SANEF), released a statement saying that when he received the funds, he was running a “private firm not attached to any institution, private or public”. He said he had run a training workshop for 50 print and radio journalists at a venue near OR Tambo Airport in Johannesburg. “The facts are plain and available to the SIU,” he said. “The event has taken place and was attended by over 50 people. Pictures and videos were taken at the event. Accommodation was paid for. Flights were booked and paid for. The event was addressed by the GCIS deputy head at the time, along with other speakers. I facilitated the event.” Reggy Moalusi, SANEF’s executive director, responded to questions from GroundUp, saying the organisation would issue a statement about the SIU’s revelations about Sefara. It had not been received by the time we published this report. Nwabiso Makunga, the managing director for news at Arena, the owner of the Sunday Times, said in a statement: “Mr Sefara has denied any wrongdoing and has provided the company with his account of the events in question. “Having considered the matter, management has resolved to afford Mr Sefara the necessary time and space to address the allegations and to seek to clear his name. Arena Holdings will appoint an independent investigator to undertake a comprehensive review of all relevant facts and circumstances surrounding the matter. “The findings of this independent process will guide the company’s decisions going forward. Pending the conclusion of this process, Mr Sefara will take special leave.” The SIU said that Todi had repaid the grant to it. Second grant‼️ ■The second grant involved in the SIU investigation was paid to Zibsiflo, also a shelf company, in March 2019. ■Martha Ngwako, the wife of former Sunday World acting editor Ngwako Malatji, was appointed as a director of the company after its purchase. ■Within three months of the appointment of Martha Malatji as one of three directors, the company applied for an R8.2-million grant for “the facilitation of women’s soccer clinics”. But it was only awarded R1.7-million. ■After the grant was paid to Zibsiflo on 28 February, R1.4-million was paid to Black Dangaree, owned by Martha Malatji’s father-in-law, Daniel Malatji... 2/ Source: GroundUp #Corruption #fypシ

Après la mort du général Sadio Camara, l'influence russe au Mali remise en cause ? ➡️ go.france24.com/Al1C













