Thabo Tebele retuiteado
Thabo Tebele
4.1K posts

Thabo Tebele
@thabotebele
Late bloomer... Introvert.... Content..... I consider my self a story in writing Consulting Engineer in the Mining industry in SADC region
Roodepoort, South Africa Se unió Nisan 2011
2.2K Siguiendo1.4K Seguidores

@Newzroom405 Our sisters and aunties have been doing that way before the infestation of immigrants in our communities.
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@Newzroom405 We have them also in deep rural areas in Limpopo, most of then as hairdressers. Imagine someone from Ghana setting in Limpopo to become a mere hairdresser or a doing odd jobs in home construction, what visa allows him to be in the country to do such a job.
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[WATCH] Ghana's ambassador Benjamin Kofi Quashie says there are over 16,000 Ghanaians in South Africa, the majority of whom are in the country legally.
#Newzroom405
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@colonialism101 @Newzroom405 Thats true,I was in Polokwane Makro.There is a Malawian and a Ghanaians sitting on The road looking for some odd handyman jobs.Their women are hairdresser,I wonder which visa are they on.
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@Newzroom405 This is a lie, there are over 10k Ghanaians in limpopo only
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@LesegoFuturist Have a relatives in Botswana,I was called Motswakwa when I was speaking Sepedi and it did not hurt me a little bit,thats just me.
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@BujaMahoro @daddyhope Good question,to my knowledge the ANC presidency is through the ANC branches.
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Exciting post my brother @daddyhope . Can you please just share some few examples of ANC Presidents who were single-handedly GROOMED by an outgoing ANC President since 1912.....
This is very new to us who thought that the ANC as a broad church chooses its own leaders among those who have raised their hands and many of those elected some came via as Deputy Presidents who were elected by the ANC branches!
Can you say Chief Albert Luthuli groomed Oliver Tambo who later groomed Nelson Mandela?...quiet interesting your post🤔
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Former South African president Thabo Mbeki made some serious mistakes during his presidency, and the two glaring ones were HIV and AIDS policy and Zimbabwe. I would also add his failure to properly groom or allow a successor before the 2007 Polokwane conference.
But every time I listen to South African leaders speak, he still stands above all the presidents South Africa has had after Nelson Mandela. Mandela was in a league of his own and served a unique historical purpose during a particular era, so I do not even place him in this comparison.
But when you compare Thabo Mbeki, Jacob Zuma and Cyril Ramaphosa, I genuinely enjoy listening to Mbeki because his arguments are backed by facts, empirical evidence, research, economic analysis, scholars and international journals. Whether one agrees with him or not, he constructs arguments intellectually.
Listening to this discussion in the video reminded me again that he was a great leader who nevertheless had major flaws, and unfortunately those flaws often overshadow many of the positive things he achieved for the South African economy.
I mentioned HIV and AIDS. I mentioned Zimbabwe. I mentioned the failure to groom a successor. I also think one of his major mistakes was the refusal to invest adequately in Eskom at the time when warnings were already being raised about future electricity generation problems.
But when you then look at the presidencies of Jacob Zuma and Cyril Ramaphosa, it becomes a completely different picture.
Mbeki’s approach to Zimbabwe was ideological. Zuma, for all his own problems, is probably the only South African president who can genuinely say he at least attempted to engage Zimbabwe politically in a meaningful way. But Ramaphosa’s relationship with Zimbabwe appears deeply compromised by business and political interests, at worst corrupt.
And when you assess the three presidencies rationally, especially from an economic management perspective, the figures speak for themselves. South Africa’s economic growth reached around 5% to 6% during parts of the Mbeki era, levels the country has struggled to reach since.
The problem today is that many people analyse these leaders emotionally instead of rationally. Economic performance is measured through figures, and those figures are publicly available.
So every time I listen to Thabo Mbeki speak, I enjoy listening to him because of the depth, structure and intellectual discipline of the way he makes his arguments.
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@daddyhope Whatever he said when he came out of those negotiated government of GNU had nothing to do with him and he is not responsible for whatever happened after.Please don't peddle your opinion as facts.
Rustenburg, South Africa 🇿🇦 English

@daddyhope I suggest you do a bit of reading about the ANC and their succession culture. There is no such a thing which the sitting president grooms the incoming president. Your totally wrong on the Zimbabwe issue again, Mbeki was just a mere mediator between between Mugabe and Morgan
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@ghanaboynie Samuel is just here for clubbing and shopping,like most officials we see from the rest of the continent.He probably came with his wife,kids or side chicks. It was a perfect opportunity for him.
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Ghana 🇬🇭 & South Africa 🇿🇦: Ghana’s Foreign Affairs Minister Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa has arrived in South Africa to assist with the safe repatriation of Ghanaians amid growing anti illegal immigration protests.
This is a reminder that migration issues must always be handled lawfully, peacefully, and with respect for human dignity. Africa needs cooperation, not violence. 🇬🇭🇿🇦
#Ghana #SouthAfrica #Politics #News #IllegalImmigration #Repatriation #Africa #GhanaiansInSA #Migration
🇬🇭🌍🇿🇦🌍🇬🇭🌍🇿🇦🌍🇬🇭🌍🇿🇦🌍🇬🇭🌍🇿🇦🌍🇬🇭🌍
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Thabo Tebele retuiteado

@Miz_Ruraltarain Ya,something is not right with Motshabi.Maybe o hloka goya banneng or dipitsanyana.
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Yoh, Julius is going through mo goer sana on Sky News! Progressive breakdown or okare e nwa madi ? The red beret is tilting, the words are doing the Pretoria matrix, and international TV is witnessing a premium tier chest-pain session. Skhokho is fighting for his life against that camera lens! 💀

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Thabo Tebele retuiteado
Thabo Tebele retuiteado

@eNCA Get rid of corruption within the SAPS and NPA.More police visibility. Check if our police officers are competent to tackle the current crime trends,criminals are evolving with technology and harsher punishment for those found guilty.
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@daddyhope With his nyasa origins,he is just protecting his long distance brothers. His ancestors probably came here the same way.
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South Africa’s Deputy President Paul Mashatile has condemned anti-migrant protests and xenophobic violence against foreign nationals in South Africa, warning that immigration issues must be handled through the rule of law and not through mob violence or vigilante actions.
Mashatile called on South African law enforcement agencies to address immigration concerns legally and not through mob violence.
His remarks come amid growing tensions and increasing incidents of anti-immigrant rhetoric and violence targeting African migrants in parts of South Africa.
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@daddyhope @eNCA Probably fake using fake documentation. There was no war in 2005 Nigeria
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Dear @eNCA,
I am deeply ashamed by the type of journalism displayed in this clip. As a trained journalist, and as a former eNCA journalist myself, I must say this is dangerous and highly questionable conduct, especially when a media crew is no longer merely documenting events, but appears to be facilitating or legitimising harassment.
There is a major difference between reporting on an incident and becoming part of the theatre of intimidation.
If a legal migrant is being surrounded, threatened or humiliated by a vigilante group, the role of journalists should be to document what is happening accurately, safely and fairly, while remaining conscious that the vulnerable person may already be under pressure or fear.
Once a crew starts staging interactions, shoving microphones into faces in a way that amplifies intimidation, or giving a vigilante leader a platform without challenge or context, you cross from journalism into participation.
It becomes even more problematic in South Africa, where xenophobic violence has previously led to deaths, displacement and mob attacks against African migrants, including Nigerians, Zimbabweans, Somalis and others, many of whom were legally documented, just like this man appears to be.
Media coverage in such contexts requires extreme caution because images and narratives can inflame public hostility.
Journalists can and should interview all sides, including controversial or vigilante figures, because journalism often requires engaging difficult voices. But ethical reporting also requires balance, context and humanity. A migrant should not be turned into a spectacle while the aggressor is normalised as an authority figure.
Your crew should have avoided creating conditions where the victim felt cornered, exposed or endangered simply because cameras were present, with microphones repeatedly shoved between him and the aggressor.
I am deeply embarrassed by the conduct of this eNCA crew. You should be ashamed of this type of journalism.
This is precisely the kind of irresponsible media conduct that has historically inflamed violence in societies under tension. Journalists must never become participants in intimidation campaigns.
In this clip, you are no longer acting as observers. You become actors within the confrontation itself, helping create a public theatre where a man who is legally in your country is harassed by an ignorant vigilante who does not even understand the law governing immigration and business ownership.
A documented immigrant in South Africa has the legal right to start a business unless the conditions of their visa explicitly prohibit it. That is the law.
Journalism must expose intimidation, not become the microphone of xenophobic vigilantism.
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@keletso_mashile Arabs don't roll like that, they don't play that Ubuntu crap.They will drown them in the Mediterranean if they try even half the crap they are going here and no one will do shit about it.
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