Allenm
918 posts

Allenm
@Zham2020
Advisor at Training and Advisory Services #Ifrs17 #Jesus is life .
Zimbabwe 가입일 Eylül 2018
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Saka uchihora $3000 take home is $1800 @antomukuwa , @Munyah_Wacho Haa PAYE hatina zera nayo.

Ba-Mokopane, South Africa 🇿🇦 हिन्दी

Site iyi ndiyo yega yandazokwanisa kutenga magetsi ndanetseka.
magetsi.co.zw
Filipino

@KingJayZim DNA testing is truly remarkable. It unmasked e Golden State Killer after 40 years by linking crime scene DNA to distant relatives (killers DNA was not in system), leading police to build a family tree ending a manhunt after 40 years (mhosva hairovi indeed).
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#ZIMBABWE
Lion DNA has been used to successfully prosecute poachers for the first time in the world, it has emerged.
Wildlife crime experts have only just revealed how they were able to identify the individual animal from body parts found in a suspect's village, as they matched a profile on Zimbabwe's lion database.
A blood sample had previously been taken from the male lion, which was being tracked by authorities in Hwange National Park - using a radio collar.
Two poachers were convicted for the 2024 incident and sent to prison in what is thought to be the first prosecution of its kind -BBC News.
BBC News Africa@BBCAfrica
Lion DNA has been used to successfully prosecute poachers for the first time in the world. Wildlife crime experts revealed how they identified a missing animal's parts found in a suspect's village, by matching them to a profile on Zimbabwe's lion database. bbc.in/4kMEoFr
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@ZiFMStereoNews @ZiFMStereo @BusinessTimesZW @AnesuMasamvu @mmatenga @SupaCollinsM @MutukwaPhil @ChidzaSachidza1 @PoliceZimbabwe @FBZimbabwe I read a paper on the algorithm behind kandege. If you bet small amounts, chances of winning is high bt when u increase e betting amt e algo shifts increasing loss probability. It lures u to a winning streak 4 low amounts n when u decide to go big u r eaten alive. U can't win.
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Lawyer lifts the lid on Kandege’s grip on low-Income Zimbabweans
HARARE – Harare constitutional lawyer Phil Mutukwa has sounded a chilling warning over Zimbabwe’s exploding gambling culture, a street-level addiction now known simply as Kandege, saying the industry’s growth is not accidental, but engineered to feed on poverty.
In a hard-hitting social media post that has ignited fierce debate, Mutukwa says betting shops are deliberately planted in low-income, high-traffic areas as part of a calculated business model.
“This isn’t a coincidence. It’s a business model.”
Citing global research on “predatory placement” by the University of Oxford Gambling Research Group, Mutukwa says operators target financially vulnerable communities because the probability of repeat spending is higher.
The contrast, he says, is brutal.
“The poor are surrounded by environments that sell luck, while the rich live in environments that promote leverage.”
While high-density shopping centers host multiple betting halls, sometimes several in a single complex, affluent suburbs remain largely untouched.
“You will never find a betting hall in Borrowdale or Mt Pleasant, not because they forgot, but because the return on investment is almost zero.”
Instead, banks, investment firms, and wealth-building institutions cluster in high-income areas, following what the World Bank describes as financial stability and long-term investment behavior.
Mutukwa’s warning cuts deeper than location.
“It’s not only about how you think. It’s also about where you are. Your environment is an economic force.”
But the gambling trap is no longer confined to shopfronts.
Today, Kandege is one swipe away on any smartphone, at any hour, anywhere there is internet. What was once a counter and a queue is now a pocket-sized casino running 24 hours a day.
And the consequences are mounting.
Recent cases linked to gambling losses have included suicides, criminal charges, and lives unraveled after desperate attempts to recover losses. Families are quietly absorbing the shock. Communities are watching the pattern repeat.
Mutukwa’s message is blunt. The system is designed around instant reward psychology, proximity, and financial pressure, a cycle that normalises risk and desperation in environments already strained by unemployment and low incomes.
“Change the environment, and you change the behavior. Change the behavior, and you change the results.”
As betting halls multiply and online platforms spread deeper into everyday life, his warning lands with uncomfortable force.
In Zimbabwe’s streets, hope is being sold as odds, and for many, Kandege is no longer a game. It is an ecosystem. And it knows exactly where to find its customers.
Reporting by Anesu Masamvu
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ZiFM Stereo News continues to provide dependable, fact-based reporting from Zimbabwe and beyond. Our newsroom remains committed to accuracy, objectivity, and timely updates, ensuring the public is informed with verified and relevant news as it happens.
Follow the ZiFM Stereo News WhatsApp Channel: whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vb…

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🚨🚨UPDATE: EVE LAID TO REST🕊️
Former Scottland FC administrator, Eve Kujinga was laid to rest at Glen Forest cemetery this afternoon.
Scottland FC players and management were among the hundreds of mourners.
She died in a road accident on Thursday.
May Her Soul Rest In Peace!🕊️
#Mabviravira




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@teemadzika In a way thats how human beings learn hazvo...Unototora somethimg from somewhere and build from there so its not entirely your own idea
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In almost every creative process AI depends on plagiarism or violating the copyrights of actual creators
Madzipapi@realkeith__
I don’t see any problem with making music using AI
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@chetemu_walter @antomukuwa Interesting take. I do agree with you that the profession is academically challenging. However, having one specialising from a younger age should reduce the risk though time spent and experience.
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@Zham2020 @antomukuwa Normal route yagara inotorema chaiko, isn't it better kuti mwana achikura njere dzichivhurika paanozosvika kundoita IAC/ITC ange ava kuziva kurwa hondo dzacho here? Majority of people vanotadza CTA and IAC zvotodhakwa vozofunga ACCA or CIMA.
Română

This is the most irresponsible statement l have seen online today!Please let us not be in this habit!If you have an opinion type it in detail and we discuss like it like intellectuals!
Whatever route a student wants to take to become a CA,A level is a necessity!
Ngoni Alex Robbins@NgonieSanaz
Dear O level student. If you want to be a Chartered a Chartered Accountant, consider not going for A level
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@NateDawgSithole @baba_nyenyedzi Not always. A good example is OpenAi. It's the most valuable private entity last time I checked and is making losses in the billions and not expected to be profitable in the near future.
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@baba_nyenyedzi Hmm bambo🤔 Last I checked profitability is a major factor in determining a company's or a fund's value.
Is that not so?
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Profit doesn’t define the value of a company. Let’s be very clear about that. Mutapa investment fund yielding 1% on assets and RoI is not a big problem in itself. Especially if the fund has a clear strategy going forward. Keeping in mind they’ll make money from listing and selling assets. That’s Mutapa’s value proposition not operating profitability.
The big issue with Mutapa is the qualified opinion by Auditors. Because it questions the asset base. And rightly so.
Mutapa by opening themselves to public scrutiny and publishing the qualified report allows parliament to take the next steps to ensure the Asset base is correctly valued.

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@waltermalungaca @Footballtweet Do these competitons result in improvement of footballing infrastructure?
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@Footballtweet Cosafa Cup, Cecafa, Caf confederation cup, Champions League, Arab Cup ,Africa Nations Champion,now National League and some people think it's not enough development.
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🇫🇷🗣️ Claude Le Roy SLAMS the decision to change the AFCON to every four years from every two years:
“AFCON every four years is a distressing mistake. 😡
Do you not want Africa to develop?
Do you not want countries to build stadiums, training grounds and highways every two years? That’s exactly what all of sub-Saharan Africa needs.
Having an Africa Cup every two years allowed a lot of work and development to be carried out. This decision is against Africa and for FIFA, which creates other completely meaningless competitions that further damage the players…
I’m sorry, but for example the FIFA Arab Cup makes no sense at all! That competition offers prize money higher than the Africa Cup… I honestly don’t even understand how journalists haven’t reacted against this.”

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@baba_nyenyedzi Advancements in technology allowing collection of data points which assist in improving every aspect of our lives. We nw knw how to look younger with change in hairstyle n appearance, Foods and Products that slow skin aging and health conscious messaging.
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@controlla__zw I have learnt that problems always appear bigger especially if you dnt have someone to talk to about them. When u share, u tend to realise that others out there are strong
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suicide is never the answer, bro. real niggas outlive their problems
MALOWE@Malowe94
I have given this life my all. Maybe the next One will be Kinder
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Allenm 리트윗함

Bigger Is Better! 📺🔥
Go big this Black Friday with Sharp Smart TVs at never-to-be-repeated prices! Enjoy these and more Big Screen Savings that bring your favourite movies, sports, and series to life like never before.
Shop online tvsales.co.zw/categories/bla…



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Allenm 리트윗함

MAKERS OF HISTORY
Locardia Ndandarika, known in art circles as the woman who could make a stone “tell a story,” was her own person.
She was a self-driven passionate globetrotter who, in her lifetime, explored the world through stone sculpting.
Locardia battled to be the public face of success rather than be a behind-the-scenes figure at a time when it was not expected of women to do so. She was married for 14 years to the late Joseph Ndandarika, a world famous sculptor, but she refused to bask in the glory of her more celebrated spouse. She died on 5 January in 2023.
Locardia was a first generation Shona stone sculptor and a native of Bindura who was born in 1945. An intelligent woman who did not have much of a formal education, she started her illustrious career in arts as a child making clay models of people and animals using traditional methods. With the passing of years she graduated into ceramic products as she went commercial.
In 1964, Locardia married the late Joseph Ndandarika, considered by many to be one of the doyens of sculpture in contemporary Zimbabwe. Joseph ranked among the world’s major stone artists.
The marriage marked Locardia’s transition into stone sculpting. She would silently observe her husband carving his stones and this motivated her to venture into the art work.
However, Joseph had a low opinion of women sculptors, so Locardia started to work on stones secretly whenever her husband would be away.
Her romance with stones started in earnest around 1969 through the assistance of art enthusiast, Tom Bromfield, founder of Tengenenge Art Community.
Bromfield, at that time, used to give established artists stones to make sculptors that they would exhibit at his gallery.
Locardia told Jeff Brown that she would take the stones out one by one, carve them and hide the finished piece in the same hole.
One day her husband left home for Marondera to attend an artist’s workshop. She told herself that it was her chance to work on her pieces. She called four boys to wash the pieces for her. After a few minutes Joseph came back unexpectedly. He was shocked when he saw her working on the pieces. He asked her who the owner of the pieces was and she told him they were hers. She felt she was not supposed to hide them. He was hurt, he was jealousy. He then took her pieces and sold them and he did not give her any money. She was not worried when he took the money he got from selling her pieces. She told herself that she owed Joseph for teaching her sculpting and the money he took was his payment.
Locardia said when Joseph sold her pieces, it confirmed to her that her work was good enough for the market.
She did not resist when Joseph ordered her to stop working with stones, arguing that they were very hard for a woman to work on.
Joseph suggested she should revert to making clay pieces and he even accompanied her on her trip to look for the right clay for moulding. She would take her clay pieces to the National Arts Gallery for exhibition but he still would go there to collect her money and spend it. She then queried the authorities at the art gallery why they were giving him her money without her permission. She demanded all the money they owed her and they gave her.
Some of her clay pieces are part of the permanent Frank McEwen Collection at the British Museum.
Eventually she divorced Joseph in 1978 after 14 years of marriage when he realised that he would never support her artistic dreams. Locardia decided to go to night school. She put herself first through primary school and later trained as a professional artist at the BAT Workshop at the Zimbabwe National Gallery.
In 1986 she became a member of the Workshop Gallery. She was also invited to work at the Chapungu Sculpture Park.
As one of the first women to start sculpting in stone in modern Zimbabwe, Locardia can rightly be called the mother of stone sculpture.




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These are not cheap earphones; they're a nightmare you have to pay for. They often sell for between US$0.50 and US$1, and sometimes some phones include a free pair in the box, but they just end up being functional e-waste.
Typically, they last only for 30 minutes to a few hours. If you're really careful, they might last a better part of a week without failing, but eventually, the result is the same: you'll have to twist and spin the wires to get sound, and sometimes one side just stops working altogether.
The truth is, if you spend less than US$10 on your earphones, you are likely to be greatly disappointed in terms of sound quality, durability, and comfort.
Join our WhatsApp channel to stay updated: whatsapp.com/channel/0029Va…
#Earphones #Audio #ConsumerAdvice #Zimbabwe #WhatsApp

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