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@jsteenhuisen I like how John is minding his own business and actually doing his job. No politics this side 😂
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Today, I’m in Ceres with our farmers and industry partners to join hands as we launch government’s response to the damage caused by the devastating floods.
To the farmers and communities affected by the recent storms, help is on the way.
Your resilience and determination through this incredibly difficult period is remarkable, and I am fully committed to bringing you the support and relief you deserve.
Moving forward, it is critical that government remains nimble and adaptable to an increasingly volatile climate, and that all future investment into infrastructure and development is done so in a sustainable and resilient manner to protect our local economies and the livelihoods they support.
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@MickyJnr__ You're such a prick, choosing that image making it seem like they are the victims... if you are scared of north africans, I bet you wouldn't want south africans for enemies. Don't provoke us!!!
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🚨🌍 𝐄𝐗𝐋𝐂: CAF to delay disciplinary decisions across major continental fixtures
CAF has opted not to take any immediate disciplinary action following recent incidents in both the CAF Champions League and CAF Confederation Cup.
Incidents under review include:
• OC Safi vs USM Alger — delays to the match and fans entering the pitch
• Home & away ties between Zamalek SC and USM Alger — use of flares and laser incidents
• Mamelodi Sundowns vs AS FAR — crowd-related incidents in the stands
CAF has chosen to postpone all disciplinary meetings and sanctions, preferring to avoid any disruption ahead of the second leg of the AS FAR v Sundowns tie.
The governing body’s priority is clear:
➡️ Ensure the remaining final fixtures proceed without distractions
➡️ Avoid decisions that could lead to matches being played behind closed doors at this stage
All disciplinary outcomes and potential sanctions are expected after the second leg in Rabat.
#CAFCCwithMicky
#CAFCLwithMicky
#AfricanFootball

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@SundayWorldZA You're talking nonsense, and we see right through you.
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When the state starts protecting power instead of principle
sundayworld.co.za/news/opinion/w…
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@Miz_Ruraltarain It would've been chess if anyone in the ANC took him seriously. They know him better than we do... nobody in the African National Congress takes this chap seriously.
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Julius Malema is playing 3D chess while everyone else is playing checkers, and it is time we talk about it. ♟️🔥
Have you noticed how the EFF leader is suddenly the chief campaign manager for the ANC Presidency? One day he’s backing Zuma, the next it’s Ramaphosa, then DD Mabuza, and now he’s suddenly Team Paul Mashatile over Fikile Mbalula.
Even his own EFF supporters are scratching their heads!
Let’s be honest about what is actually happening here:
The Divide-and-Conquer Masterclass,Malema doesn’t care about Mashatile.
He cares about chaos. By hyping up Mashatile and calling Mbalula "noisy," he is successfully planting seeds of paranoia right inside Luthuli House. 🧠💥
Remember when we called it the "Shilova Express" before Bombardier even touched it? Malema knows how to ride the waves of political infrastructure and history to keep himself relevant.
With Friends Like These... It is wild to watch ANC heavyweights like Panyaza Lesufi, Lebogang Maile and cronies of Alex Mafia defend Malema more than their own organization. Talk about emotional manipulation at the highest level!
Politicians don't have permanent friends; they have permanent interests. Malema knows exactly how to trigger the ANC's internal insecurities to weaken them from the inside out.
Is he a political genius or just a master of division? 😆 🤣
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ZUMA DROPS A POLITICAL BOMB: MK Party Dismantled & Reborn as “Liberation Movement” – Total Power by 2029!
Former President Jacob Zuma has just announced a massive shake-up of the uMkhonto weSizwe Party. In a five-page statement, Zuma revealed he’s disbanding MK’s powerful National High Command, creating a new centralised “institute” to run everything, and pushing hard for constitutional changes rooted in “African identity restoration”.
After an 18-month internal study, Zuma wants to transform MK from a normal political party into a “concentrated liberation movement” — laser-focused on seizing total power in 2029.This is Zuma going back to his radical roots.
No more business as usual. Is this a masterstroke to rebuild and dominate… or the beginning of more chaos and division in South African politics? South Africa is bracing itself.
What do you think this means for 2029? Drop your predictions
#ZumaRevolution #MKPartyOverhaul #TotalPower2029 #AfricanIdentity
facebook.com/share/p/1DzMKs…

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@sandileswana These so-called political analysts are getting exposed 1 by 1.
Your hate for the man is clear for all of us to see. What in the hell do you mean he can't interdict? You're not a lawyer nor a law expect. Seat this one out chief it's above you. With your flawed analysis
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Ramaphosa can not interdict the impeachment process .
President Cyril Ramaphosa's legal review of the Section 89 Independent Panel Report does not automatically stop Parliament's constitutional obligation to conduct an impeachment inquiry. To halt the committee, he must explicitly secure an active court interdict, as political discomfort or a review application alone cannot suspend the process.
The Legal Framework
The Constitutional Court Ruling: Chief Justice Mandisa Maya ruled that the Section 89 inquiry must be implemented by referring the matter to an Impeachment Committee "unless and until the report is set aside on review".
Review vs. Interdict: Legal experts clarify that filing for a judicial review is not an automatic freeze.
Parliament can legally proceed with forming and running its 31-member committee unless Ramaphosa successfully files and wins an urgent court interdict to pause them.
Separation of Powers: The courts are highly reluctant to interfere with the internal procedures of another branch of government. Because holding the executive accountable is a core constitutional mandate of the National Assembly, courts may rule that an interdict inappropriately interferes with Parliament's right to perform its oversight duties.
What Happens Next?Committee Work: National Assembly Speaker Thoko Didiza announced the committee, and Parliament is proceeding with gathering nominations to process the report, despite the President challenging the factual conclusions and legal reasoning of the panel.
Judicial Backlogs: Even if Ramaphosa’s legal team formally challenges the panel report, court backlogs mean such reviews can take months to over a year to resolve, allowing the parliamentary impeachment process to advance in the interim.For further analysis from legal experts on why the President's review bid does not automatically halt the legislature's constitutional duties:
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Azania retweetledi

@SundayWorldZA He must be told vele, he was nowhere to be seen when zuma was there now he thinks he can boss everyone around... he must shut up!!!
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‘Mbeki not an ANC super leader’ – NEC meeting told
sundayworld.co.za/politics/mbeki…
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@Mzansiawake The people of South Africa would choose Pratice Motsepe... if you lot doubt it, let's put it to a test 😂
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Who should replace Cyril Ramaphosa if he steps down? 👀
Here are 10 South Africans people often mention:
1. Patrice Motsepe – Businessman, well-known worldwide
2. Paul Mashatile – Deputy President right now
3. Gwede Mantashe – Senior leader in the ANC
4. Panyaza Lesufi – Premier of Gauteng
5. Herman Mashaba – Leader of ActionSA
6. Ronald Lamola – Minister of Justice
7. Lindiwe Sisulu – Former minister, long-time ANC member
8. Julius Malema – Leader of the EFF
9. Mmusi Maimane – Former DA leader
10. Trevor Manuel – Former Finance Minister
If you have other names not on this list, add them.
So, who do you think would be the best replacement?
@Mzanziawake

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@EFFSouthAfrica We are tired of you julius, everyone else must be subjected to the law, but when it comes to you, somehow you're above it? Neh man, be a leader for once and stop acting like a thug.
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The EFF’s Statement Condemning Helen Suzman Foundation’s Court Bid Against CIC Julius Malema
-This application is a dangerous and dishonest attempt to redefine democratic criticism as constitutional misconduct. The implication advanced by the Helen Suzman Foundation is that members of Parliament who hold strong views about the judiciary, particularly views critical of judges or judicial outcomes, should be excluded from constitutional oversight bodies.
Such reasoning is fundamentally anti-democratic and seeks to impose an artificial culture of silence around institutions that exercise immense political and constitutional power.




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At some point, the focus shifts.
From playing the game,
to building it.
This is where leadership begins.
Not an individual success, but in the ability to create environments where others can succeed.
Because the future of football is not built by one player, it is built through systems, structures, and shared knowledge.
This is where development becomes legacy.
#ChangingTheGameForGood #PitsoMosimane

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BREAKING NEWS: JMPD officers arrested five illegal foreigners ( 3 Zimbabweans and 2 Malawians) who were allegedly found in possession of traffic robots. They are expected to face charges related to damaging Gauteng infrastructure, as well as contravening the Immigration Act for allegedly being in the country illegally. #Abahambe
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Azania retweetledi

Those who needs clarity on why Julius Malema and Vuyo Zungula r clutching on straws...
President @CyrilRamaphosa committed no crime and he's a victim of burglary
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@primetateHQ His a punk!!! He got beat up like a sissy he is... damn softie acting tough.
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@daddyhope This is how you tell china has an upper hand. He bullies every leader, but when it comes to China, he folds
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I have never seen the American president, Donald Trump, bootlick someone like this, literally kissing ass, as he himself likes to say. This was Trump today with Chinese President Xi Jinping, and boy oh boy, Trump was praising him like crazy.
What I found interesting is what I did with this video. I first inserted a clip of Trump during his campaign days attacking and mocking China, then followed it with this latest clip of him praising and flattering the Chinese president in a way we have rarely seen before, today. It perfectly shows how power and economic strength change global power relationships.
This should be a lesson for Africa and African leaders who embarrass themselves grovelling for recognition to Western leaders.
In 1975, China’s economy was nowhere near where it is today. Back then, China was still a relatively poor developing country and nowhere close to being a global superpower. Today, depending on which economic measurement is used, China is either the largest economy in the world or the second largest after the United States.
What did the Chinese do? They did not spend decades begging the West for validation or recognition. They rolled up their sleeves and went to work. They industrialised. They built infrastructure. They invested in manufacturing, education, technology, and long-term planning. And because they built something powerful, the world had no choice but to take them seriously.
That is why today you can see an American president publicly flattering a Chinese leader. China now has something the world wants and needs.
African leaders waste too much time begging for approval, validation, and symbolic recognition from the West instead of fixing their countries and building functional economies.
You even hear leaders like Emmerson Mnangagwa of Zimbabwe demanding a permanent seat or influence at the United Nations Security Council, yet he presides over a country that struggles to provide electricity for even 10 hours a day.
Zimbabwe has massive unemployment, collapsing public services, hospitals without medication, broken roads, a currency that cannot be freely exchanged internationally, and widespread corruption. The list is long.
The country’s biggest hospital has operated for long periods with severe shortages of equipment and functioning theatres. Citizens are heavily taxed while public services continue collapsing.
How do you expect the world to place you at the top table when your own country is struggling to provide the basics for its citizens? Serious nations do not hand out respect because of liberation war slogans or revolutionary rhetoric from 50 years ago.
Respect is earned through performance, stability, production, innovation, and competence.
You cannot talk about sovereignty and greatness while importing maize because you failed to properly utilise some of the best agricultural land in Africa.
You cannot demand global influence while your citizens depend on food aid and medical support and donations from the same international system you constantly criticise.
What we are seeing with Trump and Xi Jinping is a lesson in how the world works. Hard work, economic strength, production, and strategic planning force the world to respect you. Even the most powerful country in the world cannot ignore you once you become economically indispensable.
Zimbabwe has enormous potential. We have vast mineral wealth, fertile land, talented people, and strategic opportunities. We have over 80 different minerals and some of the best farming land in the region.
Yet millions of Zimbabweans live in poverty and struggle to survive because of corruption, poor governance, and misplaced priorities. We even import toilet paper and tooth picks from South Africa.
No serious global institution will fully respect leaders who cannot first build functioning societies at home. The world respects results, not empty slogans, rhetoric and childish propaganda.
What we have also learned from this video is that Trump has a domestic audience in America that he clearly does not fully respect intellectually. He says whatever he believes will win him votes, even if it means making exaggerated or hostile statements about countries like China during campaign periods. He understands the emotions and intellectual emptiness of his audience and plays to them politically.
And it does not end with his domestic audience only. Trump also has loyal but ignorant supporters and bootlickers across the world, including in Africa, people who treat him almost like a god. But politicians do not necessarily respect people simply because they worship them blindly. They respect power, leverage, influence, and results.
During his campaign, Trump spoke about China in derogatory and confrontational terms because it suited his political objectives at the time. But when he came face to face with Chinese President Xi Jinping, the tone changed completely. There was respect, praise, and careful language. In Trump’s own language, he practically “kissed ass”.
And that is the reality of how global politics works.
You do not get respect simply because you shout loudly, insult others, or demand recognition. You get respect when you build something powerful enough that the world cannot ignore you.
China earned that respect through decades of hard work, industrialisation, discipline, economic expansion, infrastructure development, and strategic planning. They built an economy and a system that the world now depends on.
That is the lesson Africans and African leaders must take from this video. Stop wasting time begging for validation and recognition from the West. Stop thinking respect is something that can be demanded through slogans, liberation war rhetoric, or political noise. Respect is earned through competence, production, economic strength, innovation, and delivery to your own people.
When you build a strong country, the world respects you automatically because you have something valuable to offer.
When you have more than 80 minerals in your country and yet your citizens are walking on top of sewage, nobody will respect you. You become a laughing stock. The world looks at that contradiction and sees failure of leadership, not potential.
You can steal as much money as you want from your people, build mansions, drive convoys, and surround yourself with praise singers, but when a clown enters a State House, it does not become a palace. It becomes a circus.
Real leadership is not measured by slogans, propaganda, or how long you stay in power. It is measured by whether ordinary citizens have clean water, functioning hospitals, decent roads, electricity, jobs, dignity, and hope for the future.
A country rich in minerals but poor in governance will never command real respect internationally. Respect comes when national wealth is converted into prosperity for the people, not luxury for the political elite.
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@ShehuSani Where do South Africans enter? Do it for yourselves not to prove South Africans wrong.
South Africa is thriving coz they mind their own business... do the same.
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A 38-year-old foreign national was arrested by the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Police Department in Benoni for producing and selling fraudulent documents.
The arrest followed reports of fake electricity receipts found at the Chief Albert Luthuli informal settlement in Cloverdene.
Officers traced the documents to an internet café on Bedford Avenue, where the suspect allegedly admitted to printing and selling the fake receipts for R250 each.
Police also uncovered other fraudulent documents, including fake smart ID cards, appointment letters, work permits, traffic registers and foreign driver’s licences.
Equipment used to produce the documents was seized.
The suspect is facing fraud and Immigration Act charges and is expected to appear in the Benoni Magistrate’s Court.




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