Christian Hlongwane retweetledi
Christian Hlongwane
80 posts

Christian Hlongwane retweetledi

[WATCH] "There is no war in SADC that could justify people flocking into South Africa." Ntshavheni says the first country-of-safety principle must be applied. She says SA could not be a centre where everyone flocks to.
#Newzroom405
English
Christian Hlongwane retweetledi
Christian Hlongwane retweetledi

@Ayibuye @Manikipi I get the power of the natives and everything.the power is most definitely present,is the the will present,the organization,what else do we need to stand up.owh yeah,have we stopped looking for a saviour.have stopped fearing the what ifs cos a lot of is fear losing what we've got
English

@Manikipi They miscalculated the power natives have when they are fed up those ones. Never expected the backlash, probably working on a strategy and PR for their come back which is difficult when most of their staff are foreigners to appear unbiased. Plus the taps are dry because of Trump.
English
Christian Hlongwane retweetledi

As a Wife, If a man flirts with you knowing you have a Husband, that is not a compliment. He is not seeing a great woman. He is seeing weak boundaries.
He is not thinking, "She is special." He is thinking, "She can be taken."
And the moment you entertain that attention, you are proving how easy it is to disrespect your Marriage.
A man who openly crosses that line does not respect your Husband, But worse than that he does not respect you either.👂🏿🤌🏿
English
Christian Hlongwane retweetledi

BREAKING NEWS: South African Police Service (SAPS) and Hawks arrested a 33-year-old illegal Ethiopian national in Malvern, Johannesburg, for possessing an RPG-7 rocket launcher, PF-89 disposable launchers, and over a dozen HEAT and fragmentation projectiles, valued for potential use against vehicles, buildings, or crowds in urban settings.
Will the President declare state of emergency on illegal immigration.

English
Christian Hlongwane retweetledi
Christian Hlongwane retweetledi
Christian Hlongwane retweetledi

🇳🇬 Nigeria was never meant to be a source of global migration problems. By every geological metric, the country is wealthier than many of the nations its citizens are now fleeing to.
It is a nation sitting on a mountain of gold while its people struggle to afford bread.
The numbers don't lie. Nigeria is heavy with untapped potential, including:
37 billion barrels of crude oil and 209 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.
3 billion metric tonnes of iron ore.
42 billion tonnes of bitumen.
A 600km greenstone belt rich with gold.
2 billion tonnes of low-sulfur, eco-friendly coal.
With Africa's largest oil reserves, immense mineral wealth, and strategic deep water ports, Nigeria should be the continent's industrial heartbeat. Instead, it has become a textbook case of the resource curse.
A nation that should be exporting finished goods is, instead, exporting its people.
For the youth navigating the chaos of Lagos or the stagnant farms of the countryside, the Nigerian Dream is now defined by a visa. When a system fails to provide a ladder, the ambitious choose migration, triggering a heartbreaking brain drain.
The nation's engine is left running on empty, while the desperate are left to survive on subsistence farming or foreign aid.
The math simply doesn't add up for the average Nigerian. While a tiny elite circle cycles wealth through foreign bank accounts and luxury stays in London or Dubai, millions roam the streets waiting for a breakthrough that never comes.
This inequality doesn't just breed poverty, it fuels a hustle culture that, in its darkest corners, manifests as cybercrime or robbery.
When legitimate paths to prosperity are blocked, people will inevitably find illegitimate ones.
Nations with half of Nigeria's natural endowments have built soaring skylines, world-class healthcare, and stable middle classes. The difference is that those nations invested in their people, while Nigeria invested in its politicians.
Nigeria does not have a resource problem, it has a distribution and leadership problem. A nation this rich should not be merely surviving, it should be leading the world.
The real tragedy isn't that the wealth is missing, it's that it never reaches the hands of those who need it most.

English
Christian Hlongwane retweetledi

The Deeper I Dig into Thabo Mbeki Administration I've come to a Uncomfortable Truth, he manufactured the Decay of this country.
Lets talk about the Firearms control act of 2000. This is with regards to what happened in East London yesterday.
The actions witnessed during yesterday's protests, where foreign shop owners were seen brandishing firearms in the faces of concerned South Africans, are a direct and chilling reminder of how Thabo Mbeki betrayed the people of this nation.
By signing the Firearms Control Act of 2000, Mbeki didn’t just pass a bureaucratic law; he handed over the keys to our national security, effectively allowing those without a South African birthright to arm themselves while leaving our own citizens in a state of perpetual danger.
For many patriots, this is an unforgivable breach of the social contract. A government’s first duty is to ensure its own citizens are the most protected people on their own soil. Instead, Mbeki’s policy created a reality where guests in our country can legally outgun the very people who built it. Seeing these weapons used to intimidate locals during a moment of genuine community concern is the ultimate proof that this law was a mistake.
It didn't make South Africa safer; it simply diluted our sovereignty and forced South Africans to live under the shadow of weapons that should never have been permitted in the hands of non-citizens in the first place.
It's a Stark reminder that the people we've elected never loved us.
English
Christian Hlongwane retweetledi

Gauteng educators look at your payslips carefully. I just got my payslip and realised that Capital legacy deducted R271.66. I immediately called them because I never talked to anyone from Capital Legacy. I was told that someone by the name of Vuyisani Patricia Sibiya opened a will for me.
I was also informed that I have a beneficiary called Pertunia Mofokeng who is “my sister” that I don’t even know. According to the will, should I die she will inherit everything and will also receive R135 000 from Capital Legacy.
When I informed my colleagues, 3 of them have the same problem including our principal.
English
Christian Hlongwane retweetledi
Christian Hlongwane retweetledi
Christian Hlongwane retweetledi

I was shocked listening to this episode on YouTube.
This woman is Zimbabwean & entered South Africa illegally via Botswana. She committed various acts of fraud to survive, including advertising fake jobs to collect people’s IDs & open accounts.
She was arrested & met thee Rosemary in prison, released & deported then returned using different documents, registered a company with CIPC & is now openly doing interviews in South Africa.
That level of disrespect is what we are dealing with & it keeps continuing unfortunately… I was livid listening to this interview but we’ll 🤷🏻♀️
youtu.be/0-sD8MI35Ww?si…

YouTube

English
Christian Hlongwane retweetledi
Christian Hlongwane retweetledi
Christian Hlongwane retweetledi
Christian Hlongwane retweetledi
Christian Hlongwane retweetledi















