Collet Marasha
10.7K posts

Collet Marasha
@ColletMara90231
Arsenal Fan for life . Supports any team playing against Manchester teams
Newcastle, South Africa Katılım Mart 2024
1K Takip Edilen588 Takipçiler
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Hanzi na @Hon_Kasukuwere Mike Chimombe anoti President akalumawo $7 million panyaya yembudzi. Aiwa President ngavaregere basa purizi. He is very corrupt.

Filipino
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To Save Zimbabwe, an Evil System Must Be Uprooted
Why ZANU PF Cannot Be Reformed — Only Uprooted
By Trevor Ncube
I am troubled by those determined to shred the 2013 Constitution — yet I remain hopeful that even at this eleventh hour, sanity may yet prevail.
Did we not fight the Ian Smith settler regime — indeed, shed blood — for one man, one vote? Was the 2013 Constitution not endorsed by more than three million citizens in a referendum? Then Constitutional Amendment Bill No3 (CAB3) must not see the light of day.
The two previous amendments did the same thing — stripped power from the people, piled it on the executive. The Bill before Parliament is only a symptom.
The disease is ZANU PF itself.
ZANU PF is an evil system. It is an energy and blood-sucking system that has fed on the fat of Zimbabweans for two generations. It has become a culture — metastasised into a way of doing things and a way of being. In its current form, it is the worst this once-proud liberation party has ever been.
It has attracted the greedy, the opportunistic, and every manner of social misfit.
Mediocrity is now the standard. Its values are selfishness, corruption, repression, violence, fear, tribalism, and hate.
This system is now in some of us. It manifests in the way we drive. In the way we treat one another. In the way we litter our streets.
It must be uprooted root and branch.
I write as a Zimbabwean who has watched, for over thirty years, as a liberation movement curdled into a looting syndicate.
I have been arrested for journalism.
I have seen colleagues beaten and publications shuttered.
I have sat across the table from ministers and presidents and know that no amount of good-faith dialogue can reform a system whose architecture is built on extracting value from the powerless.
Reform is not an option. Removal is.
How we got here
We are at this crossroads because of the military coup of November 2017 — dressed up as a “military-assisted transition,” one I myself supported in the excitement of seeing the back of Robert Mugabe.
That coup delivered Emmerson Mnangagwa and a ZANU PF faction now using incumbency to secure political permanency.
Hindsight confirms what should have been obvious: coups do not yield democratic outcomes.
They benefit only their instigators. When I hear voices whisper that only another coup can stop this constitutional coup, I understand the despair — but I reject it.
We must stop being a country in which coups are the only remedy.
The Constitution is not our biggest problem
The 2013 Constitution is progressive.
It threatens only those with no confidence of winning at the polls.
That is precisely why Mnangagwa and his faction are trying to tear it down — not a sign of strength, but a confession of weakness.
And yet the Constitution is not the biggest problem confronting Zimbabweans today.
The common man in Mbare, the graduate in Bulawayo, the farmer in Masvingo — they do not wake up worrying about Section 328(7). They wake up worrying about whether they will eat.
Poverty, unemployment, currency chaos, collapsing health, crumbling infrastructure, power outages — every one of these would be behind us if ZANU PF applied to governance a fraction of the ingenuity it has thrown at this constitutional coup.
That it will not tells you everything about whose interests this system serves.
The factions are a mirage
Let no Zimbabwean be deceived that Vice-President Constantino Chiwenga’s supposed discomfort represents a democratic alternative within ZANU PF.
There are no ideological differences between those who back Mnangagwa and those who oppose him.
The fight is about tenure — which faction eats next, and for how long.
It is not about the sixteen million Zimbabweans who will pay the cost.
Nobody from the current ZANU PF can be trusted with power.
The party is not a vessel that can be cleaned out and refitted for democratic service.

English

Kumhata kune honye.Miswai imii.Kana ariiwo mafungire enyu kudzimba dzenyu muri kuuraya mhuri ne nzara
Presidential Empowerment Fund Initiatives@PresFunds
CAB3 is good for our country because it will attract investors. Investors seek stability and policy continuity, rather than perpetual electoral cycles. #CABbhoo
Indonesia
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ZANU PF is not a political party that lost its way. It is an evil system.
A political, economic and social parasite. It cannot be negotiated with. Cannot be reformed. Cannot be waited out.
It has attracted the greedy, the opportunistic, every manner of social misfit. Mediocrity is now the standard. And this system is now in some of us — in how we drive, how we treat each other, how we litter our streets.
It must be uprooted root and branch.
Here is what you do, starting today:
You have until 17 May to send written opposition to CAB3 to the Clerk of Parliament. I will soon publish a template for this. Use it. Share it. Make your MP answer publicly for their vote.
Seven specific actions. A programme, not slogans.
Read my impassioned views here 👇
open.substack.com/pub/allthingsz…
#Zimbabwe #CAB3 #DefendTheConstitution

English
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This is beautiful from the @NewsDay_Zim team - giving voice to the fans. Especially as Dynamos appears to be dying
NewsDay Zimbabwe@NewsDay_Zim
#WATCH 🔴Fan Reactions from the Vietnam Stand at Rufaro Stadium, A goalless draw in a far from boring game as Scottland FC and Dynamos Football Club serve up an entertaining contest.
English
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Collet Marasha retweetledi
Collet Marasha retweetledi

No to 2030. No to CAB 3. Zimbabwe belongs to all of us haisi yekumba kwemunhu. Diaspora tajamuka.@AfrDiasporaNews. @dhongigono
Indonesia

Give us names of those Services stations and their locations.I will never fall for this cheap propaganda.We are in 2026 not 1930.
🇿🇼 ZANU PF PATRIOTS 🇿🇼@zanupf_patriots
Filling stations now taking ZiG‼️ Some service stations across the country have begun accepting payments in the Zimbabwe Gold, signalling growing confidence in the local currency as the Government intensifies efforts to stabilise and entrench its use across the economy
English
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