
Cuttybeats
3.1K posts

Cuttybeats
@Cuttybeats
zimbabwean music producer ,cinematographer,photographer, designer, Artist
zimbabwe,harare Katılım Ocak 2010
2.3K Takip Edilen1.6K Takipçiler

@snowballOfficia Those in power forget that their own sons and daughters will be ruled by the very laws they put in place. That is why laws should be agreed upon by the entire nation, not just a single party, because a change in leadership is inevitable.
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Proof that CAB3 is not about rights or choice but command politics
Dhara Blessed Mhlanga@bbmhlanga
They said the Bill has support but they can’t even trust each other. They fear vote by secret ballot. Guided democracy.
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@begottensun after talking i wonder what Mandate you will have after winning UEFA
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I was angry at him after Afcon but he has said something I relate to as a Zimbabwean
Sophie Mokoena@Sophie_Mokoena
Food for thought ntate Shilowa.
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Interestingly: both Pre’s of Ghana John Mahama and Pres of Zim Mnangagwa presidential Terms are ending in 2028. As much as Mahama sounds sharp, well informed and Ghana being a larger economy than Zimbabwe’s , it will be fascinating to see what happens in both Ghana and Zimbabwe’s politics and economy now and after 2028
Larry Madowo@LarryMadowo
What did the African leaders in Nairobi think of the French summit? Was it useful? I asked Ghanaian President John Mahama as he walked out of a session. PS: Security tried to push me away (just doing their job) but he recognized me and agreed to walk and talk
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@daddyhope your first paragraph is really a false theory sneaked in the truth of the visit. Fact is ANC or Cyril Ramaphosa will never react to any unconstitutional move done by Zanu Pf just like in 2017. same is true for Sadc, Au and the world.
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Hopes of a military coup against President Emmerson Mnangagwa, led by his vice president, General Constantino Chiwenga and his associates, have reportedly been quashed after sources say that South African President Cyril Ramaphosa assured his Zimbabwean counterpart that South Africa will not countenance any unconstitutional removal of a president in Zimbabwe.
Today, President Emmerson Mnangagwa met with Ramaphosa in Harare, where he was received by Mnangagwa alongside businessmen Wicknell Chivayo and Kudakwashe Tagwirei, before the two leaders and the two businessmen flew on a one hour helicopter trip together to Mnangagwa’s farm, Precabe, in Kwekwe.
They toured the farm, where the South African president was shown Mnangagwa’s Ankoli cattle and fish breeding pools. When they reached the ostriches, Ramaphosa is said to have remarked, in a pointed and politically loaded statement, that “nothing and nobody will remove my elder brother from power unconstitutionally.”
The remark was made in the presence of members of the delegation accompanying the two leaders.
“The owner of these ostriches will be president until 2030 if Parliament says so,” Ramaphosa is further reported to have said, reinforcing his assurance to Mnangagwa and those present.
The two leaders then went into a four-hour closed-door meeting, where they were joined by Tagwirei and Chivayo. The meeting was described as highly personal and private, with even the president’s spokesperson, George Charamba, excluded from the delegation for today’s visit.
Sources familiar with the discussions say Ramaphosa made it clear that South Africa would neither support nor recognise a military coup against Mnangagwa.
Those within Mnangagwa’s inner circle were reportedly buoyant after the engagement, interpreting Ramaphosa’s position as a significant reinforcement of regional backing.
They believe that, with South Africa’s stance now aligned with that of countries such as Tanzania, Mozambique, Zambia, and, more recently, Botswana, where Chivayo travelled in recent days, Mnangagwa has effectively strengthened his position and insulated his presidency within the region against any potential coup attempt.
What was significant today is that South African President Cyril Ramaphosa’s trip to Zimbabwe, which I broke last night, was not an official bilateral state engagement conducted at the level of heads of state.
It was a private trip, and sources in Pretoria say that many people in the president’s office, and indeed within DIRCO, the foreign affairs department of South Africa, were not aware of it.
President Cyril Ramaphosa is now back in South Africa after the short visit to Zimbabwe.




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If Chatunga Mugabe a man who can afford a R600k fine choose to be in South Africa illegally then:
1. Do not expect poor migrants to be documented
2. Any fight against illegal foreigners by the ant-migrant groups such as March and March and Operation Dudula is just directed on the poor foreigners
3. African in Africa immgaration is messed up. there is a need of Sadc or AU that works like EU
𝐂𝐫𝐢𝐦𝐞 𝐖𝐚𝐭𝐜𝐡 𝐙𝐖@CrimeWatchZW
WATCH | Video of Chatunga Mugabe arriving at Robert Mugabe International Airport after being deported from South Africa. 🎥 by sircarly
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@TembaMliswa you explained well the risk of CAB3 to having MPs vote for the for the president.
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Jacinta can't use France as an example without mentioning that citizens of the European Union traveling and working within the Schengen Area typically require only a national ID card, not a passport, and no border checks. Jacinta is fighting for the colonial further separation of the Ndebele, Venda, Tsonga, Tswana, Xhosa etc. The French speak French and Germans speak (German Deutsch) yet they enjoy free movement of goods and services under the EU. Fact: borders were never meant to benefit the masses but the elites for the ease of control.
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Cuttybeats retweetledi

@Shadaya_Knight even europeans both men and women dont know more about their politicians more than their Football super stars. same goes with and industries like Film and Music. Thats why even politicians pay Stars to boost their campaign reach. why drag "AFRICAN MEN" thats just rage bait.
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AFRICAN MEN: THEIR OBSESSION WITH EUROPEAN FOOTBALL
This post isn't to say people shouldn't watch sports, to be more specific football. But it's to condemn the unhealthy obsession many African men have with football
To be more precise European football, it would be least embarrassing if they were obsessed with their own football leagues
Fooball is great as entertainment, it should remain that. No man with a fulfilling life should have his mood ruined by other men losing at something they are paid for
If you observe, the average African man invests more emotion into European football than he invests in his own country's state of affairs or continent's state
They'll be more angry at a player for changing a club, getting injured, failing to score etc than they'll be at their local politicians who steal their taxes and loot their resources
They'll know a player's stats and historiy more than they know their local politicians stats or history. They'll analyse patterns of football teams more than they analyse their own lives
Do you honestly think a man who is in control of his life and doing well in life will have time to be affected his mood because of football or any other sport?
You're a loser if you spend much of your time watching other men make money and even get affected by it, whilst you're not doing anything productive with your life
Find purpose, stop masking a lack of direction with being a football fanatic

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Cuttybeats retweetledi

Constitutional Amendment Bill No. 3
Just a Band‑Aid on a Bullet Hole
The biggest problem in ZANU‑PF and the nation since independence will not be fixed with CAB3's proposals. These will only prolong and intensify the problem.
2017's "Restore Legacy," as the army called it, came after Mugabe failed to deal with the same problem.
The biggest problem we have is the absence of a clear succession plan and mechanism in ZANU‑PF. Constitutional Amendment Bill No. 3 is procrastination on a deep wound and like "Restore Legacy," it is just a band‑aid on a bullet hole.
Bill 3 avoids the real problem. It offers term extensions, parliamentary elections, and abolished commissions, but not a single clause that creates an open, binding succession mechanism.
ZANU‑PF argues that a Westminster system like South Africa's will take Zimbabwe out of "election mode," stabilise the economy, and calm the political landscape.
But if South Africa is the case study,
Why are political temperatures in the ANC and SA cooler, with President Ramaphosa finishing his term in 2029 after a maximum of 10 years, while in ZANU‑PF, President Mnangagwa is moving to extend his rule past 10 years?
The difference is not the system. It is constitutionalism certainty.
Ramaphosa has a fixed, known end date. Both his political rivals and capital can plan. The succession clock is visible to all.
Yet Mnangagwa has no fixed end date. Every day becomes a potential succession crisis. That uncertainty not the electoral model is what raises temperatures.
South Africa's system works because leaders leave on time. Copy the system without copying that discipline, and you will import nothing but instability.

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@SABCNews @Sophie_Mokoena ZANU Pf has never done smooth succession process since it’s formation does 2017 count as a smooth transition ?
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Zimbabwean Rock reimagined🇿🇼🎸🤘🏿
‘Sewe’ w/ Mann Friday out now.
link in below🔗
youtu.be/AZT0B8f1840

YouTube
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