Munya Z
7.7K posts

Munya Z
@Goddenmun
Internal Auditor | Banker| Forensic Auditor| Father| Husband. Lives in South Africa
Africa Katılım Mayıs 2011
1.7K Takip Edilen983 Takipçiler

@PrinceOfMutasa @ZANUPF_Official @edmnangagwa Red flag: ethanol started b4 DRC war. I do not like ED but I hate lies
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Zimbabwean citizens deserves to know that Zimbabwe was paid compensation for the DRC war through mining concessions, timber and forestry deals but the money and minerals were looted by @ZANUPF_Official, @edmnangagwa who was ZanuPF Secretary of Finance responsible for all Zanu PF companies and financial activities.
Zimbabwe through a front consortium Cosleg (a joint venture between Kabilas company Comiex-Africa and Operation Sovereign Legitimacy the ZDF wing) headed by Billy Rautenbach through his company Ridgepoint were awarded several mining concessions as compensation for the war losses. The money never made it home.
Emmerson Mnangagwa used his power as ZanuPF Chief Administrator and established various shelf companies in Mauritius and was fronted by General Zvinavashe who was given logistics business, General Sibusiso Moyo was placed under Gecamines to loot diamonds, John Bredenkamp to provide military hardware, food and resources to Kabila’s army and all proceeds were banked offshore.
DRC proceeds and the concealing of the theft claimed the lives of Moven Mahachi the then defence minister, General Zvinavashe and John Bredenkamp who had by then fled to United Kingdom after demanding his cut and got threatened.
This is the reason why Billy Rautenbach was given a monopoly over ethanol blending in Zimbabwe. He is just a Cosleg, Zanu PF and ED Front.
Zanu PF owned Socebo in DRC which was given 33 million hectares of timber land and the proceeds never made it to the national fiscus.
DRC misadventures later claimed the lives of several ministers and army generals and the original Cosleg Board members who remain are Rautenbach, ED and Chiwenga. The rest are gone.
Zimbabwe lost over USD500 million on DRC war which Mugabe stole from the IMF SDR rights and went to war without consulting the parliament.
ED was a key player and still is on the DRC matter and certainly does not deserve a term extension.
NO TO #CAB3
@MadzivaNehemiah @LynneStactia @IanSmiththe3rd @advocatemahere @Zimpapers @zimlive @bbmhlanga @BlessedGeza @nelsonchamisa @TrevorNcube @ibbosnr @SAPESTrust10 @ChangeRadioZW @Studio7VOA @NehandaRadio @kerinamujati @zimbabweyauya @MacBelts @MJairosi




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We have all, in one way or another, failed to dislodge the Ayatollah Marxist ZANU–PF system that has dominated Zimbabwe for decades.
But this is Zimbabwe’s moment 🇿🇼
A moment not for fear.
Not for tribalism.
Not for apathy.
Not for personality cults.
Not for empty slogans and deception.
This is a moment for courage, unity, wisdom, prayer, discipline, and decisive action.
The future of Zimbabwe will not be built by spectators, cowards, or corrupt elites. It will be built by citizens who are prepared to stand for truth, justice, accountability, freedom, and national renewal.
Let us seize this moment with both hands.
For a prosperous Zimbabwe.
For a free Zimbabwe.
For a just Zimbabwe.
For a New Zimbabwe 🇿🇼
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GENUINE LOVE FOR ZIMBABWE.. I don’t claim perfection or all the answers. What I do have is a genuine love for Zimbabwe and a relentless desire to see every Zimbabwean free, happy, prosperous and thriving. Be blessed! ~nc #TheNew
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My wife deserves a lifetime achievement award for believing in me before my life made any logical sense. 😂
When we started dating, I had:
No school lunch
One pair of shoes whose soles had been repaired so many times even the cobbler knew me personally
No pocket money for tuckshop flexing
A future that looked like an unfinished group assignment
Her family tried to rescue her from me. 😭
Someone even attempted a tactical substitution by introducing her to a guy with a car.
Meanwhile I was out there with slippers now secured by wire😀😀
But this woman still chose me.
No money.
No flashy prospects.
No evidence.
Just vibes, struggle and potential. 😂
Never forget the girl who loved you before life became soft.
Some people join the movie after the happy ending.
Others were there when the script still looked hopeless.
I hold this woman very tightly. ❤️


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Munya Z retweetledi

The most dangerous person in Emmerson Mnangagwa's office is George Charamba.
The most dangerous animal in the river is a hippopotamus.
Why are you threatening @bbmhlanga's family?
George Charamba is a behemoth!
Evil to the core!
@Jamwanda2 you are evil!

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@shumbakadzi_zim $100 is still to high. Perhaps should be capped at $20
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Capitalk Workers have been ordered to return $30, 000 gift given by Chivhayo 💔
Chivayo gave $30,000 cash for “lunch” to be shared among 30 Zimpapers employees in the radio division during the visit, and separately offered to upgrade Sibanda’s Toyota Aqua to a 2025 Toyota GD6.
According to company policy a gift should be not more than $100.
Pane arwadziwa chete kumsoro🤣🤣

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Good morning citizens. We are looking for relatives of this lady, she says she is Mirriam Moyo. She is mentally unwell and is recuperating at Ingutsheni Hospital. She says she stays in Nkulumane near Tshabalala.
If you know anything that can lead us to her loved ones please hit my DM. Please help me circulate this, we might be lucky.
Have a blessed day 🙏

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Zimbabwe Government introduced 15.5 Tax on Starlink to pay a starlink of 90$ subscription from 113$ my Ecocash wallet remained with 4.91 which mean 19$ is tax and Visa @elonmusk @SpaceX they might have not banned @Starlink in Zimbabwe but they have TAXED it heavily so that few can afford it while a majority suffer. @TateMavetera @amutambara when we stand up to say #Zimbabwe is not serious about AI and their heritage based Curriculum Education 5.0 they say we are unpatriotic.
For starlink Subscription per month this is what you need.
1. 35$ Starlink you need 8$ for Tax and Charge =43$
2. 50$ Starlink you need 12$ for Tax and Charge =62$
This is sad for advancement of AI and education 5.0 that hinges on research and innovation. They introduce Policies they can’t understand those who want to help in pushing their policies they are taxed. What’s wrong with us. @edmnangagwa @HonZhemuSoda @ZimThirdEye



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@MviringiHosia @CyrilRamaphosa Its everywhere for every to see everything
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This weekend, or anytime soon, an Emergency meeting of the ANC National Executive Committee will convene to discuss the latest crisis emanating from the inevitable IMPEACHMENT of President @CyrilRamaphosa.
His disastrous clandestine visit to Zimbabwe will be on the AGENDA.

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@mawarirej Ayas Mawarire you have lost clout .The only people that can employ you mafana are Western aligned Media houses .Apa you can't come back to Zimbabwe .It's cold out there .You have to spill vitrol against CAB3 in order to put food on yr table.Does yr kids know you are a sellout
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Cde, I don't "run accounts" like you are claiming here. I use my account, this one, with my full names and picture to communicate whatever idea I have. I also go live on TV channels to communicate whatever I feel should be communicated. I don't hide behind someone's name. That's me. So stop the nonsense of assigning accounts to my name.
𝑲𝒖𝒅𝒛𝒂𝒊 𝑴𝒖𝒕𝒊𝒔𝒊@KMutisi
You are now victims of your own propaganda… u see the accounts run by @mawarirej & @LynneStactia’s team and you think it’s The Generals? No General will write such a letter to the Commander in Chief, it will never happen.
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THE WEIGHT OF BEING WICKNELL
The only honest frame for understanding the most scrutinised private citizen in Zimbabwe's post-Mugabe history.
In 2008, Zimbabwe was emerging from one of the worst economic collapses
outside wartime.
Hyperinflation had become so absurd the Reserve Bank printed a
one hundred trillion dollar note that could not buy bread.
Power generation had collapsed. Foreign capital had vanished.
Zimbabwe was, in effect, untouchable.
In that same Zimbabwe, Wicknell Chivayo built a company, submitted a bid,
and signed the EPC agreement for a 100‑megawatt solar plant in Gwanda.
Value: US$172.8 million.
At the time, it was the largest independent power project ever awarded
to a Zimbabwean‑owned private company.
He put his own name on it.
Not a shelf company. Not a nominee director. His name.
That matters.
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THE LONELINESS OF THE FIRST MOVER
────────────────────────
There is a particular kind of isolation that attaches itself to the man
who moves before the crowd. It is not the loneliness of failure.
It is the loneliness of being correct too early.
Aliko Dangote knows this loneliness.
Before he was Africa's richest man – before the Forbes covers and the
US$20 billion refinery – he was a Nigerian trader operating inside one of
the most opaque, politically saturated business environments on earth.
His critics called him politically connected. His defenders called him
a visionary. Both were telling the truth.
Patrice Motsepe knows this loneliness too.
South Africa's first black billionaire built African Rainbow Minerals
from a zero base – acquiring loss‑making marginal gold mines that
Anglo American had abandoned as uneconomical. His wealth is “directly
tied to his political connections with the ANC.” Nobody serious calls
Patrice Motsepe a criminal for understanding how post‑apartheid
South Africa's capital markets actually worked.
Wicknell Chivayo understood how post‑Mugabe Zimbabwe's capital markets
actually worked.
He understood that in a country where formal procurement had been
systematically corrupted for thirty years, the man who could navigate
the political terrain was not necessarily the man who was corrupt –
he was the man who got the deal done.
It is a structural observation.
In Nigeria and South Africa, as in Zimbabwe, as in every post‑colonial
economy navigating the space between dysfunction and development,
political connectivity and visionary investment are not opposites.
They are the same thing.
────────────────────────
COURTS AND SELECTIVE MEMORY
────────────────────────
The media record on Wicknell is loud and remarkably selective.
What it rarely says out loud is this:
He has not been convicted of a single crime in a court of law.
In 2018, High Court Justice Owen Tagu acquitted Wicknell and Intratrek
of all Gwanda‑related charges.
In 2023, the Supreme Court ordered ZPC to honour the original Gwanda
contract. The same year, a High Court judge awarded Wicknell
US$22 million in his civil suit against ZPC.
ZACC, after its own probe, publicly stated it “found no evidence
linking Chivhayo to fraud.”
Then there is another Wicknell – the one whose story never makes a
front page for as long as generosity is not a scandal.
The man who has given away hundreds of cars to widows, single mothers,
nurses, and young entrepreneurs.
The man who has paid over a thousand school fees for families who did
not know his name before the payment cleared.
Who has donated medical equipment to hospitals treating patients on
bare floors. Who has funded funerals for families who had nothing.
The most comforting attack is to call it “theatre”.
There is a strange pleasure some find in diminishing how big a deal
his help is for the people who receive it.
If it were theatre, theatre would require an audience that benefits
from the performance.
The widow who received the keys did not benefit from theatre.
She benefited from a car.
There is no political capital Wicknell gains from giving. If anything,
it injures him.
────────────────────────
WHAT GETS BUILT WHEN THE NOISE STOPS
────────────────────────
There is a version of the Wicknell Chivayo story that has not been
written yet, because it has not happened yet.
But its shape is visible to anyone who has studied how the figures who
came before him eventually resolved their crises – by building something
so undeniably real and so obviously beneficial that the conversation
around them changed by necessity.
Rockefeller became a philanthropist. His foundations funded the
eradication of hookworm from the American South, the establishment of
the University of Chicago, and public health initiatives across
four continents.
Dangote did not resolve his political controversy by stepping back from
the state or issuing press releases. He resolved it by building the
US$20 billion Dangote Refinery – the largest single‑train petroleum
refinery in the world – on Nigerian soil, creating over one hundred
thirty‑five thousand jobs. When something that large is real and
working, the argument about how it was financed loses urgency.
The version of Wicknell Chivayo’s story that gets written in five years
will be determined by what is built in the next few.
If a properly governed, audited, credible Chivayo Foundation channels
even a fraction of the energy currently spent on car‑giving into
structured, measurable community development – education, healthcare,
entrepreneurship – the narrative of generosity becomes impossible
to dismiss.
If Intratrek builds governance that aligns with serious commercial
standards – a proper board, audited accounts, transparent structures –
the correspondent banks and international investors currently watching
will not trickle in, they will flood in. There will not be enough
cameras to capture it, nor enough heads of state angling for association.
Capital always follows credibility.
Always.
The most consequential thing about Wicknell is what he builds next –
and whether what he builds next is large enough, real enough,
and visible enough to redefine permanently what his name means
on this continent.
powerlist.africa/the-weight-of-…

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Good evening folks. I have an update on our Jane Doe who's name is Mirriam Moyo. She is recuperating at Ingutsheni mental hospital. She has an X-ray and the doctors confirmed that her arm is healing well. But the sad part is that maggots were falling from the wonds inside the old plaster. But by God's grace all has been dealt with.
I was on my feet for nearly 24 hours as I got home at 3am.
With me the whole time were two officers Constable Makarau, Constanble Sibanda as well as the lady familiar with Mirriam in the CBD mamaKim. You guys are my heroes.
Doctor Msasanure, doctors and nurses at UBH and Ingutsheni mental hospital, Bulawayo city council assisted us in each and step of the way. Thank you very much. May God bless you.
And to you donors who entrusted me with your money may God bless you abundantly, had it not been for you all Mirriam wouldn't have got the help she needed.
Umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu. Let's learn to land a hand to those who can not help themselves.
😍😍
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@NewsHawksLive Chinamasa achiri kumasure, CR naChapo vakapedza ma sports
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🔵As debate on Constitutional Amendment Bill N0.3 intensifies,
Zanu PF Treasurer-General Patrick Chinamasa, who has been at the centre of the process since its inception at the ruling party's 2024 annual conference in Bulawayo, explains why he has now changed his position on the referendum, deals with relevant provisions on presidential term limits, length of terms, electoral system and cycle, electing a president through parliament, one man one vote or universal adult suffrage, plebiscite and official reasons for proposed changes to the political, electoral and governance systems.
Chinamasa sits down with ZiFM Stereo News Digital Editor Anesu Masamvu for an in-depth interview on the growing debate on the constitutional amendments.
The Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment (No. 3) Bill, 2026, gazetted on February 16, contains 21 key clauses or provisions aimed at amending the country's 2013 constitution.
The contentious initiative has divided the nation and public opinion.
Authorities say this will bring long-term national stability and progress, while critics argue it is a constitutional coup and will also undermine democratic governance in the process.
In this interview, Chinamasa unpacks the legal rationale behind government’s current position that no referendum is required when critics say it is unavoidable, explains why the proposed changes do not amount to a third term, and weighs in on concerns about electoral system changes, parliamentary selection of the president, and democratic legitimacy in local politics.
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Munya Z retweetledi

With 11 days to go before the current parliamentary public consultations and comments on the Zimbabwe Constitutional Amendment Bill N0.3 end before the contentious proposals are introduced to the legislature for debate and scrutiny by MPs, local human rights lawyer Doug Coltart says he will be running videos to speak out against the Bill.
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