Kim Mhando

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Kim Mhando

Kim Mhando

@KimMhando

Father, Husband | Cool, calm, collected | Proud East African | Passionate about African development | Football=Life #ArsenalFC | Planes, bikes, cars

Nairobi and Dar es Salaam Katılım Nisan 2011
605 Takip Edilen708 Takipçiler
Kim Mhando retweetledi
Africa on Two Wheels
Africa on Two Wheels@AbdiZeila·
The Great North Road is a deadly, hell run. Thousands upon thousands of deadly potholes. Each of the 800 trucks plying the route every day will pay at least K2,500 (or KES 15,000) per trip to the Copperbelt, adding nearly 2 million Kwacha to government coffers daily.
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Kim Mhando retweetledi
Andile Gogoda
Andile Gogoda@AfricaisBlack·
Vuyo, you’re wrong! There's a massive difference between enforcing immigration laws and telling a legal resident to fix your country. The Ghanaian national attacked in KwaZulu-Natal had proof of legal status. This wasn't immigration enforcement, it was harassment, pure and simple. You're conflating lawful policy with mob justice. Governments across Africa do enforce immigration laws through due process, not street intimidation. Don't cloak xenophobia in the language of policy failure.
Vuyo Zungula MP 🇿🇦@ZungulaVuyo

There is no government that would summon our Ambassadors if the government actually enforced immigration laws. Immigration laws are enforced all over Africa and rest of the world, and no one says its xenophobia. The issue in SA, is a failing government that leads to citizens having to step in. The only solution is a government actually enforcing the immigration laws !!!

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Allan Lucky (Host: Klub A-Z Podcast)
These people driving government cars with sirens think they're Gods. They force everyone off the road. A typical representation of a poor and weak mentality, trying so hard to feel important.
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Kim Mhando retweetledi
Kim Mhando retweetledi
Broski_
Broski_@Kingston_Kappa·
Its okay hamjaumia, its okay wewe huoni shida, its okay hayajakukuta na unaamini sio shida zako. But, msifanye dhihaka na victims wa Oktoba 29. Watu ni vilema, yatima, childless. Watu wamepoteza watu!!!🙌🏾
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Salahu
Salahu@salahudeen33·
So painful to watch. A Sudanese child begging for his life...... Don't stop talking about Sudan... 🇸🇩
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Arsenal
Arsenal@Arsenal·
Maverick. Maestro. Man of the people. Charlie George is The King of Highbury 👑 An original documentary, directed by Ed Fenwick. Streaming now on The Arsenal ⚡
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Angus B MacNeil 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿
Israel killed some children again today - but fortunately they didn't damage a statue, so there will be no apology or killers getting 30 days in jail.
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Tanzania Bound Buses
Tanzania Bound Buses@TBoundBuses·
Maagizo kutoka Juu. 1.Mabasi yenye axle mbili hakuna kupima uzito kwenye mizani yote nchini. 2.Mabasi yenye axle moja nyuma kupima uzito kwenye mzani wa kwanza mwanzo wa safari na mzani wa mwisho wa safari. @LatraTZ mfanyie kazi na ombi la Express Buses stendi ziwe chache.
Tanzania Bound Buses tweet mediaTanzania Bound Buses tweet media
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Hopewell Chin’ono
Hopewell Chin’ono@daddyhope·
The great African and Kenyan author and university professor Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o argued that celebrating English as a marker of intelligence or progress in Africa reflects a deeper problem of mental colonisation. In his view, English, like French or Spanish, is not an African language, and turning it into a measure of identity or superiority only reinforces the legacy of colonial domination. He pointed out that societies begin to normalise this mindset when people take pride in mastering a colonial language while neglecting their own. He also highlighted the troubling reality that many African children, and even their parents, can no longer speak their mother tongues, yet feel a sense of achievement in speaking English. For him, this was not empowerment but a loss of cultural grounding. He made it clear that he had no issue with using English, but insisted it should not replace African languages as the primary means of expression. If you can speak many global languages but cannot speak your own, that, in his view, reflected the enduring impact of colonial thinking rather than true progress. Even in jest, elevating English as the benchmark of intelligence or educational success entrenches a colonial hierarchy that devalues African identity and knowledge systems. It reinforces the false idea that proximity to a colonial language defines worth, distorting how societies measure progress and quietly eroding cultural confidence across generations.
Hopewell Chin’ono tweet media
BBC News (World)@BBCWorld

Kenyan leader sparks uproar after mocking Nigerians' spoken English bbc.in/4mTFYXc

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