Masauso
60 posts


@nduncu31 So go and report me to the police station instead of continuing to complain about what I said as if I said it to you.
But at no point did I ever say the President does dirty work or decapitates people.

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Do you hear yourself, Kudzai Mutisi? You are insulting the President and the First Lady by insinuating that he extended an olive branch to me through his advisor, Paul Tungwarara, in order to decapitate me. And you put that insult on social media, then claim that I insult the President, yet I have never made such an egregious insinuation about him.
What gives you the nerve to insult the President like that? Is this why Kuda Tagwirei paid you $25,000?
President Mnangagwa has reconciled with many people he differed with before. That is why I am currently living in Zimbabwe and no one has arrested me. All opposition members live in Zimbabwe, yet they have said many harsh words to our President and even called for sanctions. Kuda is living in Zimbabwe despite asking me not to fight the sanctions on the President and his wife. So stop insulting the President, because even in all I said about him before the reconciliation, I never insinuated that he decapitates people. Mazvimbirwa ne ka $25000 blaz.

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@vinny_2026 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂, aren't we gents supposed to be chasing you, now only cheap commodities past their due date are put on sale for any price (RICH/POOR))
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@matinyarare In one of your post replied that you're bitter, because with you it all boils down to personal pecks
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𝗙𝗔𝗖𝗧𝗦 𝗔𝗥𝗢𝗨𝗡𝗗 𝗥𝗨𝗧𝗘𝗡𝗗𝗢 𝗔𝗡𝗗 𝗗𝗥 𝗧𝗨𝗡𝗚𝗪𝗔𝗥𝗔𝗥𝗔’𝗦 𝗘𝗡𝗚𝗔𝗚𝗘𝗠𝗘𝗡𝗧.
First, let me start by saying that I had never met or spoken to Presidential Advisor Dr Paul Tungwarara until he approached me online yesterday. During this public engagement, like a true leader, he extended a hand of reconciliation through the gesture of a vehicle, which he said was in recognition of the work I have done for the country.
He then invited me to a roundtable discussion to understand why I am publicly opposing CAB3, critiquing the President’s work, and expressing my separate frustrations regarding the government's non-payment in relation to my fight against sanctions.
We subsequently had another discussion offline, during which he explained to me that the President is not responsible for my non-payment for the sanctions work, but that responsibility lies with Kuda Tagwirei, whom was mandated to work with me.
Additionally, he informed me that he would engage the President and all stakeholders on the way forward. As a result, in the same way that talks between ZAPU and ZANU led to the Unity Accord, and discussions between MDC and ZANU-PF led to the Government of National Unity, we are going to have frank discussions and seek a suitable way to navigate our differing political positions around CAB3.
I also informed him that, contrary to the perceptions of some, I have no issue with the President, the First Lady, or the First Family. I have merely expressed the same constructive criticism on certain issues that I have raised since President Mnangagwa assumed office. And he has never taken issue with me criticizing him before because he has always been a listening President who allows open and frank discourse.
I also conceded that if, indeed, the President or Amai feel that any of my critique bordered on disrespect, I, as a child of Zimbabwe who has served the country loyally, would be willing to apologize publicly to eliminate any notion that the I advocate for the disrespect of our leaders.
I am a leader in our society and all the work I have done—from fighting sanctions; combating xenophobia and the expulsion of ZEP holders in South Africa; defending brand Zimbabwe; Telling The Good Zimbabwe story through documentaries on Trabablas, Geo Pomona, Champion Foods, Manhize, David Whitehead, Khaya Cement, and others, to travelling to Congo and Rwanda to assist efforts to end the conflict—has been done to advance Zimbabwe and support the President’s work because I believe in his vision for the country.
My views on CAB3 do not stem from the non-payment issues, as has been suggested by those who attacked me in defence of Kuda Tagwirei but it has been based on my own political outlook.
I understand from the Presidential Advisor that he intends to engage all the relevant stakeholders in an effort to reconcile us and restore and strengthen the unity we have always enjoyed.
Lastly, the false notion that Dr Tungwarara and I knew each other beforehand, or that he sent me to air my views against CAB3 or the performance of the President, is unfortunate. The man now appears to be facing criticism simply for attempting to reconcile me with the party and a President whom I have supported since he came into office.
All the President’s advisor is trying to do is foster reconciliation between one of the country’s strongest advocates and its leadership, in much the same way that the President himself has pursued re-engagement with the Western world and with those in the political opposition with whom he has previously differed.
Our nation has a long history of reconciliation, from the Unity Accord in 1987 to the Government of National Unity in 2009 and POLAD, which I worked closely with in efforts to bring an end to sanctions on Zimbabwe. What the Presidential Advisor is doing aligns with the spirit of Zimbabwe, and I applaud it. Let those who seek to divide us not succeed in sowing division.


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@__Umaimerh Aren't you past your due date as far as having a husband is concerned
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Fellow Zimbabweans,
As a retired Lieutenant General who has devoted my life to the defence and service of our nation, I address you at a moment of profound consequence for Zimbabwe’s future. The matters now before Parliament are not abstract legalities; they are decisions that will determine whether our children and grandchildren inherit a nation governed by democratic principles, accountable institutions, and a genuine possibility of change or whether power will be further concentrated in ways that constrict popular participation and erode public trust.
I have watched our country through moments of trial and triumph. I have seen soldiers and civilians alike sacrifice, and I have witnessed the courage of communities who, through their daily toil, keep this nation going. Service to country is not merely a profession; it is a moral obligation to defend the principles that underpin the legitimacy of governance: fairness, transparency, and the right of the people to choose their leaders.
It is in that spirit that I make my position clear. I lend my endorsement to Vice President General Constantino Chiwenga as the person best suited, within the current political realities, to resist the constitutional changes set out in Constitutional Amendment Bill No. 3, and to act as a steward for the preservation of democratic practice and institutional integrity.
My endorsement is not given lightly. It flows from three convictions born of experience in governance, security, and public service.
First, the content and consequences of the proposed amendments are fundamentally at odds with democratic accountability. Provisions that extend an incumbent’s tenure, lengthen presidential terms from five to seven years, substitute direct popular election with a parliamentary selection process, and enlarge presidential appointment powers, collectively alter the architecture of state power. These changes diminish the direct role of citizens in determining who should lead them, concentrate authority in the executive, and expand patronage networks that can erode institutional checks and balances. For a nation that claims to honour the ballot, reducing the people’s franchise on who should be President is a retrograde step.
Second, the timing and context of this Bill cannot be ignored. Zimbabweans today confront urgent social and economic crises: overstretched health facilities lacking basic medicines, deteriorating infrastructure, high unemployment and underemployment especially in the informal economy, rampant corruption, and basic service delivery failures that leave households without safe water or reliable electricity for days on end. It is morally indefensible that when citizens most need competence, accountability and reform, the energies of Parliament are consumed by proposals that could entrench political advantage rather than address the daily hardships of our people.
Third, the political arithmetic that undergirds this Bill is clear and perilous. With the ruling party’s dominant parliamentary presence and a fragmented opposition, a shift to an indirectly elected presidency would likely cement one party’s control for decades. This is not speculative; the proposed sequencing of term extensions makes clear that the path being charted guarantees prolonged control irrespective of public sentiment. When the rules of the political game are rewritten by those who stand to benefit directly, the result is a democratic deficit that will weaken public trust and social cohesion.
It is precisely because of these risks that I believe Vice President General Constantino Chiwenga represents the most credible internal check within the existing political framework.
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@Jassmini2 My mom, aunts, sisters and nieces are women, so naturally, no man can survive without women
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@TraceyMachona You are still young, life is not about pro creation story yekuvigwe negonzo ingano yokungokwiridzira vanhu kuita vana. Ende futi vamwe vanapopai varikutosiya vana vacho vachitambura vafa vasi a chiro
Suomi

@matinyarare "they won't give my money" those words shows that since they haven't given you your money, you're out to dry all their dirty laundry in public. And whatever comes after those words it's driven by monetary circumstances
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@Masausogly4 Why are you bitter here?
Since when is criticizing or interrogating wrong doing bitterness?
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Guys, please don’t put me where I don’t belong 😂😂. I’m not a politician. I’m just a Zimbabwean who loves his country and who makes some people in power uncomfortable because most of them have blood on their hands—and their evil witch doctors know the condition of my heart.
My heart holds nothing but love for Zimbabwe — even though many think I do this for money— I have no blood on my hands. So those with blood on their hands feel intimidated by me because their witch doctors tell them that I’m interested in political office. No, I’m not. I’m just interested in seeing a better Zimbabwe.
Part of why they won’t give me my money is because I have not been initiated into the occult (kuromba) so they fear what someone who has so much impact without money will become with money.
Thandiwe Zulu@ThandiweMaZ
@LynneStactia Some say he's got ambitions of getting the top job. They say he has reamed up with some retired military guys and some rich white guys from SA and America who want to use him for wealth accumulation. I don't know how true these allegations are. @ABENSUNDU @noto2030
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