Mudhara Dziva

8.7K posts

Mudhara Dziva

Mudhara Dziva

@Msaigwa1

Entrepreneur, Managing Director Hunga [email protected]

Africa. Katılım Ağustos 2015
921 Takip Edilen1.4K Takipçiler
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Mudhara Dziva
Mudhara Dziva@Msaigwa1·
My son died last night at a boarding school in unpleasant circumstances. God I really need you to stand with me now more than ever😭😭😭😭
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Setfree Nherera Mafukidze 🇿🇼
Come on @begottensun stop attacking the custodians of the “Struggle” they are struggling for all of you at the end of the day,isn’t it? That said your question on ownership will not get addressed easily @DenfordNgadzio1 you might have missed a question there,is the property in question yours or not,you only gave information about a well wisher helping with construction but question is do you own this property?
K@begottensun

Cllr @DenfordNgadzio1 please can you come clean on what’s going on with these abominations paMebaz. Apparently they are yours. Can you confirm or deny? @JMafume did you co-sign this madness?

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Dr. Maalouf ‏
Dr. Maalouf ‏@realMaalouf·
A Muslim girl from Algeria was asked at a local TV interview: “What would you do if you saw prophet Muhammad?” She began to cry and couldn’t answer. A Muslim man from the US sought her out and married her to bring her to America. A few months after arriving in the US, she divorced him and took off her Islamic clothing to live freely.
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Shalom
Shalom@Mosiuoa2868·
@Markosonke1 RSA ID "11th" Digit on your ID Citizen: 11th digit is 0 for RSA citizens Foreigner/Permanent Resident: 11th digit is 1 for those not born in RSA but hold a permanent resident permit Refugee/status: The 11th digit is 2 for refugees ×LOOK AT THAT ID. No, don't fool yoself
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In A Nutshell🥜
In A Nutshell🥜@Markosonke1·
🚨 STOP THE PANIC: "Buffalo City sold land to a Nigerian" here’s the part you’re ignoring… Let me school some of you people like Jacinta Ngobese cos the outrage is louder than the facts 😭 First things first: not every "Nigerian" you see is a foreigner with zero rights. A person can be a naturalized citizen, permanent resident, or refugee, and guess what? They can legally own property, run businesses, buy shares, invest millions… just like me and you. The only major thing they can’t do? Vote. Now from what’s circulating, that man is a South African citizen. Yes… citizen although he was born in nigeria. Meaning legally he has the SAME rights as you. Secondly… the land wasn’t "gifted" 😭 it was bought for around R10 million. TEN MILLION which me and u can't afford shame.. So the man qualifies as an investor, probably has been in the country for many years or was born from a South African parent, and can actually afford what many can’t. That’s how economies work, money doesn’t check passport first, it checks capacity. So instead of asking "why him?" maybe ask: 👉 Why aren’t more South Africans in position to buy such land? 👉 Where are our own investors? 👉 Why do we only wake up when someone else closes the deal? Because right now it’s giving: we’re angry at the buyer instead of questioning the system or improving ourselves 😭 Let’s be serious guys law is law. Ownership is ownership. Emotions don’t cancel transactions. If you hate Africans you should hate who wrote the constitution maybe 😂
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🔥Microwave 🏴‍☠️😜😂🚮
@Markosonke1 The land belongs to South Africans ( by birth) , those foreigners who are now South Africans must go rent . No foreigners should get land if they were not born in SA by either South African parent
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1234 seandf playz
1234 seandf playz@1234seandf·
@Markosonke1 You are such a domkop. Look at that man's ID number, it's South African. Even if he is a naturalized citizen tgere is a way you can tell from the ID number if someone was not born in South Africa so the fact that his number is for a bona fide SAn means he got it fraudulently
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The Instigator
The Instigator@Am_Blujay·
@Ngiyekeni As long you and your 17 followers are happy 🤷🏻‍♂️🤙🏽😂😂
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The Instigator
The Instigator@Am_Blujay·
Calling me Zai Zai won’t reduce horse power on my car , or reduce my bank Balance or move me from an estate to a back room do what make you happy 😁
NJENGOMTWANA@Ngiyekeni

@Am_Blujay And there’s nothing you and your zai zai parents can do to clean out the zai zai in you. You are condemned to be a zai zai for the rest of your life. You will give birth to little zai zaises. Once a zai zai forever a zai zai😭😂😂😂

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Manufacture Solutions
Manufacture Solutions@Manufactureumz·
#Islam The religion of God from Adam until Muhammad, peace be upon them. God honored Muhammad by making him the final Prophet and revealed the Holy Quran to him. Islam is the religion of ethics; it places women in their rightful status—cherished, dignified, and protected from the commodification of their bodies, as was the case in previous nations. Mr. Maalouf: I hope you launch a campaign to prevent the trafficking of women, the exploitation of their bodies as a means of advertising, and their employment in degrading environments. I dare you to do so, because you are a regular customer of places where bodies are sold.
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The Instigator
The Instigator@Am_Blujay·
Judging from your face I wouldn’t want to date your sisters bro trust me on this 😂😂
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MLK 🔥💯@thatosebola

@Am_Blujay Zai zai, kwere kwere, Mazweni....all matters the same and no sister of mine has dated outside of our ethinc group (tswanas), only those hores from hilbrow and uneducated/poor hores who club at Sandton will entertain ya'll, remember that.

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skilled rebhara
skilled rebhara@drjaytee87·
but pa fair paroad hapana minimum speed .nyaya yekuflasher nekuti urikumhanya haisi right..
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Mudhara Dziva retweetledi
Thabani Mpofu
Thabani Mpofu@adv_fulcrum·
Let’s talk about the fuel—first— because we cannot pretend that we have not heard these recycled allegations. So according to you Tagwirei sponsored Chamisa with fuel in 2023 for his campaigns. In 2023 we were adults and alive and know that Chamisa never bussed his supporters to attend his rallies. That being an undisputed fact, what was this fuel for? Please break it down for us, we are patient. We’ve just come from witnessing the wonderful miracle of the resurrection of our God and friend, Jesus Christ. Our hearts are at peace!
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The Instigator
The Instigator@Am_Blujay·
Zimbabwe 🇿🇼 Ronald Mujuru drops flowers on each of the 6 graves he lost his wife and five children in a car accident , he lost his entire family 💔
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Sirroco
Sirroco@Sirroco4·
Everyweek there is a new mercenary saying something about @nelsonchamisa iye akanyarara... Ukavati unzai evidence vanobva vati Cult...mwari protect @nelsonchamisa.. Tiripachirangano
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CT
CT@CT_RSTA·
@TheIranWatcher Special Forces 🤣😂🤣😂 More like Special Needs
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The Iran Watcher 🇮🇷
The Iran Watcher 🇮🇷@TheIranWatcher·
❌ All six Iranian special forces seen here involved in the hunt for a downed American pilot were killed. The group was part of a larger deployment tasked with locating the missing American crew member in a CSAR operation, yet the Islamic Republic failed to find him in difficult mountainous terrain. A MANPAD can be seen in the hands of one of the special forces, showing how heavily armed the unit was during the operation. Despite deploying multiple forces, the mission ended in failure and heavy personnel losses for the Islamic Republic.
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Orlando B 🇧🇷🇳🇴
This photo is almost pitiful. This isn't SpecOps operators anywhere on the planet. It looks like a bunch of humble people, in an old French car, taking a picture before a family barbecue. I don't know if it's courage or ignorance about what, and who, they were going to face. If you're going to wage war against someone, at least have a minimum of preparation.
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Mudhara Dziva
Mudhara Dziva@Msaigwa1·
@TembaMliswa "Zvigaro hazvitorwe nehasha dzekuzviti ndakaunza Zimbabwe. This country is a product of the masses who sacrificed their sons, daughters and even their wealth" do you really comprehend what you have just written here?
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Sabhuku Temba P. Mliswa
Sabhuku Temba P. Mliswa@TembaMliswa·
The President has too many opportunists around him, eager only to accumulate wealth for themselves and yet never ready to defend his position and standing. From the Politburo, Central Committee etc there are many stooges, lacking the gravitas and energy to wage battle for their party and the leader. Thus time and again he has been railroaded without any defence from those who by natural order and structure should be leading the defence. When your parent is attacked in your presence how can you remain quiet and docile? At the height of the attacks against ED, many in the party retreated and hid away. Maitotya kudaira when your leader was under attack! Its just that ED is a veteran of such shenanigans and isn’t easily ruffled. He faced the same in 2017& never uttered a word in response. He remains a constitutionalist and is able to handle so many dramatic characters as we have seen with the drama by his VP. Zvigaro hazvitorwe nehasha dzekuzviti ndakaunza Zimbabwe. This country is a product of the masses who sacrificed their sons, daughters and even their wealth. Some of us have been in the party before and understand its ways even better than some who remain in it. Tinotodawo zvigaro izvozvo as we also have massive supporters vanoti Bhuru pinda, but we know how it should be done. Tichauya kumusangano ikoko and teach you the proper way of doing things! CAB3 is a recent example of a weak support system for the President. The Bill has very commendable amendments and massive support from the areas which I visited. However, the party has failed to set the tempo in articulating the positive nature of the 22 clauses which need to be amended. Instead, the opposition managed to reduce the conversation to just 2 clauses and painted everything negatively. I have previously cited organs such as Women’s League and Youth Wing. They have totally failed in their duties as the militant arms of the party. Certain people will have to be named and shamed as they no longer have any relevance because all they want is money. Some already have enough money such that they no longer have need for the incumbent. They can do away with him! Its those who are at the bottom who suffer defending the President and the party imi kumusoro ikoko muchingodya mega. The people who were attending the CAB3 meetings were mainly the ordinary party members and I salute them for that. I also salute traditional leaders who were able to come out and endorse CAB3. We worked for this thing traversing the length of the country and yet those who will enjoy the fruits of this work are at the top who never did much. I have always criticized what I feel is wrong and won’t stop even if I’m not from within the party. The party creates our Hovernment and by that lineage its condition is everyone’s business. What I never do is insult anyone. As it is, there is an active faction within ZANU PF which has given itself to advancing the candidature of VP Chiwenga as a better leader and are even agitating for him to usurp the sitting President. The blunt verdict for such actions is that they are the highest form of subversive action in a party. One can’t present themselves as a party member and yet work against the very same party’s leader and the agreed resolutions. Once a position has been agreed every party member has a duty to abide by it otherwise you are just a sleeper opposition member who should be handled as such. Not even VP Chiwenga himself would be receptive to such antics if he were the one in office. That these people have been allowed to remain inside is due to ED’s own operational patience in playing the long game than anything else. He knows and allows one a very long rope. It only takes one day for everything to unravel. We also know some of them and very soon some of us will simply state the names plainly. A party can only have one leader at a time. Once one decides to create parallel structure through which he sells himself as the better leader that is not just selling out but undermining the current leader. The same applies to supporting the party’s resolutions. Once a position has been agreed its incumbent upon everyone in the party to affirm and stand with that position. In plain words, for any ZANU PF member, once you find yourself advancing an agenda of leadership that promotes someone else other than the one who has been chosen by the party, you have totally lost it and become a subversive element that should be dealt with harshly and totally. Its telling how some of us, supporters who are outside the party have come to be the prime defenders of the President and the party more than those inside. However, as supporters we shall continue making our voices to be heard. After all supporters can't be fired but they can influence the firing of coaches!
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Mudhara Dziva
Mudhara Dziva@Msaigwa1·
@NewsHawksLive This is stuff straight from Chitepo school of ideology and it's not surprising that it's a heap of rubbish.
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TheNewsHawks
TheNewsHawks@NewsHawksLive·
Whispers have turned into loud accusations regarding his alleged clandestine talks with the Mnangagwa regime. Rumours that he has been negotiating for a Prime Minister post or a seat at the table of a government of national unity have disillusioned a base that once saw him as the uncompromising face of resistance. ​Then there is Fadzayi Mahere, whose intellectual rigour and digital fluency mirror Coltart’s own. While she remains a powerful voice for the urban intelligentsia, her political journey has not been without its bruises. Her previous staunch support for Chamisa’s "strategic ambiguity" bungling during her time in the Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) exposed significant limitations. That period of opacity, which left supporters confused and the party vulnerable to infiltration, is now viewed by many as a failure of clear-eyed leadership, somewhat tempering her status as a viable alternative to the status quo. ​Coltart’s "outsider advantage" is that he represents a clean break from these toxic internal squabbles and the perceived compromises of the liberation-era parties. He is a "clean" brand. His "outsider liability," however, is the ease with which the security state can delegitimise him. As his father recently remarked regarding the farcical nature of the hearings: "Citizens were denied the opportunity to speak... this is not consultation." If they can deny a lawyer the right to speak at a public hearing, the machinery of the state will certainly move to deny a white candidate the path to State House. ​The barriers are more than just psychological. Zimbabwe’s political infrastructure is geared toward the survival of the incumbent. From the weaponisation of the judiciary to the control of rural food aid, the structural hurdles are immense. For a white candidate, these are compounded by the "nationality narrative" - the inevitable legal and rhetorical challenges to his "Zimbabwean-ness" that would dominate the campaign trail. ​Furthermore, internal opposition fragmentation remains a ghost that haunts any new political movement. Could a Coltart candidacy unify the opposition, or would it provide the final wedge for ZANU PF to drive through the heart of the democratic movement? ​As the country watches the constitutional amendments move forward, we find ourselves at a historical crossroads. The assault on Doug Coltart was a signal of state-aligned intolerance, but the reaction to it was a signal of national fatigue. Zimbabweans are tired of the old scripts, weary of the economic malaise that has turned a breadbasket into a basket case. Perhaps the real issue is not whether Zimbabwe is ready for a white president. That is a question rooted in the very identity politics that have stalled our progress for 40 years. ​Instead, the question we must ask is whether Zimbabwe is finally ready to abandon the past as the primary currency of political legitimacy. Until we stop asking who a leader’s father was and start asking what the leader’s vision is, we will remain trapped in a post-liberation purgatory. After all, the blood on Doug Coltart’s face was Zimbabwean blood. The question is whether we are brave enough to recognise it as such.
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TheNewsHawks
TheNewsHawks@NewsHawksLive·
DOUG COLTART & THE POLITICS OF IDENTITY IN POST-LIBERATION ZIM ​By Gabriel Manyati ​The air inside the City Sports Centre in Harare was thick with more than just the humid heat of a Zimbabwean afternoon. It was heavy with the palpable, jagged edge of state-sponsored intimidation. On March 31st, as the floor opened for public hearings on a constitutional amendment designed to scrap presidential term limits, the veneer of democratic consultation shattered. In the centre of the maelstrom stood Doug Coltart. ​The scene was visceral. As Coltart, a prominent human rights lawyer, attempted to exit the complex in protest of the orchestrated heckling, he was swarmed. A mob, identified by witnesses as ZANU PF supporters, descended. Shouts for "ED 2030" (referring to President Emmerson Mnangagwa) morphed into physical blows. Coltart was shoved, slapped and his glasses - the quintessential tool of a man of letters - were smashed. His phone was snatched, a digital silencing to match the physical assault. ​In that moment, the symbolism was stark. A young white lawyer, bloodied but unbowed, standing as a physical barrier between a constitution and those seeking to dismantle it. It was a political baptism by fire. Yet, the most startling development occurred not in the sports complex, but in the digital town squares that followed. Within hours, a spontaneous groundswell erupted on social media. From the dusty streets of Highfield to the diaspora in London, the cry was the same: "Doug Coltart for President." ​This brings us to the central, provocative tension of our current national psyche: Is Zimbabwe ready for a white president? ​To understand Doug Coltart, one must first navigate the formidable silhouette of his father, David Coltart. A veteran of the opposition and the current Mayor of Bulawayo, David’s legacy is a complex tapestry of Rhodesian history and reformist zeal. He served in the British South Africa Police (BSAP) during the height of the liberation struggle - a fact ZANU PF’s propaganda machine has never allowed the public to forget. ​David Coltart eventually became one of Robert Mugabe’s most effective critics, a transformation that earned him respect among constitutionalists but deep-seated suspicion within nationalist circles. For Doug, this inheritance is a double-edged sword. To some, he represents a continuation of a family tradition of excellence in governance and human rights. To others, he is an easy target for the "puppet of the West" narrative that has sustained ZANU PF for four decades. Can Doug transcend his inheritance? Perhaps. But in Zimbabwe, the past is never dead; it is not even past. ​The reaction to the assault highlights a widening schism in the Zimbabwean electorate. For the rural heartlands and the liberation-war veterans, race remains a potent political weapon. To them, the prospect of a white leader is not just an electoral choice; it is a reversal of the very sovereignty they fought for. ZANU PF relies on this "patriotic history" to maintain its grip, positioning itself as the only shield against a return to colonial-era dynamics. ​However, for a younger, urban and digitally connected generation, the currency of legitimacy is changing. These Zimbabweans, who have known only economic decline and governance crises, are increasingly colour-blind when it comes to competence. To a youth population facing 90 percent unemployment, the skin colour of the person who can provide jobs and restore the rule of law is secondary. They see in Doug Coltart not a "Rhodie," but a compatriot who bleeds the same red on the floor of a sports centre. ​If Coltart were to heed the social media calls and launch a political career, he would enter a crowded and treacherous field. Contrast his prospects with Nelson Chamisa, whose charisma and grassroots appeal remain unmatched in the Zimbabwean interior even if his once-unassailable credibility is currently waning.
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Retired Lt General Winston Sigauke Mapuranga
Rtd General Chiwenga is not greedy. When Zimbabwe stood at a crossroads in 2017, he didn’t seize power he handed it over. That’s not weakness. That’s leadership. He could’ve taken the presidency. He didn’t. He could’ve turned against Mnangagwa. He stayed loyal. He could’ve bowed to corruption. He chose principle. Rtd Chiwenga showed restraint, discipline, and dignity. That’s the mark of a gentleman not a tyrant. Zimbabwe needs leaders who serve, not dominate. General Chiwenga’s legacy is still unfolding but history will remember the man who stepped back when he could’ve stepped up.
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