Sekai Gombe

2.1K posts

Sekai Gombe

Sekai Gombe

@gombe_sekai

Founder and chairperson of Zimbabwe Political Victims Foundation Trust(ZPVFT),a grassroots Org of victims for victims and led by victims,member at NTJWG

Harare,Zimbabwe Katılım Ekim 2017
337 Takip Edilen254 Takipçiler
Mdara Gee
Mdara Gee@mudharagee·
Honourable Amos Chibaya and others were involved in an accident whilst on their way to Gokwe. I have just been on the phone with Chibaya he is feeling a bit better now
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M.Caicedo@25
M.Caicedo@25@PKatiyaka98693·
@bla_bidza Guys musiyei inguva yake yekuba mangwana ndewewo kanyika kedu aka ndekembavha ..kana muri serious go and arrest chiyangwa mutodi mafume chamisa and chombo
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Bla B
Bla B@bla_bidza·
Investigate him further; get him arrested and locked up for years. He has single handedly turned Mabelreign into a high density suburbs with him selling any open land including all that wetland overlooking Cotswold Hills and Ashdown Park, and all what used to be the Drive-In. He is a school leaver who never worked and now has two wives and each with gigantic mansions as big as Microsoft Head Offices. And he is a product of Wamba cult politics.
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Sekai Gombe
Sekai Gombe@gombe_sekai·
@BaShonaBaShona No,the public service commission is not a chapter 12 institution,chapter 12 institution are:ZEC,ZHRC,ZGC,ZMC &NPRC
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BaShona.
BaShona.@BaShonaBaShona·
I have seen so many Zimbabwean lawyers trying to interpret the law here, quoting sections of the constitution. As Grade 2D, these lawyers failed to explain to us which section of the constitution was used when, for example, Justice Matandamoyo was reassigned from ZACC to NPA. Was she fired? There is no explanation as well on the issue of Justice Chigumba, who moved from the High Court to be ZEC chairperson. @ProfMadhuku @adv_fulcrum @advocatemahere @KikaMusa Can you interpret the law for us here so that we understand, because as it is, Commissioner Majome is still a member of Chapter 12 institutions.
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Sekai Gombe
Sekai Gombe@gombe_sekai·
@nickmangwana Hon Jessie Fungai Manjome is being punished for saying out the truth .What did you want her to say?,you wanted her to lie that all was well at the public consultations on CAB3,shame on you!
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Nick Mangwana
Nick Mangwana@nickmangwana·
Re‑assignment Notice: His Excellency the President, Cde. Dr. Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa has re‑assigned Ms Fungayi Jessie Majome from the position of Chairperson of the Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission to Commissioner in the Public Service Commission.
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Mr_kays
Mr_kays@Mr_Okays·
@nickmangwana That was swift and very embarassing. Does Mnangagwa has any advisors at all?
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Prof Jonathan Moyo
Prof Jonathan Moyo@ProfJNMoyo·
With all respect Honourable Senator Advocate Phulu - and fully appreciating your right to your opinion in this important national question arising from Clause 20 of #CA3 - it is difficult if not impossible to see how the vindication of the full political rights of traditional leaders takes away their independence. Arguably, any human being who does not have his or her full political rights cannot be independent. Traditional leaders would not have played their vanguard and pivotal roles during the liberation struggle and during the historic land reform push (in the Third Chimurenga), as mere "non-partisans". It's a historical fact that traditional leaders, peasants and freedom fighters lived together organically and acted with a common political purpose. Traditional leaders are best compared with religious leaders, who are supposed to treat everyone as equal before God regardless of their political affiliation, and who claim to be independent. Society accepts that about religious leaders, and there's no provision in the Constitution, which limits the political rights or regulates the conduct of religious leaders. Why is it that what's good for religious leaders is not good for traditional leaders? In understanding their societal role, it is crucial to keep in mind the fact that traditional leaders are creatures of tradition. Section 3(1)(d) of the Constitution provides that among the nine values and principles upon which Zimbabwe is founded is the "recognition of the nation's diverse, cultural, religious and traditional values". As such, stripping traditional leaders of their political rights enshrined in section 67 of the Constitution - as is currently the case - amounts to an assault on one of Zimbabwe's fundamental founding values and principles; whose recognition is critically important for traditional leaders as it is for religious leaders!
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Adv. Kucaca Ivumile Phulu - MP
Clause 20 of the Constitution Amendment bill removes the wording that requires traditional leaders to be non-partisan. It removes the entire code of conduct from Section 281. I was a Technical adviser in COPAC, I remember clearly that it was the traditional leaders who asked for this clause as they were represented in COPAC and even had their own technical advisor. They opined that such a clause would protect their independence. Personally,I don't agree with this clause. #cab3
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Adv. Kucaca Ivumile Phulu - MP
@ProfJNMoyo thank you. I was merely pointing out (1) That it was the Chief's delegation that had insisted on that clause.Secondly they have Judicial roles as part of the local courts. The same rules that apply to judges apply to them. See s 162(g) 163(f), s 164 especially 164(4). They are defined as part of the judiciary. There is going to be an inconsistency. My other important point here is that the discussion on CAB3 must move beyond a yes/no kind of discussion to consideration of the merits and demerits of individual clauses.
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ZLHR
ZLHR@ZLHRLawyers·
CHINOWAWA APPOINTED ZLHR EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
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COZWVA
COZWVA@cozwva·
Sir Wicknell has gifted Ronald Mujuru, who lost his wife and five kids in an Easter holiday accident, a Toyota Fortuner valued at $80 000 and US$50,000 chema.
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Nick Mangwana
Nick Mangwana@nickmangwana·
The Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission (ZHRC) today held a press conference at its Samora Machel offices. Chairperson Jesse Majome reported that the recent public hearings on Amendment Bill No. 3 were largely peaceful and well attended across the country. ZHRC monitoring teams were deployed nationwide from 30 March to 4 April to observe the hearings conducted by the Parliament of Zimbabwe. Majome stated that most venues were filled to capacity, demonstrating strong public interest, with many participants expressing support for the Bill. The Commission confirmed that its role was to ensure citizens exercised their constitutional rights, including freedom of expression and participation in governance. Observations focused on whether people could freely share their views without intimidation. The ZHRC commended organisers for maintaining order and enabling public participation. The Commission reaffirmed its commitment to protecting human rights and monitoring national processes in line with the Constitution. #CAB3
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NewsDay Zimbabwe
NewsDay Zimbabwe@NewsDay_Zim·
#WATCH 🔴 “Longer terms reduce the citizens ability to hold leader accountable and may diminish responsiveness to public concerns,” @zhrc365 chairperson Jessie Majome gives the commission’s view of #CAB3.
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Sekai Gombe
Sekai Gombe@gombe_sekai·
Good morning Zimbabwe,Nyazengu is raining and we're just fine
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Sekai Gombe
Sekai Gombe@gombe_sekai·
@cozwva Affirmative Action Group Chairman Phillip Chiyangwa
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COZWVA
COZWVA@cozwva·
US$100 prize to the first person who manages to identify the person in this picture 💰 🤑 💸 💲 🪙 💶 💰
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Sekai Gombe
Sekai Gombe@gombe_sekai·
@cmatewu Hon Matewu idyai makanyarara.The whole CAB3 in its entirety if a huge fraud to our constitution Sir
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Caston Matewu 🇿🇼
Caston Matewu 🇿🇼@cmatewu·
The President already appoints 7 Ministers outside Parliament who become MPs; why would he need to appoint a further 10 Senators. Why not make sure proportional Senators are competent people to be appointed Ministers if need be. This clause makes a mockery of our proportional representation and goes against the dictates of political balance in the Upper house, a no brainer.
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Afshine Emrani  MD FACC
Afshine Emrani MD FACC@afshineemrani·
The Desperate Race to Save the Colonel. April 3, 2026. Friday night over southwestern Iran’s Zagros Mountains. Iranian surface-to-air missiles slammed into the F-15E Strike Eagle. “Eject! Eject!” Both crew members yanked their handles. The jet vanished in a fireball. The pilot’s parachute opened. U.S. forces fixed his position fast. Night Stalker helicopters swooped in under covering fire and pulled him out within hours—shaken but safe. The weapons systems officer, a battle-hardened Air Force colonel, wasn’t so lucky. He slammed into a rocky slope alone. Injured. Armed with nothing but a pistol and a palm-sized encrypted radio with an emergency beacon. No food. No water beyond what was in his survival kit. The Hunt Begins Iranian Revolutionary Guard convoys raced toward the crash site. State TV broadcast bounties: find the American “pilot,” turn him in alive. Farmers and shepherds became hunters. For thirty-six grueling hours, the colonel became prey in a life-or-death game. Dragging his wounded leg, he climbed a jagged 7,000-foot ridgeline, heart pounding, every rock slide threatening to give him away. He wedged into a narrow mountain crevice as an enemy patrol passed within ten feet—boots crunching gravel, flashlight beams slicing the dark, voices arguing in Farsi. He held his breath, pistol ready, radio clutched tight. One sound and it was capture, cameras, a show trial—or worse. The Noose Tightens His beacon pulsed faintly. U.S. satellites and the CIA locked onto the signal. But Iranian jammers hunted it too. Overhead imagery showed three IRGC columns closing fast—less than two miles out. In Washington, President Trump gave the order: Get him out. Whatever it takes. Hundreds of elite operators—Navy SEAL Team 6 in the lead, Delta Force, and Night Stalkers—launched into the most complex combat rescue in recent U.S. history. Dozens of fighter jets and attack aircraft roared overhead. Cyber teams jammed enemy radars. A-10 Warthogs and strike jets hammered approaching Iranian convoys, bombs and cannon fire shaking the mountains, buying precious minutes. "We Got You, Sir" Saturday night. The colonel heard rotors and engines closing in. Then—gunfire. Real, close-quarters gunfire. The rescue force had made contact. “Friendly! Friendly!” Rough hands yanked him from the rocks. “We got you, sir—move!” Commandos half-dragged, half-carried the exhausted colonel toward the landing zone while bullets cracked overhead. One operator took a grazing round; he never slowed. Enemy tracers stitched the night sky. Disaster and Defiance Two MC-130 Commando II transports slammed down at a makeshift dirt strip in the narrow valley. Ramps dropped. The team sprinted aboard with their prize—then, disaster. Both massive birds bogged down in loose rock and mud. Engines screamed. Wheels spun uselessly. Iranian reinforcements were minutes away, headlights cresting the ridge. “Destroy the birds,” the commander ordered, voice ice-cold. Explosives flashed. Fireballs roared as the planes were blown apart in orange hell to keep sensitive technology from Iranian hands. The team sprinted for the emergency helicopters now racing in low and hot. Enemy rounds sparked off fuselages. Black Hawks took ground fire but stayed airborne. Home Bound They piled in. The last man was still climbing when the birds lifted off, skimming ridgelines as bullets chased them into the night. All souls accounted for. No American casualties. The colonel—seriously wounded but alive—was already en route to medical care in Kuwait. One of the most high-stakes, complex special-operations rescues in U.S. history had succeeded by seconds. Deep in enemy territory, America had once again sent the message louder than any bomb: We don’t leave our own behind. Ever.
Afshine Emrani  MD FACC tweet media
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