NM Tsie retweetledi
NM Tsie
13.5K posts

NM Tsie retweetledi
NM Tsie retweetledi

One thing about lies they have shot legs
Revolutionary Gansta💚@RevoGangSta777
R8k per month better than R370.🇿🇦🇿🇦🚨🚨🚨
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@SABCNews @Sophie_Mokoena It's not convincing when the state delegates AFROPHOBIC VIGILANTES to do IMMIGRATION, POLICE,LABOUR INSPECTOR&MUNICIPAL AUTHORITY roles @CyrilRamaphosa. BLACK AFRICANS are DISPLACED,DENIED MEDICATION,PROPERTY LOOTED,BEATEN&even KILLED in police presence. No ARRESTS or COURT cases
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@ChrisExcel102 @pikinunch Wrong! There are far better people like Phakelumthakathi & Ngizwe. That's their area of speciality.
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NM Tsie retweetledi
NM Tsie retweetledi

Look,now they call you a Kiffir @DeezyphandaSA.You posted thinking you were better than a mice-eating Malawian. You wanted to impress the other race but got your pay through this racist insult.Learn to be yourself.Good for you!
Trilwillem@Trilwillem3
@DeezyphandaSA Kaffers when they kill all the white farmers. Cant wait
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@DeezyphandaSA Certain food only irrtates when it's eaten by a certain race & a certain group among Black Africans. Emancipate yourself from mental & Colonial slavery! What's wrong with eating mice? We don't know what you eat but there is nothing special about it.
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NM Tsie retweetledi

White privilege at display here. Elon musk would have 8182 tweets calling for war if they were muslim or black.
The Resonance@Partisan_12
Argentina fans spat on and trampled the England flag under their feet.
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@Arumlily92 @mamakaCleo What makes this AFROPHOBIC IDIOT more distinct from other Black Africans?
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‘Does not look South African’ . Meanwhile she has the most generic face I could find in Zimbabwe 10 times over
Dave Jones ( Mdeva) 😄@DaveJon63336865
This is a South African hun living and working in Germany. Shes basically exposing whats going on in Ireland as well. So many here are claiming to be South African.
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NM Tsie retweetledi
NM Tsie retweetledi

You are very correct, my brother. The Zimbabwean government does restrict foreign nationals from operating in certain business sectors, such as barbershops and tuck shops, which are called spaza shops in South Africa. However, an important distinction needs to be made.
Those restrictions do not apply to people who have legally acquired Zimbabwean citizenship through naturalisation.
Your question stems from my earlier tweet about people who came to South Africa and later naturalised. Despite having South African citizenship, many of them are still treated and spoken about as if they are foreigners. That is the point I was making.
In Zimbabwe, if someone from another African country migrates there and later naturalises and becomes a Zimbabwean citizen, they are no longer regarded as a foreign national for these purposes and are not barred from entering those sectors. They are entitled to work and do business like any other Zimbabwean citizen.
The issue, therefore, is not where a person was born, but their legal status and equal treatment under the law. I hope this answers your question.
ndalokandalo@ndalokandalo
@daddyhope This is wat I was asking, I don't have problem with Africans but the rules of law
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NM Tsie retweetledi

Two years ago, senior Zimbabwean journalist Blessed Mhlanga penned an article titled “ED Has No Intention of Stepping Down,” referring to President Emmerson Mnangagwa.
Lawyers representing the President, Dube, Manikai & Hwacha, subsequently wrote to NewsDay demanding a retraction. NewsDay, which employed Blessed Mhlanga, complied and issued both a retraction and an apology.
Now that events have seemingly vindicated what Blessed Mhlanga wrote, an important question arises: why was NewsDay forced to retract a story that appears to have been factually correct? Why did the newspaper have to apologise for publishing what has now come to pass?
Was this not an abuse of power by a sitting President, using the weight of his office and legal threats to compel a newspaper to withdraw a story that was, in substance, true?
And what does this say about press freedom in Zimbabwe, where journalists and media houses can be pressured into retracting reports that later prove to be accurate?



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NM Tsie retweetledi

Remember this video before you start with this industry , good luck my fellow South Africans 🇿🇦🙏 @JacintaNgobese @JacintaaNgobese
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@JacintaNgobese Only an independent assessment & report by the police should be trusted.
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NM Tsie retweetledi

My dear brother, this is where you miss the point. The assumption that every black African is not allowed to run a tuck shop or a spaza shop, as you call them in South Africa, is misguided. Equally misguided is the assumption that every white Zimbabwean or every white foreigner person automatically has the right to run a business in South Africa.
The problem is that your determining factor is the colour of a person’s skin. That is xenophobia and Afrophobia. I have never seen any of you walk up to a white person and demand their ID or immigration papers because your assumption is that every white foreigner is in South Africa legally, while every black foreigner is a suspect until proven otherwise. That is the textbook definition of discrimination.
Now let me teach you something, if you are willing to learn. There are Africans who have permanent residence in South Africa, and that status legally allows them to open and run businesses, including spaza shops. They are there legally and enjoy rights granted by South African law.
There are also South Africans of Zimbabwean origin who look like you and me but have South African citizenship through naturalisation. They are South Africans, just like you. You do not have more rights than they do simply because you speak Zulu or any other local language. The fact that someone does not speak your language does not make them any less South African.
Furthermore, there are white foreigners in South Africa, particularly in parts of Cape Town and the Western Cape, who do not have legal status. Some of them run small businesses selling cards, stationery and other goods.
Yet I do not see mobs demanding their papers or trying to shut down their businesses. Those card shops fall under the same laws as Spaza shops. The focus is almost always on black Africans, even when those Africans are in the country legally.
If your issue is with the law itself, then go to Parliament and campaign for the law to be changed. That is how democracies work. But do not victimise, intimidate or abuse people who are operating within the law simply because you dislike where they come from or the colour of their skin.
South Africa is a constitutional democracy governed by the rule of law, not by mob sentiment or prejudice. Rights and obligations are determined by legal status, not by race, nationality or accent.
I hope you understand this, and I genuinely hope you have learned something from this interaction.
ndalokandalo@ndalokandalo
@daddyhope Who should run township business in Zimbabwe according to the law of Zimbabwe?
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