Post On Sunday retweetledi
Post On Sunday
24.2K posts

Post On Sunday
@PostonSunday1
News & Current Affairs
Zimbabwe Katılım Temmuz 2019
1.2K Takip Edilen1.2K Takipçiler
Post On Sunday retweetledi
Post On Sunday retweetledi
Post On Sunday retweetledi
Post On Sunday retweetledi
Post On Sunday retweetledi

If someone is upset because I have spoken the truth, they can go and hang. I do not care how they feel. If someone is upset that I said so-called strategic ambiguity was nonsense, and events have now proved that assertion correct, they can go and hang. I do not care how they feel.
If someone is upset that I said the opposition was as dead as a dodo, and I have been proved right, they can go and hang. If someone is upset that I exposed who is behind feeding fake stories about their friends to fake news websites like Zimeye, they can go and hang. I do not care how they feel.
If someone is upset that I said there is no real opposition in Zimbabwe, and reality continues to prove that point, they can go and hang. If someone is upset that I have said there are people pretending to be opposition figures while quietly supporting CAB 3, they can go and hang. I do not care how they feel.
If someone is upset that I said many people support personalities instead of principles, and that some of those personalities are cartoon politicians, they can go and hang. Events continue to validate what I said. I am not here to appease people or massage egos. I am here to speak the truth about how public affairs are conducted and manipulated.
I genuinely do not care how people feel about uncomfortable truths. That is their business, not mine. If someone is upset that I have called certain political positions foolish, and reality continues to prove those positions foolish, they can go and hang. People have a right to be idiots, but the rest of us also have a right to point at idiocy and call it exactly what it is.
You cannot be upset that I have refused to be a fool. You cannot be upset that I refused to follow idiotic positions like so-called strategic ambiguity. You cannot be upset that I refuse to continue defending something as correct when the whole world can clearly see that it is wrong.
Africa is in the mess it is in today partly because of this kind of thinking, where people blindly bootlick politicians even when those politicians are clearly using and manipulating them for personal power and survival. Critical thinking disappears, and personality cults replace rational political engagement.
I know that our country has never had an O-Level pass rate above roughly 33% over the past four decades, so I understand fully that not everyone will grasp political reality or complex public affairs issues.
But if, out of my 1.7 million followers across Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram, only a few hundred are upset because I told the truth, then I will sleep very comfortably at night knowing that the silent majority remains on the right side of politics and reality.
I watch old men embarrass themselves on this platform bootlicking someone who lied that he had been told by God, telling supporters in 2013 that victory was only weeks away. Now, 13 years later, those same old men are still singing from the same hymn sheet and defending the same failed politics.
That is their business if they choose to be fools, but they cannot get angry because some of us refuse to join them in that foolishness. At some point, blind loyalty stops being political support and becomes self-inflicted deception. Truth does not become wrong because fools are offended by it.
Make Zimbabwe Great Again 🇿🇼@buster_goldie
Inini personally l don’t think @daddyhope is a sellout.This men has a passion to see Zimbabwe really change & by attacking him we are not doing the struggle justice.Think of what he does & suggest should be done in this struggle uri sober zvisina ma feelings & you will see sense
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Post On Sunday retweetledi

This man, Madzibaba Veshanduko, real name Godfrey Karembera, has sacrificed so much for the democratic cause in Zimbabwe, and has suffered so much. He has been in prison since October 2025, and today he is slowly becoming a forgotten figure in the public discourse of our politics, especially opposition politics.
And what is this man’s crime? Printing flyers allegedly carrying the words “No to Corruption.”
Prison is a very painful thing and place to be. I was there myself, three times as a political prisoner, and I can tell those who have never experienced it that prison breaks the human spirit. The only thing that keeps you alive mentally is hearing prison officers tell you that people outside are speaking your name, rallying around you, demanding your freedom, remembering your sacrifice. The one thing that destroys a prisoner is hearing those same officers tell you that people have forgotten about you.
Every morning, between 6 and 7 a.m., the prison cell gates open. You go outside to bathe in the open, that is if there is water at all. You would have spent the night squeezed into a filthy cell built for eight to 12 people, but carrying around 45 human beings. There is no space to stretch, no dignity, no privacy, no humanity.
When one side of your body becomes numb and painful from sleeping on concrete, you cannot even turn around because there is simply no room. You are packed in there like sardines. That is the life this man is living every single day.
You go out and are given what is supposed to be food, but it is rubbish. Around 11 a.m., they give you sadza and boiled vegetables without even cooking oil, just salt. Around 1 p.m., they call you for supper. Then at 3 p.m., you are locked back into that overcrowded cage until the next morning at 7 a.m.
From 3 in the afternoon until sunrise, you are trapped inside that suffocating cell. If you are not mentally strong, prison will destroy you. If you do not have a strong family support structure, prison will crush you completely.
I was telling someone recently that I am one of the very few political prisoners in Zimbabwe who did not need a GoFundMe or public fundraising campaign whilst in prison because I had a very strong family support structure behind me. But this man is the breadwinner in his family, he is the family structure. He is the one who provided for his home. He was taken away while fighting for all of us, and today he suffers in silence.
And let us tell the truth today, whether it hurts people or not. This man has been let down. Completely let down.
Because of personality cult politics in Zimbabwe, many clowns will defend the silence of their political leaders. Talking about this man's plight keeps his name in the public consciousness, but the leaders are quiet. The truth must be spoken plainly. This man has been abandoned by many of the same people who once celebrated him when he was useful to their politics. Today, even opposition leaders barely mention his name anymore. He has become a forgotten man.
And that is why ordinary citizens are no longer willing to put their heads on the chopping block for politics the way many did. People are watching carefully. They can see how political charlatans use citizens as foot soldiers, but when those citizens land in prison, they are dumped and forgotten.
This man came out to demonstrate during the Geza days. That was his “crime”. He answered a call because he believed Zimbabwe deserved better. But because he did not answer the call from a particular person due to personality politics, he has been let to rot. People have looked away. It is as if in Zimbabwe the struggle for freedom belongs to a few political individuals, and if you fight outside their shadow, your suffering no longer matters.
That poisonous mindset is exactly why Zimbabwe remains a political and moral disaster today. It is why good people rot in prison while opportunists ignore their plight. It is why ZANUPF continues to rule with ease. We are not politically conscious enough to understand a very simple principle, when someone sacrifices their freedom for the people, you stand with them regardless of who they are or which faction they belong to.
When they are arrested, you should defend them.
When they are hungry, you feed them.
When they are broken, you comfort them.
When they are forgotten, you remind the nation of their sacrifice.
A society that cannot understand something so basic is a society condemned to permanent oppression. And until Zimbabweans learn this lesson, ZANUPF will continue ruling this country until kingdom come.
Today, Madzibaba Veshanduko is in my thoughts. Today I reflect on his sacrifice, his pain, his suffering, and his courage. History must record that this man paid a heavy price while many who shouted slogans from safe places moved on with their lives and forgot him.
I also want to applaud people like Freeman Chari, who have continued to remind us of this man’s suffering and who have consistently reminded society that when one person suffers while fighting for our collective struggle, that suffering should become the suffering of all of us.
That is what solidarity means. It means we do not abandon people once prison gates close behind them. It means we stand with their families, we support their children, we check on their welfare, and we make life a little more bearable for them while they endure the brutality of incarceration on behalf of all of us.
A struggle cannot survive if those who sacrifice the most are forgotten the fastest. A nation that abandons its prisoners of conscience abandons its own humanity.




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Post On Sunday retweetledi

Join us live from Victoria Falls 🇿🇼 tomorrow for the @ITU Regional Development Forum for Africa.
The Forum will bring countries, partners, and stakeholders together to advance the ITU Regional Initiatives for Africa and support #Partner2Connect matchmaking around country needs.
Watch the webcast 👉🏼 itu.int/webcast/live/d…

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Post On Sunday retweetledi

🔸ICYMI: In this audio clip, Honourable VP @wicknellchivayo sheds light on how he makes “his millions”, the extent of his grip on the topmost political elites as well as what he discusses on the airport red carpet when the other two VPs have been left behind.
Just listen. Don’t comment.
We need new leaders.🇿🇼
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Post On Sunday retweetledi

Takunda Mhuka and @EmmanuelSitima7 have been remanded to May 26 to fix a trial date. For nearly 50 days, the State has failed to bring a simple case of a broken windowpane to trial, a glaring reflection of Malaba’s justice system.

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Post On Sunday retweetledi
Post On Sunday retweetledi

CLEANING UP THE MINING SECTOR
“All foreign investors and foreign-controlled entities currently participating in the small-scale gold mining sector are required to regularise their operations by transitioning to mining operations above the prescribed small-scale thresholds.
Accordingly, all such operators shall, by 01 January 2027:
a) Increase production capacity to levels beyond twenty (20) kilograms of gold per month; and/or
b) Recapitalise investment to beyond United States dollars Fifteen million (US$15,000,000),
thereby qualifying for operation under the large-scale mining category applicable to foreign investment participation.”
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Post On Sunday retweetledi

Police have warned that they will not allow unlawful behaviour to be passed off as protest action. Demonstrations over undocumented migrants continue in parts of the country. Police spokesperson, Athlenda Mathe says they are working with immigration officials to address the migration crisis. Tune in to #eNCA, channel #DStv403.
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Post On Sunday retweetledi
Post On Sunday retweetledi
Post On Sunday retweetledi
Post On Sunday retweetledi
Post On Sunday retweetledi

Julius Malema has dismissed the growing wave of Afrophobia in South Africa as “clownish” during an interview with Sky News, criticising the dangerous rise of anti-African sentiment and warning against turning fellow Africans into scapegoats for South Africa’s deeper economic and governance failures.
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Post On Sunday retweetledi







