BossBle

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BossBle

@Blecharaz

Called to equip

Africa เข้าร่วม Ağustos 2020
7.3K กำลังติดตาม1.2K ผู้ติดตาม
LynneM 💕💝💎
LynneM 💕💝💎@LynneStactia·
Who did this? Kuda kutinzwa ! 🙌🏽 Tongobhara ZERO mozoita sei ?
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BossBle
BossBle@Blecharaz·
@Twum_111 It's time South African cargo must be stopped to drive through Mozambique, Zimbabwe and other countries. The mediocre citizens don't know the repaccurssions of what they are doing.. Burning bridges of relationships with other nations.. South Africans think they can live solo
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BossBle รีทวีตแล้ว
0wura🥷🏾
0wura🥷🏾@Twum_111·
Cancel South Africa . Such a stupid country
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BossBle รีทวีตแล้ว
The Instigator
The Instigator@Am_Blujay·
President of Botswana 🇧🇼 Duma Boko stunned the audience after stopping midway through his speech to deliver a brutal but powerful lecture on relationships, loyalty, and trust.
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iBhiza
iBhiza@tattoedBhiza·
Chibatamabvi
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BossBle รีทวีตแล้ว
Hopewell Chin’ono
Hopewell Chin’ono@daddyhope·
In the topical immigration debates taking place in South Africa, many ignorant people have been manipulated by politicians and individuals with political ambitions who are exploiting that ignorance for their own agendas. But not everyone is ignorant to the real issues at the heart of the crisis. Some voices within South African society, including from the white community, are now speaking openly and calling things for what they are. The reality is that immigration in South Africa is not simply about foreigners. It is also about failed governance across the region, corruption, unemployment, economic collapse, weak border management, and political leaders who refuse to confront the root causes driving migration. Increasingly, some South Africans are beginning to recognise that blaming migrants alone will not solve the deeper structural problems affecting the country. But who cares about facts and accurate narratives when all that is needed are emotions to drive people into doing things they have been wrongly told will mitigate their suffering and the abject poverty in which they live? The tragedy of populist politics is that it feeds on desperation, not truth. People who are struggling economically become easy targets for manipulation, especially when they are constantly told that vulnerable groups, rather than failed leadership and corruption, are responsible for their hardships. Who cares about all the corruption coming out of the Madlanga Commission? Who cares that hospitals are being looted while billions that should have been used for healthcare, schools, roads, housing, and service delivery are instead being squandered on Ferraris and lavish lifestyles for politically connected elites? Nobody cares about those facts. The public is deliberately distracted from the real criminals destroying society. Instead of confronting corruption, state capture, and political failure exposed before the Madlanga Commission, people are encouraged to direct their anger at the easiest and most vulnerable targets, foreign nationals who are themselves trying to survive poverty and economic hardship. That is how populist politics works. It protects the powerful while turning the poor against one another manipulating their ignorance.
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Fadzayi Mahere🇿🇼
Fadzayi Mahere🇿🇼@advocatemahere·
🔸Good day @wicknellchivayo, Is this true? We need new leaders.🇿🇼
Dandaro Online@DandaroOnline

#dandarostreets The Johanne Marange Apostolic Church has reportedly rejected businessman Wicknell Chivayo’s lavish US$510,000 donation package, which included a 2026 Land Rover Defender and US$250,000 in cash intended for church leader Nimrod Taguta. Senior figures within the sect say the gifts go against the church’s long-standing values of humility, sacrifice and spiritual discipline, insisting the apostolic movement does not embrace material excess or outside influence. Follow our WhatsApp Channel: whatsapp.com/channel/0029Va…

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BossBle
BossBle@Blecharaz·
@advocatemahere @Mazilankatha_73 They say that when it comes to purchasing of hospital medications, equipment and chemicals to sustain clean tap water - But Rolls Royces' no and splashing US$millions NO SANCTIONS. CURSED 😢
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Fadzayi Mahere🇿🇼
Fadzayi Mahere🇿🇼@advocatemahere·
🔸Ndikunzwei futi muchiti sanctions are the cause of the country’s underdevelopment. We need new leaders.🇿🇼
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BossBle
BossBle@Blecharaz·
@matinyarare Isn't it the same mindset you are denying in Zimbabwe that Ed is the man, besides him there's none to lead Zim.? Aren't leaders replaceable Rutendo?
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Rutendo Matinyarare
Rutendo Matinyarare@matinyarare·
The fact of the matter is that South Africa cannot afford to lose Ramaphosa right now because the markets believe in him and see him as the glue holding the GNU together with the DA. Any impeachment or resignation of Ramaphosa, in an ANC that doesn’t really have another leader the markets are comfortable with, would destroy the rand and trigger capital flight. So, the truth is no one in South Africa really wants Ramaphosa to resign or be impeached. The ANC would also be guaranteed to lose all municipalities if it went into elections without Ramaphosa. No one can afford the consequences, irrespective of how many people are romanticizing the idea. #RamaphosaToBigToFall
Rutendo Matinyarare tweet media
Africa Research Desk@MightiJamie

“Legally credible” 😂😂😂. Sorry you guys are doing too much. The Section 89 panel report is well written and has no errors of law and makes well reasoned conclusions. Based on their mandate and evidence before them. They made the correct recommendations. The review is an attempt at time buying which is an affront to the constitutional court judgement and accountability and transparency.

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BossBle
BossBle@Blecharaz·
@daddyhope These guys are now starting to think soberly
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Hopewell Chin’ono
Hopewell Chin’ono@daddyhope·
As we celebrate and reflect on Africa Day today, it is important to qualify the intervention by South Africa’s Minister of International Relations and Cooperation, Ronald Lamola. What he says is correct, the issue of immigration in South Africa is indeed a crisis, and instead of focusing on peripheral issues, attention should be directed at the root causes, the push factors driving African migrants from countries such as Zimbabwe and Mozambique into South Africa, both legally and illegally. The fact of the matter is that we all know what the problem is: misgovernance. And the African National Congress, which has governed South Africa since 1994, is fully aware of this reality. Yet it has continued politically supporting the regimes in the region that have contributed to creating this crisis inside South Africa itself. We all know that ZANUPF rigs elections. We all know that it presides over a deeply corrupt system. We also know that some within the ANC benefit politically and materially from relationships with ZANUPF. So while Minister Lamola’s comments sound correct in principle, many people across the region have become sceptical because statements are repeatedly made, yet very little changes in practice. As we saw during the recent Southern African Development Community (SADC) foreign ministers’ meeting held in South Africa, Zimbabwe’s Foreign Minister, Dr Amon Murwira, was effectively in denial, insisting there is no immigration crisis affecting Southern Africa or South Africa. As long as leaders continue issuing statements without confronting the underlying governance failures driving migration, this crisis will persist. This is fundamentally a crisis of failed leadership. That is why other parts of Africa, and indeed other regions of the world, often look at Southern Africa with disbelief. We know what the problem is, and we know what needs to be done, yet we refuse to act. Worse still, regional leaders continue defending and embracing the very political systems that are producing the collapse, namely ZANUPF in Zimbabwe and FRELIMO in Mozambique, even after disputed elections, corruption scandals, and institutional decay. It is not rocket science why Zimbabweans cross into South Africa to seek medical treatment. It is not rocket science why a significant number of women giving birth at Musina Hospital are Zimbabwean. It is because Zimbabwe’s public healthcare system has collapsed under corruption and decades of misgovernance. Zimbabwe’s largest public hospital still relies on a single maternity theatre built in 1977. The country’s public health sector has, for years, lacked a functioning radiotherapy cancer treatment machine for the entire nation. Under such conditions, desperate citizens will inevitably cross borders, legally and illegally, in search of survival and dignity. Tragically, it is ordinary poor Africans who now become pawns in political battles. Politicians exploit immigration to whip up emotions and win votes, while many of those same political actors continue protecting, legitimising, and enabling the governance failures that created the migration crisis in the first place. The Southern African Development Community (SADC) issued a scathing report on Zimbabwe’s 2023 election. Yet the first president to go and celebrate that disputed victory was South African President Cyril Ramaphosa. It therefore does not make sense for South Africa’s Minister of International Relations and Cooperation, Ronald Lamola, to correctly speak about the root causes of the immigration crisis while his own government continues supporting and legitimising the very systems creating those root causes. After the SADC report was released, the Secretary-General of the African National Congress openly declared “Viva Mnangagwa.” That kind of duplicitous behaviour does not build confidence among citizens in South Africa or across Southern Africa.
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BossBle
BossBle@Blecharaz·
@daddyhope Thabo Mbeki is one intellectual president who had significant applications to raise SA unfortunately mistakes do happen. But he's still outstanding. Respect to him 🫡
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Hopewell Chin’ono
Hopewell Chin’ono@daddyhope·
Former South African president Thabo Mbeki made some serious mistakes during his presidency, and the two glaring ones were HIV and AIDS policy and Zimbabwe. I would also add his failure to properly groom or allow a successor before the 2007 Polokwane conference. But every time I listen to South African leaders speak, he still stands above all the presidents South Africa has had after Nelson Mandela. Mandela was in a league of his own and served a unique historical purpose during a particular era, so I do not even place him in this comparison. But when you compare Thabo Mbeki, Jacob Zuma and Cyril Ramaphosa, I genuinely enjoy listening to Mbeki because his arguments are backed by facts, empirical evidence, research, economic analysis, scholars and international journals. Whether one agrees with him or not, he constructs arguments intellectually. Listening to this discussion in the video reminded me again that he was a great leader who nevertheless had major flaws, and unfortunately those flaws often overshadow many of the positive things he achieved for the South African economy. I mentioned HIV and AIDS. I mentioned Zimbabwe. I mentioned the failure to groom a successor. I also think one of his major mistakes was the refusal to invest adequately in Eskom at the time when warnings were already being raised about future electricity generation problems. But when you then look at the presidencies of Jacob Zuma and Cyril Ramaphosa, it becomes a completely different picture. Mbeki’s approach to Zimbabwe was ideological. Zuma, for all his own problems, is probably the only South African president who can genuinely say he at least attempted to engage Zimbabwe politically in a meaningful way. But Ramaphosa’s relationship with Zimbabwe appears deeply compromised by business and political interests, at worst corrupt. And when you assess the three presidencies rationally, especially from an economic management perspective, the figures speak for themselves. South Africa’s economic growth reached around 5% to 6% during parts of the Mbeki era, levels the country has struggled to reach since. The problem today is that many people analyse these leaders emotionally instead of rationally. Economic performance is measured through figures, and those figures are publicly available. So every time I listen to Thabo Mbeki speak, I enjoy listening to him because of the depth, structure and intellectual discipline of the way he makes his arguments.
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LynneM 💕💝💎
LynneM 💕💝💎@LynneStactia·
The motorcade is waiting at RGM international, kana unenharo enda Pa airport… 📍
LynneM 💕💝💎@LynneStactia

#BhaskorONews!! 🔹Mr Skoprihihorihihadhozi (President ED) is executing a coordinated, low-profile return to the country within the next 60 to 90 minutes, perfectly mirroring the exact tactical strategy used during his secret departure. His arrival utilises a distinct two-aircraft formation, a Boeing 737-7Z5 Business Jet (BBJ) modified for VIP transport, extended range, and secure communications to carry him and his inner circle ⭕️ who departed with him a few days ago. Operating along a synchronised flight path, a secondary heavy-duty cargo jet accompanies the BBJ, the same jet that transported high-value assets on the day of departure. 🔸This coordinated arrival is timed perfectly to slip through specific blind spots in radar coverage. No details are available about the flights; the details are completely masked, so that both aircraft can slide back into national airspace completely unnoticed. We see you! We are tracking the flight ✈️! @nickmangwana @dhonzamusoro007 @HonZhemuSoda @

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BossBle
BossBle@Blecharaz·
@wicknellchivayo I play chess... But checkmate ndoiziva hangu. Dribbling 😂
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sir_wicknell.
sir_wicknell.@wicknellchivayo·
Aiwa muchitendei Baba asi handisati ndawana ma registration details ebhazi and mari inozouya pamwe chete ne bhazi. Mukomana weku fona ku radio station ane kodzero yeku pihwawo AQUA yake ne 10 thousand USD musi umwe chete iwowo watichaita handover. Ndichiri pa nyaya ye ku radio station vana vaye 30 after consultations with my wife and the 27000 being returned to my Lawyer I have decided to offer them a loan of 2000 usd each. The loan will be interest free and payable over 10 years with a grace period of 5 years. This means they will only start paying me back in 2031 and their monthly installment will be 33 dollars for 10 years till 2036. This is a very small transaction so no security is required and no loan agreement will be signed. If any of them are interested they can advise PHATHISANI and I will mobilize the funds and hand it over to them outside working hours and work premises. I THANK YOU...
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BossBle
BossBle@Blecharaz·
@daddyhope I like Chamisa - BUT I have serious concerns over his muteness on crucial matters. The NATION IS BEING BOTCHED but he's quite. It's worrisome
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Hopewell Chin’ono
Hopewell Chin’ono@daddyhope·
Does Nelson Chamisa want Zimbabweans to simply sit back and watch Constitutional Amendment No. 3 being pushed through without resistance? Does he expect people to wait for him to return from America and only then decide when an opposition movement should emerge? I thought Chamisa himself told people to go and form political parties and opposition movements of their choice and to leave him alone. Now that some have done exactly that and are trying, in their own small way, to push back against Constitutional Amendment No. 3, why is he insulting and undermining them? Does he not realise that this strengthens the growing perception that there is some form of alignment between him and the faction pushing Constitutional Amendment No. 3, whose objective is clearly to ensure there is no meaningful resistance? Because what sensible opposition figure attacks people who are standing up against the abuse and violation of the Constitution by a ZANUPF faction? Why would anyone genuinely opposed to authoritarianism ridicule citizens attempting to resist it? At a time when Zimbabwe desperately needs unity against constitutional manipulation, attacking those trying to organise only weakens the broader democratic struggle and benefits the very people pushing these dangerous amendments.
Hopewell Chin’ono tweet media
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Nyasha
Nyasha@NNyashaYessur·
The new Chief Justice holds: -A Diploma in Women’s Law -A Diploma in Legislative Drafting -A Diploma in Adult Education. -A Certificate in Gender Studies and Development -An honorary Master’s degree in Women and Gender Development. No law degree that's weird 😕
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LynneM 💕💝💎
LynneM 💕💝💎@LynneStactia·
I’m the Streets Lt General, l don’t report lies , I don’t get paid, I love ❤️ Zimbabwe 🇿🇼 chete chete #GCC ! Hooooyo!!
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