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The Rozvi State
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The Rozvi State
@RozviState
Zimbabwe Historian. Mharidzo yekumuka kwemapfupa
Sumali Şubat 2022
391 Sinusundan1.9K Mga Tagasunod
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President @edmnangagwa, accompanied by @ZimFirstLady Dr Auxillia Mnangagwa has arrived in Maphisa for the handover of houses to war veterans. This event is part of the Presidential War Veterans Housing Scheme, aimed at providing decent accommodation for liberation war veterans.

Mulakazuva4ED@MulakazuvaL
President @edmnangagwa is set to hand over houses in Maphisa as part of the Presidential War Veterans Housing Scheme, a program aimed at providing decent accommodation for liberation war veterans. The scheme is a collaboration btwn the govt and Prevail Group of Companies.
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President @edmnangagwa is implementing robust socio-economic empowerment initiatives targeted at the country’s liberation heroes. His experiential understanding of the liberation struggle informs a governance approach anchored on recognition, restitution, and empowerment of war veterans. The commissioning of modern housing units in Maphisa signals a paradigm shift towards sustainable welfare provisioning. Come 2030, no war veteran will be left behind in the national development trajectory.
#CAB3 #vision2030




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The Rozvi State nag-retweet

🇿🇼 Happy Independence Day to Zimbabwe! 🇿🇼
Today we celebrate freedom, resilience, and the unwavering spirit of our nation. May this day remind us of the sacrifices made and inspire us to build a future of unity, peace, and prosperity.
Let us also lift our nation in prayer:
🙏 Father, we thank You for Zimbabwe—its people, its land, and its destiny.
🙏 Lord, continue to guide our leaders with wisdom and righteousness.
🙏 Let peace, stability, and development flourish across every province.
🙏 Unite us as one people, with one vision, under Your divine purpose.
Zimbabwe shall rise and shine! 🇿🇼🔥
Happy Independence Day!

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The Rozvi State nag-retweet

Support for Constitutional Amendment Bill No. 3 is firmly consolidating, with ordinary Zimbabweans demonstrating a clear and confident understanding of its significance.
Across communities, including among vendors, citizens are articulating well-reasoned perspectives in favour of the Bill, outlining how its provisions align with their aspirations for stability, development, and effective governance.
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Dear Zimbabwe Council of Churches,
You have no business opposing Amendment Bill No. 3. None whatsoever. Your interference in constitutional affairs is a brazen affront to Zimbabwe's democratic order. Stay in your lane. Your mandate is souls, not legislation.
Constitutional revisions are routine across the globe - from the United States to South Africa. Zimbabwe is no exception, nor should it be.
The usual suspects will argue that ZCC members, as Zimbabwean citizens, retain the right to participate in constitutional processes. Granted. But there is a profound difference between individual civic engagement and an ecclesiastical institution formally mobilising its religious authority against a legislative instrument. Your members may engage as private citizens through appropriate civic channels - that is their constitutional right. However, the ZCC did not speak as concerned citizens. It spoke as a Council of Churches, wielding its institutional authority to oppose a parliamentary process. That is not civic participation. That is an unambiguous overreach.
Scripture itself forecloses your position. Romans 13:1 commands: "Let every soul be subject unto the higher powers, for there is no power but of God." First Peter 2:13-14 further instructs submission to every human institution established by law. And Christ Himself settled this matter with finality: "Render unto Caesar what is Caesar's, and unto God what is God's" (Matthew 22:21). Parliament was constitutionally mandated to debate and enact laws - not you.
If you crave political influence, resign your collars and contest an election. Be accountable to the electorate as politicians are. Your current posturing blurs the sacred line between faith and politics, divides congregations, and wholesale abandons your spiritual calling.
Pray. Serve. Unite. Leave constitutional matters to those elected and mandated to handle them.
I thank you.

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The Rozvi State nag-retweet
The Rozvi State nag-retweet

VARAKASHI4ED MASH WEST Info DESK
18April 2026
Today in History April 18 (Zimbabwe) 🇿🇼
Today marks one of the most important milestones in Zimbabwe’s history, Zimbabwe Independence Day.
On April 18, 1980, Zimbabwe officially gained independence from British colonial rule after years of a bitter liberation struggle. At midnight, during a historic ceremony at Rufaro Stadium, the British flag was lowered and the new Zimbabwean flag was raised, symbolizing the birth of a free and sovereign nation.
Power was formally transferred from the British administration led by Lord Soames to the newly elected government under Robert Mugabe, while Canaan Banana became the country’s first President.
The celebrations were attended by thousands of Zimbabweans and international leaders, marking the end of colonial rule and the beginning of majority governance. One of the most memorable highlights was a performance by Bob Marley, whose song Zimbabwe had become an anthem of liberation.
April 18, 1980 is the day Zimbabwe became independent, a powerful symbol of freedom, unity, and the triumph of the liberation struggle.
#Zim@46

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President @edmnangagwa who loves every Zimbabwean despite political pate or age has arrived at Mahetshe Primary School for the Children’s Independence Party celebrations, accompanied by the 1st Lady Dr Auxillia Mnangagwa.
#ZimIndependence #Zim@46 #Maphisa #ChildrensIndependence



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This is why I decided to be party and parcel of this vibrant and eternal party @ZANUPF_Official,
- it is people centred,
- development centred
- cultured.
President @edmnangagwa handed state of the art houses to war vets in Maphisa, Mat South.




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@lilomatic Our future is bright i wish you be incorporated in the @ZANUPF_Official government for the best of the majority you have a good political insight
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The Rozvi State nag-retweet

Impressive scenes from Maphisa Stadium where the nation has converged for the 46th Uhuru Celebrations. The commemorations are running under the theme: Zimbabwe@46: Unity and Development Towards Vision 2030.
#ZimIndependence #Zim@46 #Maphisa #Uhuru #Zimbabwe #Vision2030




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Just a smile will tell you everything is under control,He is truly the Godfather of the system @edmnangagwa
Long live Shumba ,thank you for the idea of keeping rotating independence celebration,lot of development had been noticed in each and every Provinces,this year Maphisa

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Today in history 16 April 2026
On April 16, 1980, Zimbabwe was in the final transition from colonial rule to full independence. The country had just gone through historic elections held under the Lancaster House Agreement, which ended the war and paved the way for majority rule. By this time, the results were already clear, Robert Mugabe and his party, ZANU-PF, had won the election and were preparing to take over leadership of the new nation.
Across the country, there was a strong atmosphere of anticipation and celebration. Former liberation fighters were assembling, political leaders were organizing the new government, and preparations were underway for the official independence ceremony to be held in Rufaro Stadium on April 18, 1980. International guests, including dignitaries and leaders from around the world, were arriving in what was then Salisbury (now Harare) to witness the birth of a new nation.
At the same time, British authority, led by Lord Soames, was in its final days as power was being formally handed over to the elected African leadership. The long and painful liberation war was effectively over, and the country stood on the brink of a new era of independence, unity, and self-governance.
In short, April 16, 1980 was a moment of transition, Zimbabwe was no longer at war, but not yet fully independent, standing just two days away from becoming a free nation.
#Zim@46
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