auto electician and proud sadza eater

Joined July 2025
52 Photos and videos
Leonel moyo retweeted
You don’t build a nation from lying and selling your soul @matinyarare nations are built by telling uncomfortable truths that influence leadership.
Replying to @BaShonaBaShona
I think for the sake of reconciliation, we need not keep pulling in names of people like Kuda Tagwirei into our conversation. Let us unite and build the nation from this unnecessary chapter we just went through. And yes, you have worked hard to be a voice of reason and I appreciate that.
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Leonel moyo retweeted
Sorry to burst your bubble, Moroccans hate black people especially black gay people like you South Africans.
Dear Morrocans and South Africans. When an idiot doesn’t like you, they link up with other idiots that don’t like you and before you even know it, it’s a hating group of fools that don’t like you! Funny part is, they don’t like each other but they have one thing in common ... YOU! South Africans and Morrocans. The poverty stricken countries hate you guys. Morocco is rich. South Africa is rich. This explains the hate from abegistan countries.
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Leonel moyo retweeted
Accepting a bribe live on X (in)directly from the president 😭😭😭😭
Replying to @paultungwarara
Much appreciated Dr. Someone will be there to collect it on Monday. We will definitely find a solution to collaborative nation building.
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Where is this thing.its so quiet these days
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If you go to public hospitals such as Gomo, and Mpilo hospitals, you will hate this man with passion. Mnangagwa is committing a secret Genocide.
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Leonel moyo retweeted
Jun 12
“The danger becomes clearer when Clause 8 is read together with Clause 3. If Parliament elects the President, and the President in turn elects Senators, the process becomes circular!” @JoanaMamombe has thrown CAB3 into the bin with a single argument!

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Leonel moyo retweeted
Spot the difference!!
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Leonel moyo retweeted
Zimbabwe is a very difficult place to live if you are just an ordinary citizen trying to get on with your life. Yesterday, a young man got in touch with me seeking financial assistance to travel to Zimbabwe because he had lost his father. I helped him, and his bus left Johannesburg at 5 p.m. It travelled all the way to Zimbabwe and got to the border in the morning, where it was cleared. It then continued its journey into Zimbabwe. When the bus got to Bubi, ZIMRA officials, who are Zimbabwe’s customs officials, sent it all the way back to the border for another search. As I write this, that bus is back at the border. This young man left Johannesburg yesterday at 5 p.m., and it is now past 6 p.m. the following day. He had already done more than half of his journey from Johannesburg, only to be forced back. I honestly do not understand why our government makes life so painful and difficult for ordinary people. It is cruel, painful, and heartbreaking. This is one of the reasons many young Zimbabweans do not want to return home when they complete their studies. If you are not part of the political elite circle, life can be incredibly difficult. Even those who are trying to live by the book and simply live normal lives are subjected to unnecessary hardship. It is heartbreaking. It is sad. The once respected Zimbabwe has become a mafia state.
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Leonel moyo retweeted
Given that this Budiriro human being has become ZANU PF, why is she not being recalled from Parliament? Can the CCC rotational president kindly untie the knot for us.
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Leonel moyo retweeted
Anything that stops CAB3 count me in. Wake me up even at 2am. But there are Ts and Cs. The people of Zimbabwe will have to choose the president of their choice via through free and fair elections. One man one vote 🗳. CDGN restore order and you'll be the hero.
Mnangagwa is history......✍️ It's time for General Chiwenga. The 2017 succession pact has been betrayed. The "ED 2030" CAB3 madness agenda is a constitutional coup to block the rightful successor. General Chiwenga, the anti-corruption warrior who restored power in 2017, must lead Zimbabwe's Third Republic. Change is coming. Discipline. Order. Consequences. Retired Lieutenant General Winston Sigauke Mapuranga.
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Leonel moyo retweeted
Susan Matsunga entered Parliament as an opposition Member of Parliament for Budiriro, a constituency where three Zimbabweans were recently found drowned in a sewer. Yet instead of focusing on the real issues affecting her constituents, she chose to defend and advance the interests of the ruling party and President Emmerson Mnangagwa in exchange for political trinkets. She is a perfect example of what is wrong with Zimbabwean politics. Four years ago, I was heavily criticised and insulted on this platform by some personality politics die hards when I questioned the process used by the opposition to select candidates for Parliament. One of the reasons I eventually fell out with the opposition leader was because I challenged the lack of transparency in how candidates were chosen. I argued that there should be public interviews so that Zimbabweans, both at home and abroad, could hear for themselves the quality of thought, ideas and leadership abilities of those seeking to represent them before they were selected or elected. I questioned how different the opposition was to ZANUPF if it refuses this level of transparency. I deliberately use the words “selected” and “elected” interchangeably because, in many cases, opposition candidates are selected long before voters are given an opportunity to elect them. If need be, rigging is done to make sure that the candidate the leader wants gets in, this is commonly known in the opposition circles. Anyone who has spent time around opposition politics knows that many aspiring MPs get onto the ticket not on merit but more on ingratiating oneself with the leader and his side kicks. That makes the process fundamentally flawed. My challenge in 2022 and again in 2023 was simple, if the opposition claims to be different from ZANUPF, why should advancement depend on loyalty to an individual rather than commitment and loyalty to ideas and principles? There were persistent stories that some aspiring candidates had to curry favour with influential figures in order to secure positions on party tickets. Susan Matsunga is an example of what happens when politics revolves around personalities rather than principles. Many will remember how she bootlicked the opposition leader on social media and attacked anyone who raised genuine concerns. I raised concerns about that at the time, and I will look for the posts. What we are witnessing now is not an isolated incident. It is a symptom of a deeper and structural problem. When people rise through the ranks by flattering leaders rather than demonstrating competence, principles and independent thinking, they eventually transfer that loyalty elsewhere whenever it serves their interests, as she is doing now. What she said during the Constitutional Amendment Bill No. 3 debate yesterday reflects exactly that. President Emmerson Mnangagwa did not simply ask MPs to support a bill that could benefit him. He offered something that could benefit them as well, an extension of their own terms in parliament. For those like Susan whose politics is driven by personal gain rather than principle, the temptation becomes obvious. Bootlicking is not loyalty to a particular progressive idea. It is a political culture based on personality cults. Those who build careers through flattery will eventually flatter whoever appears capable of advancing their personal interests. Yesterday it was the opposition leadership. Today it is Mnangagwa. Tomorrow it will be someone else. Zimbabwe’s political challenge is bigger than one person or one party. We have allowed personality cults to dominate our politics at the expense of ideas. We support individuals rather than principles, and as a result we repeatedly produce leaders and representatives who place personal interests above the interests of the people they claim to serve. If our politics were rooted in ideas, accountability and merit, there would be less bootlicking and more conviction. Representatives would feel bound by the principles on which they were elected rather than by opportunities for personal advancement. Today you see grown men and women shamelessly bootlicking leaders instead of ideas. Susan Matsunga entered Parliament on an opposition ticket, but many of her constituents who oppose Constitutional Amendment Bill No. 3 will struggle to see their views reflected in her position. In the end, that is the real issue, whether elected representatives remain accountable to the people who sent them there. Some people will not understand this argument today. Others may take years to do so. As the saying goes, puppies in the same litter do not open their eyes on the same day. Some open them sooner, some later, and when it comes to human beings, some never open them at all. But history must be recorded. These things need to be said when they need to be said, so that future generations know there were people who challenged the culture of personality politics and warned about its consequences long before the damage became obvious to everyone else. And to my fellow citizens, especially journalists, it is far better to be unpopular for saying the right things than to be celebrated for saying the wrong ones. History has a way of separating principle from convenience. Those who stand for what is right, even when it is unpopular and misunderstood, are often vindicated with time. The crowd is not always right, and popularity is not always a measure of truth. Eventually, history will judge those who stood with the interests of the people, even when the people themselves did not fully understand the message at the time. The duty of a journalist is not to tell people what they want to hear, but to tell them what they need to hear, guided by facts, principle and conscience. Susan Matsunga is not the disease; she is the symptom. The real disease is a political culture that rewards bootlicking over ideas, loyalty to individuals over principles, and personality cults over democracy.
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Leonel moyo retweeted
Operation:People’s Army !! Kana unenharo ayo ma V11 from the ground!! Akubaira zano ndewako! MISWAI oro Muchamiswa!!
The barracks that woke up to this message are: 1. Commando Regiment 2. Brigade(2PG) 3. Josiah Magama Tongogara (KG6) 4. Dzivarekwa barracks ( 2 Pg Bn) 5. Manyame Air Base 6. ZNA army HQ 7. Air HQ Kana unenharo enda unobvunza ikoko!!
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Leonel moyo retweeted
The barracks that woke up to this message are: 1. Commando Regiment 2. Brigade(2PG) 3. Josiah Magama Tongogara (KG6) 4. Dzivarekwa barracks ( 2 Pg Bn) 5. Manyame Air Base 6. ZNA army HQ 7. Air HQ Kana unenharo enda unobvunza ikoko!!
Fellow Zimbabweans, comrades in Arms, and men and women of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces,I have read with grave attention the document that has emerged from the Barracks titled "OPERATION CODE NAMED: PEOPLE'S ARMY". The message is clear, direct, and unmistakable. The Barracks have spoken. As a retired senior officer who served this nation with honour for decades, I salute the courage of the serving senior officers, officers, and NCOs who have put their names, careers, and lives on the line to issue this situation report. They have done what true soldiers must do when the Constitution is being mutilated, when elders are being exploited, and when the institutions we built with our blood are being turned into instruments of personal enrichment and tribal patronage.The document exposes what many of us have watched with growing alarm: The incapacitation of the C-in-C and the capture of state institutions by external forces. The blatant bribery of senior officers with farms, cash, cows, and promises. The erosion of professionalism in the Army, Air Force, and other arms.The dangerous privatisation of state companies and the inflation of tenders. The recruitment of villagers and the sidelining of merit in favour of loyalty to one man and one faction. These are not rumours. These are the observations of men and women still in uniform who took an oath to defend the people and the Constitution, not to protect individuals or their godfathers.Let me be clear: The Barracks have spoken. They have drawn a line. They have said they will not be used to mutilate the people's Constitution. They will not salute self-promoted generals who have abandoned the customs and traditions of the ZDF. They stand with the people of Zimbabwe. To the serving members of the ZDF: Remain disciplined, remain professional, but above all, remain loyal to the Constitution and the people, not to individuals who have lost their way. History is watching. The people are watching. To the political leadership: The game of divide-and-rule, bribery, and extension of power at the expense of the nation must stop. The soldiers have told you plainly they are tired of pathetic conditions of service while billions are being looted. They will not do your dirty work.Aluta Continua.The voice of the Barracks is the voice of the institution. Let those who have ears hear. Retired Lieutenant General Winston Sigauke Mapuranga.
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Leonel moyo retweeted
Zhou @nickmangwana imbomirai kudzima maWell-Thought-Out posts kani. Musadzime ! Stop it !
I am just quoting a senior civil servant Zhou @nickmangwana: “Wicknell is a very objectionable individual and a 100MW hazard…Zim will be a better place when a certain individual is behind bars”. I will just leave it here.
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Leonel moyo retweeted
As a nation, we are tired of this man!
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Leonel moyo retweeted
Aayas ! 😂🙌🏽🙌🏽
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Leonel moyo retweeted
Nelson Chamisa’s main job is to feed poor Zimbabweans false hope every cycle. Stadium sermons, "change is coming" zero delivery.On CAB3, he is part and parcel! Publicly shouting "withdraw the bill" but secretly promised the Prime Minister position once it passes...✍️
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Leonel moyo retweeted
I appeal to Africans living in South Africa to be extremely careful during the month of June, particularly as 30 June approaches. As President Cyril Ramaphosa said yesterday, there are hidden hands pushing for anarchy and instability in South Africa. The individual in these screenshots is a Member of Parliament for MK, and he is posting inflammatory material on Facebook at a time when tensions are already high. The phrase “Yizo Yizo” may be interpreted by many as a call for confrontation, intimidation, or unrest, which is irresponsible from anyone holding public office. While the South African government is urging everyone to respect and follow the rule of law, foreign nationals also have a responsibility to protect themselves and avoid situations that could place them in danger. Do not allow yourselves to be drawn into confrontations. Stay alert, avoid potential flashpoints, and be mindful of your personal security and that of your families. South Africa’s Constitution protects the rights of all people within its borders, and any grievances must be addressed through lawful and democratic means, not through threats, intimidation, or mob action. Watch your back, remain vigilant, and make sure your security arrangements are as tight as possible.
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Leonel moyo retweeted
Dear @edmnangagwa and @ZANUPF_Official I SAY NO TO CAB 3 AND I'M READY TO FACE WHATEVER IT TAKES!!!
We are prepared to suffer, we are prepared to be arrested, and we are prepared to die for this country because Zimbabwe does not belong to ZANU-PF it belongs to the people!!! @ZANUPF_Official @zanupf_patriots @Zinasuzim @ARTUZ_teachers @edmnangagwa @DCPlatform25 @cdfzim @Chofamba
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Leonel moyo retweeted
I must make it clear that only the authorised government officials may act against violations of the law, including violation of our immigration laws.   No other person is allowed, for example, to confront someone in the street to demand proof of nationality.   x.com/i/broadcasts/1qxvvvAVw…

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