Joined January 2012
1,853 Photos and videos
What did the US benefit from attacking Iran? Who was the main beneficiary?
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What is xenophobic about asking illegal immigrants to respect the laws of our country and to come to the RSA legally? Do we have South Africans who are illegal immigrants in any other country?
South Africa is a xenophobic nation. South Africans are xenophobes. This is well known globally. No amount of PR or clean up can wash that away. @CyrilRamaphosa and his acolytes must be brought before the ICC the same way he hauled @netanyahu before the ICC.
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We must never promote & tolerate lawlessness in the name of entertainment. All foreigners must respect the laws & the constitution of RSA, no short cuts.
South African musicians may face concert cancellations in Africa over xenophobia attacks
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They must use the same mode of transport or the state must cover the costs since we're donating almost 50% of our salaries through tax towards them.
You say Abahambe but you have no plan to take them home? What type of madness is this?
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Moroco Fifa World Cup Squad 19 - Foreign Nationals 7 - Moroccans
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Please help RT she stole R150k from me
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Goes straight to heart, at this rate will have chronic illness because of stress of paying tax with no tangible results
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The plan is to keep ordinary citizens poor forever while they use our taxes to buy Lamborghinis without no accountability at all...No one is coming to save us, we need to stand up against this madness!!
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Imagine I said โ€œstay in your countryโ€ ... the uproar.
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South Africa = Xenophobia Cรดte dโ€™Ivoire = mass demolition exercise You are pathetic Sam, extremely pathetic.
The Government of Ghana is repatriating 327 Ghanaians from La Cรดte d'Ivoire following a mass demolition exercise by Ivorian authorities. 228 arrived in Ghana safely yesterday. The Ministry of Foreign Affairsโ€™ special consular intervention of bringing back home Ghanaians and their belongings is to guarantee the protection and welfare of our stranded compatriots. The Ministry is grateful to all those who brought this development to our attention and conveys appreciation to our diplomatic mission in Abidjan and Ivorian authorities for the effective cooperation and welcome promise of compensation. For God and Country ๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ญ ๐Ÿ™
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Cartrack is disrespectful
*Cartrack Rosebank is calling Gcina(deceased) that lady *They no longer knows her name *Employees are threatened to attend the funeral and to market the company(Cartrack)
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Tenders given to Zimbabweans, again ๐Ÿ‘‡ Department of Higher Education & Training gave a tender to this Zimbabwean ๐Ÿ‡ฟ๐Ÿ‡ผ : mukumba@melatrendmconsultancy.co.za Owner: Onismo Mukumba Zimbabwean National Contract number: TETA2603POH00000074 DATED: 25 May 2026 Cell: 073 70 2 (withheld) Guys, please tag relevant stake holders and news agencies, everyone. We need answers ๐Ÿ˜ก
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In the meantime, 5.5k citizens of his country are heading back home from Mzansi! We really need to chat about African leaders
It is that time again when President Arthur Peter Mutharika of Malawi heads to South Africa for a medical check-up. The 87-year-old President was elected by Malawians last year to serve another five-year term. He has already travelled to South Africa several times, and if I am not mistaken, this must be his third visit for medical treatment. Meanwhile, many Malawian public hospitals struggle with severe shortages. Some lack basic necessities, including reliable access to clean drinking water, let alone adequate medication and medical equipment. Yet the President is able to fly to South Africa on a private jet to receive treatment while ordinary Malawians are left to rely on an under-resourced healthcare system. This raises a broader question that applies not only to Malawi but to much of Africa, why canโ€™t African leaders fix their healthcare delivery systems so that they can receive treatment in their own countries instead of travelling abroad? President Arthur Peter Mutharika is not unique. Across Africa, presidents, vice-presidents and senior government officials routinely travel to South Africa, India, China, Dubai and other destinations for medical care. Yet if one considers the amount of money spent on private jets, accommodation, security, allowances and medical bills abroad, that expenditure could go a long way towards improving healthcare systems at home. The greatest tragedy is that a Malawian president can fly all the way to South Africa for medical treatment, only to discover that the doctor treating him is Malawian. That is the real tragedy of Africa. We spend millions sending our leaders abroad for treatment while failing to build healthcare systems that can retain our own doctors and serve our own people at home. No nation can claim to be developing while its leaders have confidence in foreign hospitals but expect ordinary citizens to rely on failing public healthcare systems. The true test of leadership is building institutions that are good enough for everyone, including those in power. If I were the president of an African country, I would make it an unchangeable law that every public official elected to public office must use public hospitals. Not private hospitals in our own country, and certainly not hospitals abroad, but public hospitals. If you believe that a public hospital is beneath you, then you should not be in a public office in the first place. If you are unwilling to use the same healthcare system as the people who elected you, then you clearly lack the commitment, confidence or capacity to fix the problems facing that healthcare system. The moment a minister, member of parliament, vice-president or president knows that their own life and the lives of their families depend on the quality of public healthcare, things will change very quickly. Equipment will be purchased, medicines will be stocked, doctors will be retained, and hospitals will be maintained. The tragedy in many African countries is that those responsible for fixing public services are often insulated from the consequences of their failure. They send their children to private schools, use private security, live in exclusive suburbs and seek medical treatment abroad, while ordinary citizens are left to endure collapsing public services. A leader should never ask citizens to rely on services that they themselves are unwilling to use. True leadership means sharing the same realities as the people you serve and having enough faith in your own policies to live by them. It is also important to acknowledge things where they actually work, things that reflect the Africa that we want. Nelson Mandela did not die in a hospital abroad. He died in South Africa, being treated by South African doctors. The former Vice President of South Africa, David Mabuza, did not die in a foreign hospital. He died while being treated in a hospital in South Africa. Presidents Hage Geingob and Sam Nujoma of Namibia did not die in foreign hospitals. They died in Namibian hospitals, being treated by Namibian doctors. That is the kind of Africa that we want, not what we see in countries such as Zimbabwe, Malawi and Nigeria, where presidents do not even have faith in the public systems that they are running. That is a tragedy. As for Malawi, it is a tragedy because it is one of the poorest countries in the world, if not the poorest, and yet it is being saddled with these huge bills by its ailing and very elderly president. Yet his own country, as I have said many times, does not even have water in some of its major public hospitals. Just drinking water, forget about the medicine. Former Malawian President Hastings Kamuzu Banda died on 25 November 1997 in Johannesburg, South Africa, in a South African hospital. President Peter Mutharikaโ€™s brother, former Malawian President Bingu wa Mutharika, suffered a cardiac arrest in 2012 and was flown to South Africa on a private jet. So, almost 30 years after Malawiโ€™s founding president died in South Africa, Malawian leaders are still travelling to South Africa for medical treatment. Three decades later, they are still unable to fix their own healthcare system. It is sad. A country cannot continue spending millions flying its leaders abroad for treatment while its public hospitals struggle to provide basic services. The real measure of development is whether a countryโ€™s leaders have enough confidence in their own healthcare system to use it themselves. Thirty years later, the destination remains the same, South Africa. That should concern every Malawian. It is a painful tragedy.
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The ANC you are an evil organization... How did you allow this madness to happen really๐Ÿ˜ญ๐Ÿ˜ญ๐Ÿ˜ญ
WATCH: Over 4 thousand Malawi nationals are gathered at Sherwood Hall in Durban awaiting to be deported back to their home country from South Africa. Some have spent more than a week camping here. - BM #GFMNews #GagasiFM #IllegalImmigrants
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Tau Foundation "STOP BUYING FROM SOMALIANS SPAZA"S. YOU ARE KILLING YOUR FAMILIES! VUKA'MAULELE" TSOGAAAAANG BATHO"
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Mexicans ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฝ
Dear Minister @Leon_Schreib and @HomeAffairsSA; there are over 600 000 illegal Nigerians in South Africa, involved in narcotics trade, Internet fraud and human trafficking; what do President @officialABAT @NGRSenate @Ojukwu_Bianca say??
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Says a Mexican
This is how the map looks like today in Africa ๐Ÿ˜‚๐Ÿ‘‡๐Ÿ‘‡
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Mexicans
Home Affairs Reveals that All 586 Nigerians Processed for Repatriation Have Been Declared Undesirable and Banned from Re-Entering SA for Five Years After Being Found to be in the Country Illegally The Department of Home Affairs has confirmed that it processed 586 Nigerian nationals for repatriation after they were found to be residing in South Africa illegally. The first repatriation flight departed on Thursday, 11 June 2026, carrying 268 passengers back to Nigeria. According to the department, all individuals processed for repatriation were issued Emergency Travel Documents by the Nigerian High Commission to facilitate their return. In terms of the Immigration Act, those repatriated have been declared undesirable persons and are prohibited from re-entering South Africa for five years. The department also acknowledged the assistance provided by the Nigerian High Commission during the documentation and repatriation process. A second flight carrying the remaining individuals from the group of 586 is scheduled to depart on Monday, 15 June 2026. Home Affairs reminded foreign nationals that they must possess valid visas or authorisations to remain in the country lawfully. Home Affairs Minister Dr Leon Schreiber said the department remains committed to enforcing South Africaโ€™s immigration laws and restoring the rule of law. He noted that deportations and repatriations have increased by 46% over the past two years and urged the public not to engage in violence or take the law into their own hands as government reforms continue.
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South Korea was lucky they played against starters in football
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We have illegal immigrants from Ansia and South America as well. They must be subjected to scrutiny as well.
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