
Cucsman
@CucsmanE • 9,671 subscribers
Proud Zimbabwean citizen, musician, comedian,short guy
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What these South African guys are doing to Zimbabweans is not right, this is someone s husband shame 🤣
Cucsman411,807 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr
1:10
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What this South African brother is doing to Zimbabweans is not right 😭
Cucsman67,693 Aufrufe • vor 6 Monaten
0:30
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This will be the last day you see me posting anything about Nelson Chamisa on all my social media platforms. I believe I have vented enough and made myself clear. From here, I will leave everything to time to prove whether I was right or wrong However, I want to make one thing absolutely clear I was never paid by anyone to say what I have been saying. Everything I expressed came from my own frustration. Looking back, I think the biggest mistake I made when I became active in politics was putting my full belief in Nelson Chamisa and everything he stood for. Witnessing the opposite of what I believed in was painful. But now, I have finally moved on. NOTO2030
Cucsman19,454 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten

WE ARE CRYING FOR FREEDOM ,in solidarity with Dhara Blessed Mhlanga
Cucsman89,047 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr

We have to stop these guys , surely you can't make an old man to cry like this 🤣
Cucsman84,982 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr

South Africans must come to terms with one reality: Zimbabweans are not going anywhere ,at least not while the ANC remains in power, and certainly not while white capital continues to dominate the economy. In 2023, I, along with several Zimbabwean colleagues, had the opportunity to meet with a white South African bishop who is closely connected to the Minister of Home Affairs and other high-ranking ANC leaders, including President Cyril Ramaphosa. At the time, we were seeking permission to stage a peaceful demonstration at the Beitbridge border to express our deep dissatisfaction with the outcome of Zimbabwe’s 2023 elections. We had already received clearance from SAPS and other relevant authorities. Thousands of Zimbabweans living in South Africa were prepared to participate united in their frustration over what we believed was another stolen election and equally outraged by South Africa’s tendency, particularly under the ANC, to endorse or legitimize such flawed electoral outcomes. For our event to succeed, however, we needed to reach an agreement with the Department of Home Affairs not to arrest or deport Zimbabweans without valid passports during the course of the demonstration. We weren’t asking for special treatment only a temporary assurance that participants would not be harassed or detained. To secure this, we sought an honest and direct meeting with the Minister of Home Affairs, or at least another senior official in the department. This meeting could only realistically happen with the help of the bishop, given his connections. I use the word honest deliberately, because the South African government loses millions each year trying to control the illegal migration of Zimbabweans yet continues to ignore the root cause. That root is political: Zimbabwe’s prolonged crisis of legitimacy, repression, and rigged elections. The day Zimbabwe holds free and fair elections and installs a legitimate, accountable leadership, much of the crisis including the mass exodus of its citizens will begin to resolve itself. Our planned protest was meant to be peaceful but powerful. We intended to block the Beitbridge border not just for hours, but for days or even weeks if necessary. No vehicle would be allowed to pass through the bridge until both governments Zimbabwean and South African committed to doing the right and honest thing for the people of both nations. We couldn’t stage such a protest in Zimbabwe itself, of course, because demonstrations are not allowed there they are quickly shut down, often violently. That’s why we turned to South Africa, which claims to be a democratic country that respects freedom of expression and assembly. But during our meeting, the bishop was brutally honest. He told us, quite directly, that he would not help us and that no one else in power would either with anything that might result in Zimbabweans going back home. Instead, he offered to support us only if we were advocating for some form of identification or documentation for Zimbabweans already in South Africa. He then explained why. According to him, South African businesses especially in agriculture and domestic services heavily depend on undocumented Zimbabwean and Malawian workers. These workers are poorly paid, easily exploited, and unable to demand rights or protections. The government knows this and allows it to continue, because it serves both political and economic interests. With a heavy heart, he told us: “The day Zimbabweans are okay and return home, the South African economy will suffer especially at the bottom. Locals can’t be exploited. They demand fair wages and proper treatment. But illegal Zimbabweans fill that gap, and it’s working for the ANC and the business community.
Cucsman52,144 Aufrufe • vor 10 Monaten
