Crime South Africa Research
Crime updates. Not only Foreigners are criminal. South African citizens taking loot advantage and copying. Let's report crimes using cultural diversity.
Everyone is a law enforcement officer.
All night
Prayer tonight
Mountain
ConnectRevelations Revival Church SA
Glory to God
My bicycle is in my hands
God directed the search
The criminal was not violated
The criminal was prayed for
The criminal was advised a good way of life
The criminal was someone who always begged at my house
The criminal is a drug addict
The criminal is illiterate
The criminal is well known as a villager
We thank God
Holy Spirit permitted peaceful restoration
Thank You Jesus for all this
Truly mountain mass prayers do wonders
We thank God for the people
Who caught the criminal and ceased the bike
The story began when he manifested
When I was going to mountain prayer
I told him to bring the bike
He said he needed transport
Upon not returning it
I went to o prayer today
On my way back
Something told me to check behind tuckshop at Sambulo
I found him and we went to collect the bicycle
The house that ceased the bicycle
Was a home of two grannies
And a young man
They gave me my bike
Thank You for prayers
This is a testimony
From brother Nyawo Wellington
Revelations Revival Church
Just to remind you that this gentleman below released 22 Albums (zulu and English) in a period of 25yrs.
Album: "Slave" (1987)
Slave
Let Jah Be Praised (Igzebier)
I've Got You Babe
How Will I Know?
Rasta Man
Back To My Roots
The Hand That Giveth
Think About The Children
Album: "Together As One" (1988)
Together As One
On My Own
Women
Truth In The World
Children In The Streets
Jah Save Us
Album: "Prisoner" (1989)
War And Crime
Prisoner
False Prophets
Remember Me
Jah Live
Dracula
Reggae Strong
Don't Cry
Album: "House Of Exile" (1991)
House Of Exile
It's Not Easy
Hold On
Up With Hope (Down With Dope)
Reap What You Sow
Can't Blame You
Mickey Mouse Freedom
Crazy World
Group Areas Act
Running, Falling
Album: "Victims" (1993)
Different Colours / One People
Lovers In A Dangerous Time
Victims
My World
My Game
Keep On Knocking
Soldiers For Righteousness
You Know (Where To Find Me)
Johnny
Little Heroes
Album: "Trinity" (1995)
Feel Irie
Trinity
Serious Reggae Business
My Brother, My Enemy
Rasta Man's Prayer
Puppet Master
Affirmative Action
Big Boys Don't Cry
Life In The Movies
God Bless The Women
You Got No Right
Album: "Taxman" (1997)
Guns & Roses
Taxman
Is This The Way
Take It To Jah
Mirror, Mirror
We Love It
You've Got A Friend
Kiss No Frog
Well Fed Slave / Hungry Free Man
Good Things
Release Me
I Want To Know What Love Is
Album: "The Way It Is" (1999)
Crying Games
Crime And Corruption
The Way It Is
You Stand Alone
Man In The City
Let The Band Play On
Man In The Mirror
Rolling Stone
Till You Lose It All
The Show Goes On
Album: "Soul Taker" (2001)
Put A Little Love
Romeo
Sleeping Dogs
Teach The World
Soul Taker
Money Money Money
Is This Freedom
Love Me (The Way I Am)
Good Girl
Fugitive
Sins Of The Flesh
Album: "The Other Side" (2003)
Number In The Book
The Other Side
Ding Ding Licky Licky B**g
Cool Down
Family Ties
Divorce Party
Soldier
Julie! Julie!
The Bully
Hero
Album: "Respect" (2006)
Respect
Shut Up
Political Games
Changing World
Shembe Is The Way
Monster
Celebrate Life
The One
Choose Your Friends
Never Leave You
Mask
Touch Your Dreams
other songs:
Born To Suffer
I Wanna Take You To Jamaica
Mr. DJ
Oh My Son (I'm Sorry)
Peace Perfect Peace
Steel Bars
We'll find a way
Reggae strong for peace.....and more more others!
1964-now.
Book Review: Animal Farm by George Orwell
My good friend, Wazih likes saying that the dictatorship you like will always usher in the dictatorship you don't like.
That's the story of Animal Farm. The moment Snowball was chased out and no support for him was uttered, it was bound to happen; the farm was set for a dictatorship already. No one could have predicted how terrible it would turn out, but it was glaring that it was headed towards a path where dissent was no longer tolerated.
What fascinated me in this reading was the retelling of history that Squealer and Napoleon implemented. It is fascinating how repeated lies become conventional wisdom.
In all this story, the person I pitied the most was Boxer, and he was the most honest of all. He truly believed what he believed, yet he believed in error. That's a very unlucky life. With his zeal and strength, Boxer could have led another revolution on the farm, yet he thought, "I will work harder" and "Whatever Napoleon says is true." How tragic. Ultimately, he was betrayed and killed the way he hated the most. But what could he do? He was weak and sold out already. Too late for any change. Boxer's mistake was refusing to learn to read earlier at the beginning of the revolution. He would have been more empowered if he had learned to read.
Dictators always need men like Squealer; without Squealer, dictators can never last. It is rare for a dictator who makes noise a lot. Those who do often do not last long. The most successful dictators are the ones like Napoleon, who make their presence something mystical. From Kim Jun Un to Mugabe, to Hi**er to Mussolini, and the ancient emperors, the mystery was part of their game plan.
I know Animal Farm is fiction, but it isn't. It was written as an explanation of the Russian revolution. The understanding of the world that George Orwell cast in that book still holds. What happened in Animal Farm is what happened in Uganda, Libya, Iraq, etc. Understanding George Orwell is understanding how the world works. It is a powerful book of political thinking. Like I always say, until you understand politics, you will never understand politicians.
Is George Orwell still relevant? It is relevant for all time, especially now, where populism is rising globally. We must be careful of Utopia. No political system on earth can offer that. Anytime a politician tells you he will change things, that's the best time to think twice.
Lastly, I think Animal Farm turned out the way it did because of the structure that already existed. Toppling a former master is not necessarily toppling a system. And sometimes, revolutionary leaders start with the best intentions, as I believe the Animal Farm revolution began, but the existing system has been put in place specifically to be extractive. It takes a genuinely extraordinary leader to change that; of course, it has been done before. That's one of the finest lessons from the American state. Of course, the American system is imperfect, but at the same time, it is the best one that has balanced the slope.
Thank you, Mac Senfat, for making me read this. I enjoyed it. It's time to try "1984".
Philippians 4:1-9
[1]So then, my brothers and sisters, how dear you are to me and how I miss you! How happy you make me, and how proud I am of you! This then, dear brothers and sisters, is how you should stand firm in your life in the Lord.
[2]Euodia and Syntyche, please, I beg you, try to agree as sisters in the Lord.
[3]And you too, my faithful partner, I want you to help these women; for they have worked hard with me to spread the gospel, together with Clement and all my other fellow-workers, whose names are in God's book of the living.
[4]May you always be joyful in your union with the Lord. I say it again: rejoice!
[5]Show a gentle attitude towards everyone. The Lord is coming soon.
[6]Don't worry about anything, but in all your prayers ask God for what you need, always asking him with a thankful heart.
[7]And God's peace, which is far beyond human understanding, will keep your hearts and minds safe in union with Christ Jesus.
[8]In conclusion, my brothers and sisters, fill your minds with those things that are good and that deserve praise: things that are true, noble, right, pure, lovely, and honourable.
[9]Put into practice what you learnt and received from me, both from my words and from my actions. And the God who gives us peace will be with you.
In pictures
UTTERANCES
When we write English
You don't read everything
You speak sarcasm
Speaking sarcasm is dying
Some dress up
Political robes
Walking with bodyguards
Concealing past utterances
Patinonyora chirungu
Hamuverengi zvese
Munotadza kutaura
Kutadza kutaura kufa
They're not needed at the market
Cause they spoke profanity
They jumped to lead
Their speech isn't good
Uma sibhala singisi
Hanifundi konke
Niyahluleka kukhuluma
Kuhluleka kukhuluma kufa
You speak rags
As if you created a nation
When you actually lied to everyone
That your entry was peace genesis
They speak profane utterances
It shall sink them
And it shall be narrative shame
Failure to be true is hiding
Hiding with suits
Trending of robes
What a dark metaphorical leader?
You don't know how to speak
When you spoke we wrote nothing
Since you said nothing factual
You're a truant who defrauds names
Failure to talk is failure to lead
When we write Shona
You don't read at all
You fail to comprehend
Failing is a robber ...
© Wellington Nyawo
The Man From Harare
Crime South Africa Lecture
WE SHALL GO
Dear South Africa
We as expatriates
To your land of birth
We shall go home
We declare this
For we see and hear
All historical allegations
On us as from 2001
We shall go home
For we're a divine purpose
Like Israelites
We shall depart loaded
Dear Mzansi nation
As loving as we are
Following Mandela legacy
We shall go home
We've been deranged
By mass hatred
We're disturbed
Of being burnt offerings
We became Easter lambs
Of every seven years
2001, 2008, 2015 and 2022
The watch is reflecting
We shall go home
As we're delighted
We taught many schools
And helped many students of South Africa
Use that well
As a historical development model
You needed it
Forever we'll love you
Nations changed
The post colonial trends
The post modernism
All changed your humanity perceptions
We shall go home
And narrate to others
How slaving it is
To be far from motherland
We're still on one land
Divided by colonial borders
Fueling these protests
We're going home
You shall go home
Where you sent
The combusting flames of us
We've heard you
We're going home
When we go
Please never miss us
It was Foreign Direct Investment...
By Wellington Nyawo
Biographies by Wellington Nyawo
Legendary Biko: 1946–1966
Bantu Stephen Biko was born on 18 December 1946, at his grandmother's house in Tarkastad, Eastern Cape. The third child of Mzingaye Mathew Biko and Alice 'Mamcete' Biko, he had an older sister, Bukelwa, an older brother, Khaya, and a younger sister, Nobandile. His parents had married in Whittlesea, where his father worked as a police officer. Mzingaye was transferred to Queenstown, Port Elizabeth, Fort Cox, and finally King William's Town, where he and Alice settled in Ginsberg township. This was a settlement of around 800 families, with every four families sharing a water supply and toilet. Both Bantu African and Coloured people lived in the township, where Xhosa, Afrikaans, and English were all spoken. After resigning from the police force, Mzingaye worked as a clerk in the King William's Town Native Affairs Office, while studying for a law degree by correspondence from the University of South Africa. Alice was employed first in domestic work for local white households, then as a cook at Grey Hospital in King William's Town. According to his sister, it was this observation of his mother's difficult working conditions that resulted in Biko's earliest politicisation.
Lead24 Magazine Africa
WHEN THE ZULUS DEFEATED THE BRITISH EMPIRE
In January 1879, the British army in South Africa invaded the independent and previously friendly Zulu kingdom, which had been founded by the formidable Nguni warrior Shaka Zulu in 1818. Shaka had been the first proper king in South Africa, in that he managed to unite almost 800 Eastern Nguni–Bantu clans under his rule, displacing the rest. He was also the first to establish a proper army, which he divided into regiments called impis armed with assegais and iklwas – the former a traditional long-poled spear to use from a distance, the latter a remodelled short-poled version which was lethal in hand-to-hand combat.
Leading the British troops was Lord Chelmsford, a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath who had already fought in Crimea, India, and South Africa, winning skirmishes with Xhosa chieftains which no doubt influenced his low opinion of the Zulus. He commanded 4,700 highly-trained soldiers equipped with the latest Martini-Henry rifles, assisted by armed colonial volunteers and many field guns of the Royal Artillery. He attacked the kingdom on three fronts, expecting an easy victory and national fame.
Facing him on the vast, baking-hot plain at Isandlwana was a Zulu army of 350,000 warriors wielding deadly spears and an assortment of ancient muzzle-loading fi****ms, divided into 34 regiments of which 18 were made of married men, and 16 of unmarried ones. However, since 7 of the married regiments were made of men over 60 years old, there were only 27 Zulu regiments fit to take the field, amounting to some 44,000 warriors.
News of the attacking force reached the Zulu court while it was getting ready to host the annual First Fruit Festival, attended by all the regiments, smaller chiefs, and the best isangomas of the land –who immediately started manufacturing protective amulets and invigorating potions. What was supposed to be a harvest celebration turned into a three-day pre-war ceremony, at the end of which all warriors were sprinkled with protective medicines and sent to the border.
When the Zulus first appeared in the distance Lord Chelmsford divided his force to meet them, leaving over 1,500 men in the main camp beneath the Isandlwana hill. It was this reserve force that the Zulus attacked, leaving Chelmsford’s main regiment stranded miles away and unable to help.
The Zulu plan was simple, but efficient, developed over hundreds of years while hunting large herds of game. It was called the “horns of the bull”, with the horns made of fast-moving younger regiments whose primary job was to encircle the enemy, leaving the killing to the more seasoned warriors who would bear the brunt of a frontal attack.
The tactic was most successful if the two horns completed the encirclement of the enemy before the main body of warriors had been seen, and in this battle they not only encircled the British position but also the hill of Isandlwana itself. When the circle was closed, they advanced at a steady jogging speed, then broke into a run.
The battle raged for less than an hour, at the end of which all but 100 British men had been killed – and that’s because they ran away before the Zulus attacked. When Lord Chelmsford entered the shattered camp strewn with corpses he famously said: “But I left a strong force here! How was this possible?”
It was the worst defeat ever suffered by British troops at the hands of indigenous people equipped with vastly inferior military technology. It was also the greatest victory the Zulus were ever going to achieve.
Simonetta Gatto
Photo of a Zulu warrior taken in 1860
Satanism. The love for money will sell souls to the devil
We must unite are art in art
IS THIS THE REASON
Is this the reason?
We're in prison?
Yes in economics
We're like parasites
But is this the reason?
We're put in prison?
Hatred going horizontally vertical
Women weeping wounding wildly
Is this the reason?
We're putting foreigners to prison?
Hating products of power scramble
Thinking of own gains
Is this the reason?
We're closing cultures?
Is this the purpose
We're killing women
In the name of foreigners
Fingers and toes gaining momentum
Is this the reason
We banned body viewing
In the name of the pandemic?
Is this the reason?
Why we're breeding rebels?
To undermine every race
Is this humanity?
By Wellington Nyawo South Africa
Our lifelong Corporate Image of Excellence
We're to start reality shows of social cohesion
TINOKUMBIRA RUREGERO
Asking for forgiveness by Zimbabwe
We're asking for forgiveness
On whatever is blamed
That we're alleged
Please forgive us
We're asking for a pardon
Let us live in peace
Please forgive us
For reaching out in education
We're sorry
For the lost trust
The trust we shared in classes
Rebellious went your education
For whatever graduation
Please forgive us
Without forgiveness
Effects are lateral
Please forgive us
For being Zimbabweans
Stop posting crime images
Claiming it's Zimbabweans
We're victims and products
Of Mugabe and Mnangagwa
We're just citizens in shame
Forgive us for our refuge
We'll never work
In your companies
We promise
We'll open own projects
Forgive us
And benefit the aftermath
Kill us and curse the generations
Forgive us please South Africa
Some say we're now eating rats
Some say we're now cannibal
Some say we're stealing copper cables
Please forgive us
Forgive us
And navigate your crimes
To real perpetrators
Forgive us and gain.
By Wellington Nyawo
LET THEM HATE
by Elvis Nyathi (Reciprocated activism)
You can plan
To kill us
Evict us
Or repatriate
When they came
Singing their freedom songs
They demanded me outside
I obeyed but was blamed
I was collected
When I was hit
By pebbles and objects
I knew the day had come
They flamed me
And I turned to God
Said God receive my spirit
Let me rest in Your arms
They blamed
Shouted and attacked
And flamed me
Let them hate Jesus loves
Let them hate
Let them kill
Let them allege
Our Lord is aware
If you remember well school days
How many were taught by Zimbabwean teachers
So what went wrong you burn instructors
My death demands change of character
All the flames
The petrol and knobkerrie actions
I died for what I wasn't aware of
The day shall analyse sometime...
© Welligton Nyawo South Africa: NMF Advocate: SAPPS®™
THE NEW SOUTH AFRICA
Lead24 Magazine Africa
The new South Africa isn't like the one expected. This one is blame games through social media. People using social media for fake hatred fueling news. It's a new South Africa.
When Nyaope was introduced as a democratic right, everyone watched. The effects of Nyaope include massive stealing or vandalism (Nyawo:2020). As a public sector scientific art, youth of South Africa are unaware of what's really cooking.
South Africa making fake news claiming foreigners are doing it. For killing that Zimbabwean, Elvis Nyathi South Africa went cannibal. Though leaders turning a blind eye celebrating tax saving through the deaths of children, many are focused on fake social media news.
The African Magazine has a question. How many people died in hands of South Africans after the killing of Elvis Nyathi? We're stealing, slicing and selling babies as shares. The new South Africa is ignorant, insecure, brutal and also clueless on where we are in 2025. Democratic demons demanding deaths. ®™
Xenophobia was Facebook and WhatsApp misuse. Lack of literature review abilities of past damages (Nyawo:2022)
THE SOJOURNER
By Wellington Nyawo
He had no relatives
Nor was he related
In the foreign lands
The lands that swallowed many
He became a victim
They alleged
Charged and defamed him
He had no attorney
And never afforded one
They knew he was defenseless
But never knew
He had no life insurance
Nor had he accrued benefits
For he was never employed
And couldn't afford a work permit
He was incarcerated after long trial
The trial for what he never committed
He was a sojourner
Today we remember
Pathology reports
That declared
That he suffered mental breakdown
Another clause noted pneumonia
And the police dockets said
He broke ribs from mob justice
His name was fabricated
He was never buried decently
He was an unknown sojourner
They underlined his career...
©2009