[GUEST ACCESS MODE: Data is scrambled or limited to provide examples. Make requests using your API key to unlock full data. Check https://lunarcrush.ai/auth for authentication information.]  Hopewell Chin’ono [@daddyhope](/creator/twitter/daddyhope) on x 844.8K followers Created: 2025-07-13 07:46:59 UTC South Africans are holding their breath tonight, not just for President Ramaphosa’s words and action, but for a rare glimpse of decisiveness. South Africa is praying that the President doesn’t moonwalk around the Mkwananzi–Mchunu showdown like a man dodging potholes in Johannesburg seeking to protect his comrades. If ever there was a moment to lead boldly for President Ramaphosa, this is it, because failure to act now might not just be a headache for his presidency, but the ANC’s own Waterloo come 2026 Local Government elections. South Africans have long memories, especially when they are standing in service delivery queues and driving in a Johannesburg that is slowly but surely rotting in being turned into your proverbial African city. What makes this Ramaphosa television moment even more critical is that neighbouring countries are also gripped by the Mkwananzi saga, not just for the drama, but because in their own backyards, the rule of law is a rumour and police officers don’t dare sneeze without a politician’s permission. South Africa has a rare opportunity to take the win and show that accountability can still stand taller than partisan and party politics. Will President Ramaphosa show decisive leadership, or will it be yet another commission of inquiry that rambles on until people forget; buried in paperwork, drained of urgency, and seasoned with legalese until it dies a quiet, bureaucratic death? South Africa does not need another performance of justice; it needs the real thing, especially when the neighbours are watching with envy because their own police chiefs cannot even question a ZANUPF leader without risking victimisation.  XXXXXX engagements  **Related Topics** [south africa](/topic/south-africa) [Post Link](https://x.com/daddyhope/status/1944302523247903190)
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Hopewell Chin’ono @daddyhope on x 844.8K followers
Created: 2025-07-13 07:46:59 UTC
South Africans are holding their breath tonight, not just for President Ramaphosa’s words and action, but for a rare glimpse of decisiveness. South Africa is praying that the President doesn’t moonwalk around the Mkwananzi–Mchunu showdown like a man dodging potholes in Johannesburg seeking to protect his comrades.
If ever there was a moment to lead boldly for President Ramaphosa, this is it, because failure to act now might not just be a headache for his presidency, but the ANC’s own Waterloo come 2026 Local Government elections.
South Africans have long memories, especially when they are standing in service delivery queues and driving in a Johannesburg that is slowly but surely rotting in being turned into your proverbial African city.
What makes this Ramaphosa television moment even more critical is that neighbouring countries are also gripped by the Mkwananzi saga, not just for the drama, but because in their own backyards, the rule of law is a rumour and police officers don’t dare sneeze without a politician’s permission.
South Africa has a rare opportunity to take the win and show that accountability can still stand taller than partisan and party politics.
Will President Ramaphosa show decisive leadership, or will it be yet another commission of inquiry that rambles on until people forget; buried in paperwork, drained of urgency, and seasoned with legalese until it dies a quiet, bureaucratic death?
South Africa does not need another performance of justice; it needs the real thing, especially when the neighbours are watching with envy because their own police chiefs cannot even question a ZANUPF leader without risking victimisation.
XXXXXX engagements
Related Topics south africa
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