Sunday, September 7, 2025

Adults: Gregory Porter Is Coming to SA Again

Insightjozinews.blogspot.com

Noko Maleka 

“Adults: Gregory Porter Is Coming to SA Again”



South Africa, get ready to be serenaded once more—jazz legend Gregory Porter is bringing his Love is King Tour back to our shores this November!


Why This Matters


Grammy®-winning vocalist Gregory Porter—renowned for his velvety baritone, soulful storytelling, and signature cap—has captured South African hearts since his Joy of Jazz appearances in 2014 and 2015, and again during his sold-out solo tour in early 2023 .


Tour Stops & Details


Cape Town – GrandWest Grand Arena: 12 November 2025, doors at 19:00, show at 20:00. Ticket prices range from R800 to R1,500 .


Johannesburg – DP World Wanderers Stadium: 15 November 2025, doors at 18:30, show at 20:00. Tickets go from R800 up to R2,000 .


Durban – Durban International Convention Centre: 19 November 2025, doors at 19:00, show at 20:00. Pricing spans R700 to R1,500 .



Ticket Info


Grab your tickets before they vanish—on sale from 9 AM, Thursday, 24 July 2025, exclusively via Showtime.co.za and Ticketmaster.co.za . Steer clear of resellers like Viagogo—only purchase from the official platforms, or risk invalid tickets .


A Message from Gregory Porter


Reflecting on his relationship with South African fans, Porter recently shared:


> “For me, music has always been about coming with a humble and honest expression about love and life. South Africa, I’m humbled by your exuberant radiant love… Two years later, I return with my ‘King of Love’ SA tour—a continued celebration of the incredible people of this nation.” 




What to Expect


Expect an unforgettable evening filled with Porter’s timeless classics like Liquid Spirit and Hey Laura, delivered through his smooth fusion of jazz, soul, gospel, and blues. It’s a performance rooted in emotional depth and musical mastery .



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Bottom Line


Adults, take note: This is more than just a concert—it’s a soulful reunion. With his rich voice and heartfelt delivery, Gregory Porter’s Love is King Tour promises to be one of the most memorable live music experiences of the year in South Africa. Don’t hesitate—tickets sold out fast in 2023, and they’ll likely do the same this time around!



Friday, September 5, 2025

Shepherd Bushiri, Real Name Chipilaro Gama, Funding Mayibuye Africa Party



Shepherd Bushiri, Real Name Chipilaro Gama, Funding Mayibuye Africa Party?



Politics in South Africa is never short of drama, and the latest whispers carry the name of one of the continent’s most controversial prophets: Shepherd Bushiri, born Chipilaro Gama. It is alleged that the self-proclaimed prophet, who fled South Africa in 2020 amid fraud charges, has resurfaced in political conversations — this time as a potential backer of the Mayibuye Africa Party.

The story thickens with claims that Floyd Shivambu, former EFF deputy president, recently traveled to Malawi not just to “visit” Bushiri, but to discuss the possibility of launching a new political home — Mayibuye Africa Party — with Bushiri playing the role of financier. If true, this would mark one of the most bizarre marriages of religion, politics, and scandal in recent memory.

Bushiri’s name evokes strong reactions. To some, he remains a spiritual father who offered hope and prosperity teachings; to others, he is a fugitive who ran from accountability. If indeed he is channeling resources into South African politics from his Malawian base, it raises troubling questions: what kind of politics can be birthed from money tainted by unresolved allegations? Can a party backed by Bushiri truly claim to represent the interests of South Africans, or will it serve as a platform to launder reputations and influence?

For Floyd Shivambu, whose own political career has been marked by both brilliance and controversy, this alleged partnership would be a risky gamble. On one hand, Mayibuye Africa Party could provide him with a fresh start outside the shadows of Julius Malema and the EFF. On the other, his association with Bushiri could damage his credibility further, as South Africans remain wary of leaders entangled with scandal-prone figures.

South Africa deserves political movements born out of integrity, accountability, and vision — not out of whispered deals in Malawi or the coffers of fugitive prophets. Until clear answers emerge, the alleged Bushiri-Mayibuye connection remains an uncomfortable reminder of how easily money, power, and desperation can distort our political landscape.

The nation must ask: do we want our future dictated by prophets in hiding and politicians seeking quick comebacks, or by leaders with genuine courage to face the people and the truth?



Thursday, September 4, 2025

From Operation Dudula to Tribalism: The Dangerous Road We’re Paving for Ourselves




From Operation Dudula to Tribalism: The Dangerous Road We’re Paving for Ourselves


By Noko Mabofa Maleka |Insight jozi news 

The fear that keeps me awake at night is that after the so-called “success” of Operation Dudula, South Africa will be forced to confront an even uglier demon—tribalism.

I am often condemned for my stance against Dudula. Yet, I cannot remain silent when I see a dangerous shift in our society, where some South Africans—particularly black South Africans—are beginning to negotiate in their minds that xenophobic attacks and hate speech against fellow Africans might somehow be justified. That thought alone chills me to the bone.

It baffles me that those who share the same skin tone, the same history of struggle, and the same scars of oppression could support movements rooted in hatred and division. We know—better than anyone—the conditions that have driven our brothers and sisters from across the continent to our shores. These Africans have come not to steal our prosperity, but to share in the crumbs of a bread we ourselves are still searching for. We don’t even know who ate the loaf.

I have written, spoken, and publicly condemned Operation Dudula’s criminal acts. And yet, my greater fear is this: after the xenophobic dust settles, we will find ourselves choking on the smoke of tribalism. We will turn from blaming “foreigners” to blaming each other—Zulu against Xhosa, Sotho against Tswana, Venda against Pedi. We will carve our unity into pieces, just as our colonisers once did.

What stings most is our double standard. As black South Africans, we can erupt with rage over a single racist tweet from a fellow black man who dares use the K-word—but somehow we can rationalise an organised mob hunting down African migrants in the streets. If that is not hypocrisy, what is it?

I’ve seen tribalism up close, and it is never noble, never righteous. Years ago, I worked in the Limpopo mines in Burgersfort. Every day, workers who weren’t from Limpopo—especially those from the Free State and Eastern Cape—faced toxic hostility. Some even died. And, disturbingly, this was often treated like a joke.

When I took a vacation job in KwaZulu-Natal, I was called a mfene. People questioned why I had travelled so far just to work there. My Zulu was terrible, and at one point, I feared for my life. That fear taught me that tribalism is not just an ugly sentiment—it is a deadly disease.

And yet, across Africa, the story is the same. From Cape to Cairo, we are ruled by governments and leaders who have long stopped caring for the people who put them in power. We are fed lies because lies are easy to swallow, especially when they tickle the ear and absolve us from facing the truth.

History is littered with the consequences of our divisions. In Zimbabwe, the Shona massacred the Ndebele in the Gukurahundi. Decades later, are the Shona any better off? Did such bloodshed feed the hungry or free the oppressed? No—it merely deepened the wounds of a nation.

If we do not confront the cancer of xenophobia now, it will metastasise into tribalism. And when that day comes, the enemy will not be the “foreigner” at our door—it will be our neighbour, our co-worker, even our family member.

Operation Dudula may claim to protect South Africa, but if its spirit of hatred takes root in our communities, it will destroy us long before it saves us.



Monday, September 1, 2025

The ANC is a Criminal Enterprise


The ANC is a Criminal Enterprise


By Noko Maleka | Insight Jozi News



South Africa is a country blessed with potential, yet crippled by leadership failures. This truth was laid bare once again when political analyst and author, Prince Mashele, appeared on the State of the Nation podcast with Mike Sham. His words were not coated in diplomacy, but charged with the urgency of a citizen who has had enough of watching his country drift under the weight of incompetence.


Mashele’s criticism comes hot on the heels of his now-viral interview on the Sizwe Mpofu-Walsh Show, which attracted over a million views. Clearly, South Africans are listening, because he is saying what many are thinking but few dare to articulate: the ANC has lost all credibility, and President Cyril Ramaphosa is a man completely out of his depth in the highest office of the land.


A Circus Called “National Dialogue”


In the podcast, Mashele tore into the much-publicised “national dialogue” initiated by the ANC, dismissing it as nothing more than a political circus. Instead of engaging meaningfully with the crisis of unemployment, collapsing state institutions, and a faltering economy, he argued that the ANC was staging yet another empty performance. “It is not a dialogue—it is a show,” Mashele declared, underscoring the disconnection between government theatrics and the lived reality of ordinary South Africans.


Ramaphosa’s Irony of Wealth and Poverty


Perhaps the sharpest dagger came when Mashele took aim at Ramaphosa’s public musings on inequality. The President recently asked South Africans to reflect on why some people are rich while others are poor. Mashele’s response was scathing: “How dare Ramaphosa pose that question, when he himself is one of the richest men in the country?”


It was not merely a rhetorical jab—it was a moral indictment. For Mashele, Ramaphosa represents the very embodiment of South Africa’s contradictions: a leader who speaks about poverty from the comfort of his fortune, while failing to create policies that address the structural inequalities deepening the gap between rich and poor.


The ANC: From Liberation Movement to Criminal Enterprise


In perhaps the boldest statement of the conversation, Mashele described the ANC as nothing short of a criminal enterprise. His reasoning was simple: a party that presides over state capture, looting, cadre deployment, and the deliberate hollowing out of government institutions cannot be described otherwise.


This is not the ANC of liberation glory. It is a party that has cannibalised the state and betrayed the very people it once vowed to liberate. For Mashele, the ANC is no longer an organisation of visionaries; it is a network of opportunists feeding on the country’s resources while preaching empty slogans to the masses.


Why His Voice Matters


Prince Mashele has become one of the sharpest political commentators in modern South Africa, not because he speaks politely, but because he speaks plainly. His message resonates because the frustration of citizens has reached boiling point. When his interviews go viral, it’s not just entertainment—it’s a reflection of how deeply the public craves accountability and truth in a time of national despair.


South Africa stands at a crossroads. The ANC may continue to brand itself as the custodian of democracy, but voices like Mashele’s force us to confront a painful question: what happens when the custodian becomes the criminal?

https://youtu.be/FmZykqcW844?si=87O-UuLRYXnNndSF

Insightjozinews.blogspot.com 






Thursday, August 28, 2025

Tuesday, August 26, 2025

Shoprite Offers Job Opportunities Through the Youth Employment Service (YES) Programme



Shoprite Offers Job Opportunities Through the Youth Employment Service (YES) Programme


The Youth Employment Service (YES) is a business-led initiative, supported by government and labour, designed to create economic pathways for young people and reduce unemployment in South Africa.


Through the programme, participants receive 12 months of on-the-job training in the retail sector. Learners gain hands-on experience across different areas of the retail business. After completing the programme, successful candidates are equipped with the skills to either pursue a retail career or start their own retail business.


Who Can Apply?


South African youth aged 18 – 34 years


Minimum of Grade 10 (or equivalent)


A matric certificate is an advantage


Alternatively, a Retail Readiness Programme (RRP) qualification is accepted



How to Apply


To apply for this opportunity with Shoprite:

📲 Send a WhatsApp message with the word “hello” to 072 773 4335 and follow the prompts under Our Stores.



Monday, August 25, 2025

Open Letter to Santaco: Hands Off E-Hailing, It’s Time to Innovate

Open Letter to Santaco: Hands Off E-Hailing, It’s Time to Innovate

By: Noko Maleka – Insight Jozi News

Dear Santaco,

You are the biggest black-owned business in South Africa. From the days of the E20s and Siyayas to today’s Quantums, you have carried the hopes and dreams of black families. You took people to and from work, to schools, to town for groceries, and even across provinces to see their families. You ferried lovers to see each other, fans to stadiums, and communities to churches and funerals. Your taxis became a lifeline that helped black South Africans survive, work, and build.

But let’s be honest: many black people resent you today. You have become a symbol of poverty. You are the reason that, in our society, buying a car is considered the ultimate sign of success — because commuting with you is seen as something one must endure only until they have no choice left.

Your members buy taxis and pay thousands to join your associations, yet never once do they ask the public if they will commit to using those taxis. Still, when people choose alternatives, you react violently — as if South Africans signed a contract to remain your passengers forever.

Here is the truth: South Africans use your taxis reluctantly. They do so because you have not evolved with the times. You have not invested in innovation, in safety, or in dignity. You have not sent young people to study transport dynamics, global trends, or new technologies that could modernize your industry. You are shocked that e-hailing is thriving, yet it is thriving precisely because of your ignorance, arrogance, and violence.

South Africa is becoming a 24-hour economy. People work night shifts, attend late events, and travel at all hours. Yet, your industry still insists on operating as if the country sleeps at 9 p.m. If you did not take someone to work at 10 p.m., why must you insist you should be the only one to bring them back home?

Santaco, your business is stuck in the past. It is a symbol of poverty, not progress. It does not grow, evolve, or innovate. Instead of attacking e-hailing services, you should be learning from them. You should be developing your own apps, your own 24-hour fleets, your own systems that treat commuters with dignity, safety, and respect.

Hands off e-hailing. Compete by innovating, not by intimidating. Compete by offering better service, not by clinging to old models that no longer serve South Africans.

The truth is painful, but it must be said: e-hailing thrives because of your failure. If you want to remain relevant in the future, you must transform your industry. Until then, you will remain not a proud black business, but a reminder of how refusing to evolve kills greatness.

Respectfully,
Noko Maleka
Insight Jozi News


“25 Years of Pain”: Why Are Apartheid Victims Still Begging for Justice in Democratic South Africa

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