Blessed Runesu Geza thinks 16 million Zimbabwe people should not have to deal with bad guys around President Mnangagwa. He made another video yesterday asking everyone to help kick Mnangagwa out of office next Monday. He wants people from every corner of the country to fill up the streets that day, demanding change.
The police want to catch Geza because they say he tries to start fights with his words. For his YouTube message, he hid somewhere wearing army clothes. He talked about two groups of people doing wrong things—those close to the president and others he called political bad guys.
He named several rich businessmen, including Chivayo, Tagwirei, Sakupwanya, and the president's wife. He told viewers they would need phone data to see what happens next to these few powerful people who are making life hard for millions. Geza mentioned how sad things became when citizens said they liked British rule better than current leaders.
Geza plans to pursue Mnangagwa on March 31 but says his team has already started hunting down the other accused people. He believes these rich folks will eventually beg Mnangagwa to step down because they hurt themselves. As a war veteran, Geza apologized for backing ZANU PF all these years and disappointing regular citizens.
He asked other groups against the government to join his movement, though many doubted whether he actually believed in democracy. At a big party meeting yesterday in Harare, Mnangagwa claimed he has plenty of loyal citizens ready to stop anyone trying to mess up peace in Zimbabwe.
The police want to catch Geza because they say he tries to start fights with his words. For his YouTube message, he hid somewhere wearing army clothes. He talked about two groups of people doing wrong things—those close to the president and others he called political bad guys.
He named several rich businessmen, including Chivayo, Tagwirei, Sakupwanya, and the president's wife. He told viewers they would need phone data to see what happens next to these few powerful people who are making life hard for millions. Geza mentioned how sad things became when citizens said they liked British rule better than current leaders.
Geza plans to pursue Mnangagwa on March 31 but says his team has already started hunting down the other accused people. He believes these rich folks will eventually beg Mnangagwa to step down because they hurt themselves. As a war veteran, Geza apologized for backing ZANU PF all these years and disappointing regular citizens.
He asked other groups against the government to join his movement, though many doubted whether he actually believed in democracy. At a big party meeting yesterday in Harare, Mnangagwa claimed he has plenty of loyal citizens ready to stop anyone trying to mess up peace in Zimbabwe.