Blessed Geza recently pointed fingers at top people from government, business, and churches for stealing money meant for Zimbabwe. He spoke on March 26 about how these powerful players grabbed state cash, cheated on contracts, and ran money scams. Geza believes their greed caused the hard times most citizens face today. He claims they blocked regular people from making a living just to fill their pockets through shady deals.
The war veteran named 35 specific individuals he holds responsible for hurting Zimbabwe's economy. Business leaders Kudakwashe Tagwirei, Wicknell Chivayo, and Pedzai Scott Sakupwanya made his list for allegedly bribing their way into government deals and becoming rich off public funds. Finance boss Mthuli Ncube and bank chief John Mangudya earned blame for running the economy into the ground. Geza also accused several officials of changing political sides just to protect their wealth.
War heroes received special attention in his speech. Geza expressed anger about how fighters who freed Zimbabwe from colonial rule live in poverty today. He called it shameful that those who risked everything for independence struggle to eat, yet corrupt insiders pile up money and property. The veteran described this as turning away from everything the liberation struggle stood for and promised to fix this wrong.
According to Geza, March 31 is an important date. He demanded that police arrest all 35 accused people by then. If nothing happens, he called for citizens to join together and handle justice themselves. Geza framed this fight as a patriotic duty for all Zimbabweans who care about their country. The speech ended with claims that actions against these corrupt figures have already started. He promised these powerful thieves would face consequences very soon and told regular citizens to prepare for major changes.
The war veteran named 35 specific individuals he holds responsible for hurting Zimbabwe's economy. Business leaders Kudakwashe Tagwirei, Wicknell Chivayo, and Pedzai Scott Sakupwanya made his list for allegedly bribing their way into government deals and becoming rich off public funds. Finance boss Mthuli Ncube and bank chief John Mangudya earned blame for running the economy into the ground. Geza also accused several officials of changing political sides just to protect their wealth.
War heroes received special attention in his speech. Geza expressed anger about how fighters who freed Zimbabwe from colonial rule live in poverty today. He called it shameful that those who risked everything for independence struggle to eat, yet corrupt insiders pile up money and property. The veteran described this as turning away from everything the liberation struggle stood for and promised to fix this wrong.
According to Geza, March 31 is an important date. He demanded that police arrest all 35 accused people by then. If nothing happens, he called for citizens to join together and handle justice themselves. Geza framed this fight as a patriotic duty for all Zimbabweans who care about their country. The speech ended with claims that actions against these corrupt figures have already started. He promised these powerful thieves would face consequences very soon and told regular citizens to prepare for major changes.