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Mugabe's legacy in the light
of eternity. We read in Hebrews 9 verse 27,
it is appointed for men to die once, but after this, the judgment. To some, the doctrine of eternal
judgment is a great comfort, especially for the persecuted
church. because we may not receive justice on earth, but we do receive
justice in eternity. But to others it's a terrifying
concept, as it should be. It is a fearful thing to fall
in the hands of the living God. The world was informed that the
longest ruling dictator in Africa, Marxist terrorist Robert Mugabe,
died in a hospital in Singapore. Now how various people reacted
to this news speaks volumes. D.A. leader Mimussi Maimani sent
his condolences to the family of former President, capital
P, President Robert Mugabe. Is the D.A. democratic? I mean,
did they think he got elected? May his soul rest in peace, said
Mimussi Maimani. Mimussi Maimani claims to be
a Christian, he even claims to be a pastor, and a democrat,
yet he called the brutal dictator president and assumed that his
soul will rest in peace. Now, D.A. Musimani also described
Mugabe as a liberator. Now, you wonder where Mayimani
has been since 1980. Has he not noticed the tragic destruction
of our neighboring Zimbabwe under the despotic tyranny of Zanu
and Mugabe? I mean, just look at what these
people are saying here. Mugabe starving his own people.
Mugabe's a liar. We want jobs in Zimbabwe and
so on. And Mugabe's a liar, just in
case you missed the first one. He's called a liberator, but
the Zimbabwe National Army is not exactly liberating anyone.
The eulogies from leaders praising Robert Mugabe are in sharp contrast
to the celebrations in Zimbabwe over the demise of the Marxist
dictator who promised them paradise and who delivered perdition.
David Coulthard made an interesting observation on a BBC radio program
where they asked his reaction. He says, well, all the praises
for Mugabe are bound to be coming from outside Zimbabwe, but not
much from inside unless the people are members of the Zani ruling
party. 2 Peter 2 verse 19 could be written over many dictators,
especially Mugabe. While they promise them liberty,
they themselves are slaves of corruption. For by whom a person
is overcome, by him also he is brought into bondage. The fake
leaders and the fake news reports speak of a guerrilla leader,
a hero, who liberated his people from colonialism, who instituted
land reform. These are the buzzwords, these
are the mantras that you're hearing over and over. Audacious, outrageous,
deception and dishonesty are pervasive. The lamestream media,
they call themselves the mainstream but they are the lamestream media,
have again distressed themselves as the purveyors of fake news
and Marxist propaganda. How can you take the Bolshevik
Broadcasting Corporation, Slime Magazine, the Clinton News Network,
Newspeak and Useless News and World Report seriously when they
keep coming out with mindless Marxist propaganda like this?
EFF leader Julius Malema, not surprisingly, called Mugabe a
hero, a liberator, and a perfect human being. President Emerson
Mnangagwa praised Mugabe as an icon of liberation. Wait a minute,
isn't that the same Mnangagwa who overthrew him and replaced
him in a coup? If he is so great, why did they replace him? It
is with the utmost sadness that I announce the passing on of
Zimbabwe's founding father and former president, Comrade Robert
Mugabe. I think the only true word in
that entire statement from Manangagwa is comrade. Mugabe was a comrade.
And so said the new dictator who seized power from his previous
leader in the 2017 coup. How's that for hypocrisy? By the way, you see this ivory
on each side of his throne? Incredibly, Mnangagwa described
the deceased dictator as a national hero. Comrade Mugabe was an icon
of liberation, a pan-Africanist who dedicated his life to the
emancipation and empowerment of his people. His contribution
to the history of our nation and continent will never be forgotten.
That's probably true. May his soul rest in eternal
peace. What? Wait a minute, you've got a communist
asking for another communist soul to rest in eternal peace?
Calling Mugabe a great teacher and mentor and a remarkable statesman
of our century, Malangagwa instituted an official period of mourning,
which is quite extraordinary considering there was national
celebration when he was removed from power. Riddled with so many
lies and hypocrisies, this is worthy of study to refute every
single phrase. Facts can really ruin a good
story. Marxists do not believe a man has a soul. Nor do they
believe in eternal peace. They believe in economic determinism,
materialism. If you can't see it and touch
it, it doesn't exist. They don't believe in a soul. Mugabe's actual
contribution was tyranny, brutality, cruelty, massacres, starvation,
corruption, hyperinflation, systematic destruction of a once safe, stable,
productive country that used to be self-sufficient, even exporting
food. during a war, during droughts,
during famines, with international sanctions, and they were still
exporting food. Mugabe turned this breadbasket
to a disastrous basket case. A basket state, beggar nation,
dependent on foreign aid and charity to even survive. In what
sense did he empower and serve and emancipate his people? This
is what land reform looks like in Zimbabwe. Yep, nothing working
or growing. At independence, so-called, in
1980, Mozambique's Samora Michel and Tanzania's Julius Nyerere
actually warned Robert Mugabe, don't make the same mistakes
we made. They urged him, respect property rights and let the Europeans
continue to contribute to the economy. Incredible, I didn't
think that Nyerere had learned a thing, and I certainly didn't
think Michel had, so their advice is quite extraordinary. Interestingly
enough, It was Thabo Mbeki at the memorial service they held,
was it just yesterday, in Durban for Mugabe. Thabo Mbeki praised
Mugabe endlessly, including for the fact that he delayed his
land reform, so-called policies, for over 10 years until we had,
because he was going to institute in 1990, and the ANC and Nigerians
and others persuaded Mugabe to hold off another 10 years until
the transfer of powers secured in South Africa and they've consolidated
the revolution because otherwise the Boers would never trust them
with the country. So Mugabe self-sacrificed and he held back the second phase
of the revolution for more than 10 years and he's awfully grateful. Now I've heard Mbeki say this
before, 20 years ago actually, and at the time we drew people's
attention to it about the deception operation, how all these communists
really work together. In Zimbabwe, the second phase
of the revolution was launched approximately 20 years after
the signing of the Lancaster House Agreement, which led to
the transfer of power and the guarantees, internationally guaranteed,
guarantees of private ownership property being respected, the
rule of law, separation of powers, legal safeguards, entrenched,
with the United States of America, Great Britain, Organization of
Community, the UN, and a whole bunch of others guaranteeing
the Lancaster House Agreement that this will be observed. Despite
massive foreign aid from Britain, America and the EU, Mugabe's
ZANU government failed to provide the vast amount of land at their
disposal to be productively farmed. The vast majority of land in
Zimbabwe has always been owned by the government and they didn't
allocate the land in their power to the people who wanted land.
The issue wasn't land reform, the issue was looting the farms
that were productive and destroying them. In order to distract their
citizens from the gross failure of government, they blamed the
economic woes of the country on the white farmers and unleashed
a wave of violent farm invasions, which led to the total collapse
of Zimbabwe's economy and the worst hyperinflation ever seen
in history. $1,072,418,003 million only. Who's got a calculator
that can handle this? It became difficult to measure
Zimbabwe's hyperinflation because the government of Zimbabwe stopped
filing official inflation statistics. However, by November 2008, inflation
was estimated at 79.6 billion percent. I mean, how can you
even calculate that? One brick in 2008 cost more than
every house, business, farm, and property in all of Zimbabwe
in 1980 at so-called independence. Even after deleting 16 zeros
from the currency, a $100 trillion note in 2008 could not even buy
half a loaf of bread. And so you had these sort of
so-called checks and reserve bank going from 10, 20, 50, $100
trillion, but this couldn't buy you half a loaf of bread, not
even a quarter of a loaf of bread. is worth nothing. And that's
after having dropped 16 zeros off the currency. That's right. Yeah, so there
were actually coupons instead of even notes. So you could be
a starving billionaire in Zimbabwe. In fact, every billionaire would
be starving because a billion is nothing. And in fact, this
is worth a lot more than that. And that's worth a lot more than
that too. By 2009, Zimbabwe abandoned their
own currency. What a disgrace for any country.
They don't even want their own money back. and they began demanding
that you paid, at the border post to anyone else, with US
dollars, Salaf Khan Rand and Botswana Pula. What government
doesn't want their own currency? That's a real vote of no confidence.
And when Paul wrote about filthy lucre, this is probably not what
he's thinking about, but this is filthy lucre. The dollar notes
were just passed around and around and around, you don't know how
much disease was on it. Because this was the only currency they
had. that nobody wanted their own currency. In fact, we've
seen signs in the toilets in Zimbabwe not to use Zim Dollars
in the toilet. And the poor people queuing to
get, how much can you get a day? $20 maybe? How are you meant
to run a business? How are you meant to do anything
with that kind of restriction? The national suicide of Zimbabwe
under Mugabe's dictatorship led to more than half of the total
population fleeing the country. Unemployment rocketed to over
90% of those left behind the country. It reached 95%. So when
more than half the population vote to defeat, if you're not
allowed to really vote in the elections, The only vote they
had left was voting with their feet, in other words, fleeing
the country. That's a real vote of no confidence in Mugabe, Zane,
Piaf-ruled failed state. They fled the endemic corruption,
the brutality in Zimbabwe to neighboring countries. There
are more Zimbabweans outside the country than there are in
the country now. Mugabe was never dedicated to emancipating and
empowering the people of Zimbabwe. What kind of liar could say that
his heritage is that he sought to empower and emancipate the
people of Zimbabwe. Mugabe must be one of the most
corrupt, self-serving, and selfish leaders in history, and certainly
one of the greatest failures in all of history. By the way,
this is Mugabe's kaya, just one of his little kayas out there.
Kaya is a word in Ndebele for home, and he is obviously a comrade. And like all good communist comrades,
they believe that they must live more like Roman emperors, while
the rest of the people live in hovels. So this is what it means
to be a communist. You loot the country, and this
looks just slightly on the extravagant side. Jacuzzi, yeah, and telephones
and so on. Yeah, I mean, a lot of TVs all
over the place. And of course, your swimming
pool. and he lived in such opulent decadence feasting on giraffe
meat, lion meat and elephant meat while his destitute people
starved. Mugabe enslaved and he disempowered
the people of Zimbabwe that the people were left eating rats.
Destitute, living in squalor, destroyed, no future, no food. no farmers, and foreign aid,
about the only hope for their people. And some bleeding heart,
do-gooder, liberal, Peace Corps worker from America comes to
feed them. Where's the dignity and empowering in that? This
is what Mugabe did for his people. and it's absolutely reprehensible
that people can praise such a one as that. Yet ANC president Syl
Rampoza described the despot as a champion of Africa's cause
against colonialism, who inspired our own struggle against apartheid.
Well, first of all, there never was apartheid in Rhodesia, but
Mugabe never fought against colonialism because Rhodesia was not a colony.
In fact, Rhodesia was never a colony. Rhodesia was a self-governing
country from 1923. In fact, from 1890, it paid for
its own way always. The British South Africa Company
and the British South Africa Police provided everything, their own
defense. Britain didn't provide a soldier, a pound, a penny to
the building up of Rhodesia. Rhodesia was self-governing from
1923, independent from 1965, a republic from 1970. The people
who fought against colonialism were people like Ian Smith, who
broke the ties with Britain. Rhodesia wasn't a colony. And
from the very beginning, it provided its own security. It was self-supporting,
never need British funding, never needed British troops. It never
needed any foreign aid, even when being sanctioned and attacked
by terrorists funded and supported by the Soviet Union and Red China.
They built it up with ox wagons. In just a few years they built
magnificent cities, tough, hard-working people. This is Bulawero, just
six years after the religions moved in here. This is what they
built up with ox wagons. Without any British aid, they
built the Victoria Falls Bridge. Extraordinary achievements. The
British South Africa Police, one of the most efficient, non-corrupt
police forces ever seen in Africa. An independent republic, not
a colony. Mugabe was never a liberator
either. He never liberated anyone. Mugabe
waged a brutal terrorist war against black civilians, against
white farmers, against Christian missionaries, and against Red
Cross hospital and ambulance workers. Mugabe never liberated
anyone. I defy anyone to tell me one
single individual that ever got liberated by Mugabe. Mugabe was
a Marxist terrorist, a dictator, and a corrupt blood-diamond criminal.
Missionaries and nuns of a Catholic church murdered on the road.
Red Cross ambulance workers machine-gunned by Zanupiev. The testimony of
13 Elam missionaries, well nine missionaries and four of their
children, 13 people all from Britain, pacifist Pentecostal
British missionaries, the Elam mission station, murdered on
order of Robert Mugabe. Why? Because they were so nice.
They helped everyone. They didn't have guards, they
didn't have dogs, they didn't have They didn't have fences. They had nothing. They were on
the border of Mozambique. Any terrorist that came past,
they gave them medicine, food, whatever they wanted. They were
generous. They were so... Mugabe specifically
ordered these people murdered because they undermined the work
of the commissar who was telling everyone that the missionaries
are there to enslave the people. And everyone said, no, but look at
these Elam missionaries in Britain. You know, they are our friends.
And so they all got murdered right down to the baby who got
thrown up and down on a bayonet. Black Christians in Zimbabwe
were herded into churches and burned down on top of them by
Order of Mugabe. Pastors, headmen, chiefs, shot,
tortured. This man had his ears and lips
cut off by Order of Robert Mugabe because he didn't listen to commissar
and he spoke against the communists. This woman had her lips cut off
and was forced to cook and eat her own lips because she had
spoken against the communists. This is the liberator, the guerrilla
hero, icon of liberation, war hero, who dedicates his life
to empowering and emancipating the people of Zimbabwe according
to people like Saul Romposa. Unbelievable. And it didn't stop
when he was in power. He had tens of thousands of Maddabili
Christians murdered with their hands tied behind their back
in Maddabili land. This man, bayoneted in the back
by the Chinese pigsticker fold-out bayonet that you get especially
with the SKS rifles. Something like 18 or so bayonet
wounds in his back. One wasn't enough. William Spring
documented the Longfields just in the first few years of independence
on the killing fields of Madibi land under Mugabe's Gokurahundi
North Korean trained 5th Brigade. Then there's blood diamonds.
You all should know about blood diamonds. There's a film on it and there's
a lot of interest on blood diamonds and you normally think Liberia
and Sierra Leone. Blood stones because you know
nothing says I love you more than a blood diamond. People
have their hands and arms cut off by these thugs making the
people. People like Charles Taylor who
by the way was an American. Now Charles Taylor, who was tried
for war crimes at The Hague, International Court of Justice
and so on, for his blood diamond regime that he is running in
Liberia. You might be interested to know that the Americans started
Liberia to resettle freed slaves from America. And that's why
they've actually got the capital as Monrovia, named after the
American president at the time, Monroe. who gave the Monroe Doctrine. Well, what most people don't
know is that the American Negroes who moved back there were never
more than 10% of the population, and they exploited, colonized,
oppressed, massacred the indigenous black people, treated them like
slaves. In fact, according to the Constitution, you couldn't
even vote unless you were a Negro of American descent. A
black African didn't have any rights in Liberia to get elected
or to be president or, for that matter, member of parliament
or whatever it was. And Charles Taylor ran this place like he
was a Bronx gangster. And Charles Taylor did a lot
of atrocities with these sort of criminals and thugs. Well,
interestingly enough, he got arrested. And he got taken to
The Hague for trial. And here he is, dressed like
a businessman here. And in this trial, lo and behold,
who should turn up to testify against him? But, Naomi Campbell. Is that the correct name? Naomi
Campbell. She's apparently a very famous
model. At any rate, she said she was a guest of Nelson Mandela
in Cape Town at Kritiskeer. That's the Prime Minister's residence
built by Cecil Rhodes. And she was a guest of Nelson
Mandela who also had Charles Taylor there. This is while Charles
Taylor was dictator and Liberian, was chopping off people's hands
and arms and so on for propagating his blood diamonds. You know,
you've got to do what he wants, produce the diamonds or we chop
off hands and limbs and things like that. And she was given,
for whatever reason, a handful of uncut diamonds, doubtless
blood diamonds, by Charles Taylor. A full handful. She didn't know
what to do with it, wasn't sure what would happen if she turned
up at the airport. What would they do? And he drove to find
them. So she gave all of these diamonds to Nelson Mandela and
said this is a donation to the Nelson Mandela Children's Fund.
Now, she's testifying this at the International Court of Justice
in The Hague, which is very interesting because when journalists did
an investigation they found there's no evidence in the books or receipts
or anything like that of the Nelson Mandela Children's Fund
of a donation of diamonds or any financial equivalent from
Nelson Mandela. So what did Nelson Mandela do with this handful
of blood diamonds from Naomi Campbell, who got them direct
from Charles Taylor, the Blood Diamond King, this American gangster
who is running Liberia as his own personal little concentration
camp. Now, if this had happened to
Donald Trump, for example, do you think that might be a scandal? But somehow or another Mandela
could just let Millions in diamonds disappear and not helped children's
fund. And you sort of wonder what the
story was. Anyway, that's Naomi Taylor's testimony before the
International Court of Justice. I would not know anything more
than what was reported there. Do you know where your diamonds
came from? Well, Mugabe has ended up in the last decade and a half
of being the biggest blood diamond king in the world. Meringue diamond
fields. He personally benefited over
15 billion dollars, that's US dollars, from blood diamonds.
Now, he did probably use some of them to buy Chinese tanks,
Chinese jet aircraft. China, after all, is interested
in raping Africa with everything it's got. And so, at the moment,
of course, we know diamonds come from the DRC, from Botswana in
South Africa, a little bit in Ghana and Angola, Namibia, but
Zimbabwe is not even on the map in this particular map because
this is before 2008. 2008 Zimbabwe discovers blood
diamonds and so the whole trade of blood diamonds you can see
here how Guinea, Mali, Sierra Leone, Liberia all wrapped up
in it as well and so on. Well, Zimbabwe's blood diamonds
have never been banned by the Kimberley process, because according
to the Kimberley process, a blood diamond is something produced
by a terrorist or guerrilla group. But if it's by government, even
if that is a terrorist government, it's a government representing
the UN, it's not a blood diamond. So the one quarter of all the
world's diamonds at the moment are coming from Zimbabwe. Since
2008, the merengue diamond fields are that big. rich diamond field. Gee, if only Cecil Rhodes had
known how right he was that there would be diamonds up in Rhodesia,
and he was right, they just didn't find them until 2008. And Kimberley
Process refuses to certify, refuses to ban Zimbabwe's blood diamonds
because they certify them as conflict-free because the people
doing the chopping off of hands and machine gunning of the people
and so on are a legitimate government, according to the UN. And so Zimbabwe's
blood diamond fields, Morang, which is just south of Matori,
is the richest diamond fields in the world at this moment,
since 2008. But do you think any of that revenue has ended
up in the Zimbabwe General Treasury coffers to help the people suffering
in Zimbabwe, living the lowest life expectancy on the planet,
according to World Health Organization? Nope, not at all. So the Morang
diamond fields is a place of real horror. When they first
were discovered, in came the local people prospecting. They
quickly got their hands cut off. They got arrested. They got machine
gunned. Helicopter gunships came in,
shot them up. In came the Zimbabwe presidential
guard and they either killed or enslaved them. And these people
then had to work for the Zimbabwe government. In fact, it wasn't
Zimbabwe government, it was the Zimbabwe presidential guard who
ran the whole show. And these people are effectively
slaves for the blood diamonds of Mugabe, and if any of them
found to hide any of them or keep it to themselves, they'll
chop off their hands. And these are some of the pictures smuggled
out of the meringue diamond fields in Zimbabwe. And this is hideous. The amount of people who died
there, these are makeshift graves there. This is one of the great
human rights scandals of our time. And yet, do the media care
about this? No, they're worried about something
that ended 200 years ago. That's slave trade. Don't worry
about the slave trade going on today. And Mugabe is the one
working this whole system. So these are some of the blood
diamonds coming in. A person working the mine will
get about $20 for that. That's the Zimbabwe dollars,
which isn't worth much. And of course, out of it, you
can get tanfuls. And that's a lot of money right
there. Ian Smiley has documented blood on the stone, greed, corruption,
and war in the global diamond trade. Devastating work exposing
the whole blood diamond trade. And Merang Diamond Fields is
one of the biggest producers in the world today, and it goes
to Lebanon, to Dubai, and India, where they do the cutting. Of
course, De Beers mine, diamonds would go to Amsterdam and Netherlands
and be cut there. So here you've got the sudden
riches where they said Robert Mugabe has got 15 billion dollars
from this, not that he's benefited people. Now how dare someone
like Sylvain Rampoza say he is dedicated to empowering and emancipating
the people of Zimbabwe, serve the people of Zimbabwe, liberate
the people of Zimbabwe. That's a total lie. Mugabe now,
well, before he died, owned the Zimbabwe Consolidated Diamond
Company, which allowed Red China to strip the country of its natural
assets. Red Chinese aircraft would fly straight out. Antonov-126
is the biggest aircraft on the planet. These massive planes
would come into Maring diamond fields where they built, the
Chinese built an airstrip. Without customs, without going through
Harare, just fly straight to China with diamonds. Now, Mugabe
obviously got things out of it, but the government of Zimbabwe
had no say in what China was doing. Of course, they gave them
tanks and jet aircraft and so on, but basically China's allowed
to rape Zimbabwe and doubtless Mugabe and Zanu-PF top people
get paid all for it. Harry Truman said, you cannot
get rich in politics unless you're a crook. How can anybody like
Ramaphosa be a billionaire in politics? How can anybody like
Mugabe be a billionaire when he's got the poorest country
on the planet? Mobutu Sese Seku was once being interviewed by
a journalist who said, how is it possible that you're the fifth
richest person in the world and yet your country is the sixth
poorest country in the world? And he said, I'm the fourth richest
person in the world. Which was the man's point, actually. How can you get rich in politics
unless you're a crook? Now, having said that, when Harry
Truman, not my favorite politician at all, I don't like him one
little bit for many reasons, including that he dropped the
atom bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki and that he fired a great war
hero like General Douglas MacArthur. Nevertheless, this quote is a
good quote. finished his term of office as
President of America, he walked to the station in Washington,
D.C., got on a train, and took the train back home. No bodyguards,
no entourage. That was it. Ian Smith cycled
to work. I met Ian Smith many a times.
Over 20 years, I saw him several times a year, at least once a
year for 20 years for lunches, suppers, teas, and radio interviews
and so on. And he never had a bodyguard.
He never had an entourage. He never had a special car. He didn't have any security.
His home didn't even have security. Front gates were wide open. Whether
you're talking about his home in Harare, his farm, or staying
with his daughter down in Hout Bay. no security whatsoever,
a man who lived fearlessly and while he was prime minister he
was still a farmer and he lived a humble life and never owned
much at all. But these poor people are the
ones who meant to have been emancipated and enriched and empowered by
Robert Mugabe. Police investigate the theft
of 15 billion, leave us alone. What do you think they might
be talking about here on the streets? People in Zimbabwe know
exactly what Mugabe was. His communist corruption certainly
inspired the ANC struggle. Rumpo said that he's an inspiration
to the ANC. Well, I'm sure he is an inspiration
for the ANC state capture, gangster state looting of a country. through
and through, looting like the country is a trough for them.
Mugabe's tactics of distracting attention from his government's
failures and atrocities by making scapegoats of the small white
minority has also doubtless inspired the ANC and their tactics. By
promising free land, this also has inspired the disastrous ANC
policy of expropriation without compensation, EWC. But the Western
media, like Associated Press, have insulted the intelligence
of the readers and viewers with misleading reports. This is how
the Zimbabwe government treats their people. And you meant to
think that Mugabe is a liberator. Former Zimbabwean leader, this
is an AP report, former Zimbabwean leader Robert Mugabe, an ex-guerrilla
chief who took power when the African country shook off white
minority rule and presided for decades while economic turmoil
and human rights violations eroded its early promise, has died in
Singapore. Now what a deceptive piece of
disinformation and garbage. AP writers Farah Mutsaka and
Christophe Torachika claimed Mugabe enjoyed strong support
from Zimbabwe's people. Well, I'm sure when you're being
beaten by the local police like this, you're going to do whatever
they ask you to do. How can any journalist be so
ill-informed, so dishonest, as to lie so blatantly? No, Mugabe
did not enjoy popular support. Millions of Zimbabweans celebrate
his fall from power. Did anyone here notice what Thabo
Mbeki, who just came out of his silence for this Mugabe fest
in Durban, in Durban City Hall. Thabo Mbeki stated, it's not
true that the people opposed Mugabe. Not one person supported
his removal from power. Not one person in Zimbabwe supported
Mugabe's fall from power. Well, this is the Daily News,
the only independent newspaper in Zimbabwe at the time when
it was blown up while the police stood by laughing. Are these people supporting Mugabe? Or are they against Mugabe? Mugabe,
shame on you. Are these supporters? Mugabe
must go. Not one single person wanted
Mugabe to be removed from power. Here's a woman about to get beaten
senseless by the police on her knees. And yep, no, she doubtless
supports Mugabe too. Mugabe must go now. Now they
don't really mean this. They're actually supporting Mugabe,
we presume. Mugabe must go. Under fire, Mugabe
cornered. The people of Zimbabwe want Mugabe
to go. Not one single person in Zimbabwe wanted Mugabe to
be removed from power. Mugabe out. And these are people demonstrating
for Mugabe to leave. Not one single person in Zimbabwe
wanted Mugabe to leave, said Thabo Mbeki. How can one take
a man like Thabo Mbeki seriously? He takes himself seriously. Arrogant
Mugabe disregards Zanepiath. Zanepiath acts false on Grace
Guy and Zanepinpin and all this. These are people dancing outside
the Palms of Zimbabwe when they heard that Mugabe had been removed
from power. And thank you Jesus. And you
know the memes that came out because of Mugabe falling and
so next thing you've got some photoshops showing now the police
chasing him out and a hippo chasing him out. I think these are all
wishful thinking photoshops. This is definitely fake photos.
But it shows you where people were thinking. Thank you ZDF,
yours truly Zimbabwe, that's because they'd removed Mugabe
from power. Rob Mugabe names for streets, names for garbage
cans. People were celebrating for days
and nights over the removal of Mugabe from power. Now another
point of fact, Mugabe was never a guerrilla, let alone a guerrilla
leader. Mugabe had the popular Zanler guerrilla leader Josiah
Tongariro murdered on the 26th of December 1979, so that he,
Mugabe, could lead Zanu. Mugabe's a politician, he's never
a soldier, he wasn't even a guerrilla or insurgent. I don't think he
even knew how to handle a firearm. In fact, as Ian Smith said, he's
never heard a shot fired in anger. I mean, Robert Mugabe is a nothing
nobody, he was just a politico. Robert Mugabe had the very popular
Josiah Magama Tongagara, the commander of the Zanla guerrilla
army, assassinated 26 December 1979. Just like Samora Michelle
had the founder of Filimo, the very popular Eduardo Manlani,
assassinated so that he could come to power. Just like Stalin
had Leon Trotsky axed, literally. Many had expected Tonga Gara
to be the first president of Zimbabwe with Robert Mugabe,
the head of Zana's political wing, as maybe his prime minister.
But the strategic removal of Tonga Gara left the path to the
presidency open for Mugabe. Just like, and this isn't my
theory, this is what Winnie Mandela, to a dying day, and General Barnett
to this day maintain, that the assassination of Chris Harney
in South Africa, the very popular, charismatic, well-spoken head
of the Southern Communist Party, that he was assassinated as an
inside job by the ANC, which was just blamed on this Polish
chap who was either patsy or maybe wasn't even involved, but
It was an inside job and in fact I think that Bhante Olamis and
Winnie Mandela could be right in this because without Chris
Harney being removed, Thabo Mbeki and Jacob Zuma wouldn't have
a snowball's chance in hell of seeing the presidency, because
Chris Harney was vastly more popular, vastly better spoken
and more charismatic leader than Mandela or any of the others.
And so Mandela, as he was the icon in prison, who is going
to be the first president, he would have been the first president,
but Chris Harney would have been the vice president, and then
he would have been the successor in 1999. But because he is removed,
door was opened for this absolutely bland, boring, mindless, drone
type Mbeki to become present. And, of course, this weird character,
Jacob Zuma. But Chris Harney would have been
it, just like Tonga Gara would have been it, just like Trotsky
was actually the natural leader to follow Lenin, but Stalin,
who came from nowhere, ex-bank robber, managed to remove him
and seize the power. This is just like 1984, just
like Animal Farm, George Orwell. A snowball is the one who does
the revolution, but Napoleon comes and has him chased out
by the dogs representing the KGB and killed, so that he, who
had nothing to do with the actual revolution, can now take over.
And he rewrites history that he's the hero of the revolution.
So don't forget Josiah Tongagora was murdered by Mugabe. Who killed
Josiah Tongagora? 30 years of independence, 30
years of killing our people. Who killed Josiah Tongagora? Mugabe, keeping Zimbabweans tired
since 1980. Now this is the sort of protest
you see in Zimbabwe. This is, in a dictatorship, that's
pretty courageous to put up that kind of protest. Nor did Mugabe
take power. He didn't take power. You think
you're storming a the Parliament or something. No, he didn't take
pouches handed to him on a plate by British Governor Lord Soames,
son-in-law of Winston Churchill. After a very flawed so-called
election, we all agreed that in terms of the Lancaster House
Agreement, Mugabe Zani should have been disqualified for the
systematic intimidation, or should we call it terrorism, which is
the correct word, of the voters and the flagrant violations of
the court and electoral code of conduct. Robert Mugabe will
be remembered as the Marxist who was propelled into power
by Jimmy Carter's State Department and the British Foreign Office
in violation of the Lancaster House Agreement of 1979. All these people from Lord Carrington,
who was proven later to be a KGB agent of influence, who was at
that stage British Foreign Office, secretary and signed by Bishop
Muzarewa who was the Prime Minister of Redis at that time, Robert
Mugabe, Joshua Nkomo and so on. So this was a sworn agreement
and the British government guaranteeing this agreement. Lord Arthur Christopher
Soames, son-in-law of Winston Churchill, British-appointed
governor of Rhodesia during the transition period, was responsible
to ensure free and fair elections in accordance with Lancaster
House Agreement, which meant all military forces of all sides
confined to barracks. only British police and so on
there to supervise and this, that and the other, and everything
is going to be free and fair elections, no military activity
whatsoever. Well, Zon, a PF, was murdering
people by the hundreds during the electoral process. They had
tens of thousands of their guerrillas all over the place, they never
were confined to base, they should have been disqualified. Now of
course his father-in-law, Winston Churchill, helped betray 150
million Christians behind the Iron Curtain by the Yalta Agreement
to Joseph Stalin, the worst mass-murdering thug and dictator in the history
of the world. So his son-in-law at least was following in his
very questionable steps. But whilst Lord Soames acknowledged
that Mugabe's ZANU PF was engaged in widespread systematic violations
and terrorism intimidating the voters, he refused to dismiss
the obviously fraudulent votes in favor of Mugabe. Which meant
that it's like this. You're in the Olympics. You're
not allowed to take drugs, but one guy takes performance-hardening
drugs. You've got to stick to the track.
This chap runs across the track. And while he's about it, he's
tripping up other people. He's spiked other people's drinks.
He's shooting some of the people who he's competing against, trips
up others, but he gets to stand on the number one and gets the
gold medal. I mean, could that happen? Well,
it shouldn't, because that's exactly how Lord Soames ran the
elections there. The people who followed the rules
were the losers, and the one who broke all the rules was pronounced
the duly elected person. In blatant violation of the Lancaster
House Agreement, Soames handed over the government of Rhodesia
to Marxist mass-murdering thug and dictator Mugabe, who'd just
killed his own military commander, and his disqualified terrorist
movement with all the disastrous consequences. As Ian Smith declared,
we were never beaten by our enemies. We were betrayed by our friends.
The terrorists never beat the Rhodesian army in the field.
They didn't win a skirmish. Forget about a battle. In fact,
you know, we can celebrate victories. All they can celebrate is defeats.
They've got the Chomoyo Massacre, they've got the Sonoya Massacre,
they've all times that they got defeated by the religions but
they don't have a victory to celebrate because they didn't
have any victories. And here's Lord Soames, son-in-law of Winston
Churchill and Prince Charles handing over the jewel of Rhodesia
to this mass-murdering communist thug who's in the pay of the
Chinese at that very moment. Most importantly, Mugabe was
not an innocent victim of economic turmoil and human rights violations,
which undermined his rule. Mugabe was the prime human agent
responsible for the socialist policies which destroyed the
robust economy inherited from Rhodesia. Mugabe initiated the
communist revolution that violated human rights, including the Gukurahundi
massacres. Gukurahundi was the driving rain,
the storm, the rainstorm that washes away the filth. That's
what Gukurahundi means in Shona. Where tens of thousands of civilians
in Madibi land were murdered. The chaotic farm invasions, the
blood diamond wars in the Congo, Zimbabwe's own blood diamond
scans in the Morang diamond fields, southeast of Zimbabwe since 2008.
Mugabe mobilized his North Korean-trained 5th Brigade to conduct wholesale
massacres in Madibili land from 1983 to 1984. The term Gukurahundi,
the early rain which washes away the chaff or the filth before
the spring rains, Mugabe is from the majority Shona tribe and
the Madibili are from the minority tribe. The Madibili are descents
of the Zulus. In fact, Madibili is very close
to Zulu. Tens of thousands of Madibili
civilians were brutally massacred by Mugabe's Zano PF. 5th Brigade. Disused mineshafts like Antelope
Mine and Attica Mine were used for dumping many of the bodies
of murdered Muttabili down the mineshaft. These are some excavations
of mass graves later. Researchers such as Dr Stuart
Doran documented that Robert Mugabe ordered the Gokurahundi
killings to remove and suppress political opposition within Muttabili
land. This was in order to make possible
Mugabe's plans to impose a one-party state in 1985. Destructive forces
are at work in the city. Threats and lives never leave
its streets. The members of the 5th Brigade
were all ZANU-PF party members, drawn from the 3,500 ZANLA troops
at Tongagora assembly point, named after Josiah Tongagora,
the ZANLA commander who had been murdered by Mugabe. The agreement
between North Korea and Mugabe for the training of the 5th Brigade
was signed at this table and ceremony. Here's some of these
5th Brigade chaps showing some North Korean type of karate expertise
and breaking some unreinforced bricks. And here's the Gokurahundi
Brigade. And this Colonel Perrins Sherry. who is wearing British-provided
uniform, by the way, because the British military assistance
team was training this creep amongst others, too, while they
were getting ready for murdering all of Madibili. They were all
distinguished by red berets, not that they knew how to parachute.
The young men in Madibiland were all considered potential dissidents
and were summarily detained or executed. Most were shot in front
of their families or fellow villagers in public executions after being
forced to dig their own graves. Sometimes groups of all ages,
including women and children, were shot, like at Lupani on
the banks of the Sowelo River, when 62 were masked. We know
of this massacre because seven victims survived despite severe
gunshot wounds and identified the place later. On numerous
occasions, large numbers of people were herded into huts and burned
alive. This was done, for example, in Cholo Cholo. The 5th Brigade
would routinely round up hundreds of civilians, march into a central
place like a school, where they'd be forced to sing Shona songs
praising Zanu while they were being beaten with sticks and
whips. These gatherings usually ended up with public executions,
which could be the local chief, or someone chosen at random,
or the pastor. The Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace in Zimbabwe
produced a document breaking the sounds with 2,000 names of
known Marabele victims of the Gokurahundi. In February 1983,
the International Red Cross produced documentation of 1,200 Maribelis
that they knew of murdered in just that month alone. In 2005,
the International Association of Genocide Scholars estimated
the death toll on Maribel land at least at 20,000, that they
had names for. Mervyn Mackay, defense minister
in 1992, became the first Sarno official who acknowledged the
execution, torture of civilians by the 5th Brigade. In 1997,
the former defense minister, Enosh N. Kala, described his
involvement with the Gokurahundi as eternal hell, and he blamed
President Mugabe for orchestrating it. These are the presidential
guard, those yellow berets are their distinguishing mark. Even
Robert Mugabe, speaking at Joshua and Komo's memorial service,
2nd of July 2000, admitted that thousands had been killed during
the Gokurahundi campaign. The Bible says we to hate evil
and love good, and establish justice in the gate. Praising
a mass murdering thug and Marxist dictator doesn't establish justice. At Independence, so-called, in
1980, Mugabe declared to Newsweek, we are not going to make the
same mistakes as the rest of Black Africa has made. We're
going to learn from their mistakes. Yep, Mugabe actually said that.
It's hard to think of what he learned, except how to lie, steal,
cheat, and murder. What mistakes or crimes did Mugabe
fail to implement? Mugabe's true legacy of corruption,
brutality, starvation and disease. Starvation, disease, corruption,
brutality. These were the hallmarks of Mugabe's
Marxist Sonu in Zimbabwe. Hospitals ran out of medicine.
Shops ran out of food. Fuel stations ran out of petrol.
Banks ran out of money. Water failed to flow through
the pipes. Electricity power failures became the norm. As
they said to me in Zimbabwe, in South Africa, you have power
failures. In Zimbabwe, we sometimes get electricity. Tuberculosis,
HIV, cholera, and malaria spread like wildfire. Zimbabwe's cholera
epidemic reached 10 times, that's 1,000%, the African average,
according to the World Health Organization. Zimbabwean life
expectancy under Mugabe plummeted from 60 years, over 60 years
in 1980, to 37 years for men and 34 years for women by 2006,
the lowest in the world according to the World Health Organization.
Now bear in mind that the life expectancy in 1980 was, as we
were coming out of a war, a 15-year war, our life expectancy was
virtually double what it was under peace with foreign aid
later. Yet despite his disastrous track record, Mugabe was elected
President of the Southern African Development Community, SADC,
Chairman of the African Union, AU, and UN Goodwill Ambassador
for the World Health Organization. Who? How can you take any of
these organizations seriously? These are the same people who
elected Idi Amin as their chairman too, mind you. While he was massacring
people in Uganda. The intense suffering of the
people of Zimbabwe apparently didn't matter to the AU, the
UN, SADC or CNN or the BBC for that matter. They're hypocrites.
They claim to care for the people of Zimbabwe but they don't care
about the people in Zimbabwe. Now this all sounds like a bizarre
Monty Python comic satire. I mean look at this. This way
up. Honestly. They didn't even think
to remove the this way up cargo sticker. And aren't these the
same military who ousted him in a coup less than two years
ago? Isn't this pretty blatant hypocrisy? They're all putting on their
best and all those look like Western, British-style, Rhodesian-type
uniforms anyway. Don't they have their own? Whatever
happened to his hatred of colonialism? But he's wearing several rose
suits and he's got his army entirely with military traditions that
come from the religions. The lunatics are running the
asylum. If this was part of a scripted plot in a fiction book or film,
it would be dismissed as unbelievable. I mean, who would ever believe
such a bizarre script as this? I mean, even the way how they
are positioning themselves with the rifles down, the bayonets.
The same army that ousted the dictator in a coup are honoring
him being returned as cargo from Singapore. And again, the question
is, why was he in Singapore? Malangagwa. Glass coffins. The fact that Mugabe died in
a hospital in Singapore is most revealing. This tells you almost
everything you need to know about him. Mugabe and his destructive
socialist policies that so destroyed the once advanced excellent hospitals
built up by Rhodesia, he had to fly to a previous British
colony, Singapore, where free enterprise provides better health
care than any socialist state. Why did Mugabe not go to a Zimbabwe
hospital? I think we know the answer to
that. He had ruined them. Why didn't he go to a communist state?
or at least to an African hospital. Why did he come to a South African
hospital? He used to come to South African hospitals, but
then he was afraid there's so many Zimbabweans there, one of them would kill
him. So he's too afraid to come to a hospital in South Africa
because there might be a Zimbabwean working hospital who would kill
him. So why did he have to go to Singapore,
far away in Asia? Why didn't he go to North Korea
or China? No. He says he hates capitalism,
but he doesn't trust his health care to a socialist hospital.
What an indictment on the catastrophic communist failure of Mugabe and
Zani. Now, this is what someone else posted. Mugabe died in Glen
Eagles Hospital in Singapore. He had an executive suite there
for 150 days. The cost per night is 80,500
rand per night. And he stayed there 150 days.
So this pan-African, to quote Romposa, costs Zimbabweans 12
million rands. Because Zimbabwe had to pay for
it, even though he has 15 billion personal. Which is, kids are
now trying to divide up amongst themselves. It should be returned
to the people it was stolen from. But anyway, you ruin your own
state's healthcare but spend 12 million on your own. I mean,
how's that for selfishness? Yet, as they once praised Joseph
Stalin, Mao Tse-tung and Fidel Castro, the BBC gushed with ridiculous
praise for Mugabe how he broadened access to healthcare and education
for the black majority. Are there no genuine investigative
journalists left at the BBC? No wonder Friends in Britain
called the Bolshevik Broadcasting Corporation, or the Biased Broadcasting
Corporation. As anyone who's actually lived
in Zimbabwe could testify, Mugabe thugs loot hospitals, close hospitals,
burn schools, beat up teachers, kidnap and brutalize students,
and close schools. And the BBC wants to praise him
for having broadening access to healthcare and medicine for
the black majority? This is what the hospital grounds
looked like, not even grass to sit on. The healthcare and the educational
standards were vastly better for black people in Rhodesia
than it ever has been in Zimbabwe. Zimbabwe became a failed state
under Mugabe, lowering life expectancy to almost half that of Rhodesia,
and taking a country with the lowest unemployment in Africa,
under 4%, to the highest, 95% unemployment. And that was after
half the population fled the country. So Rhodesia, with total
economic sanctions and at war, had higher life expectancy, higher
standards, export food and so on, but now Mugabe had no war,
and with foreign aid, he couldn't keep it together. How disgusting
is that? You shall know the truth, and
the truth shall set you free. Hate evil, love good, and establish
justice in the gate. As these people say, Zimbabwe
is open for oppression, not for business. See, Manangagwa speaks
about Zimbabwe is open for business. Eh, not really. Mugabe blasphemously
boasted he had beaten Jesus Christ by rising from the dead more
times than Christ, who had only risen from dead once. Can you
imagine? This is because several, hope
springs eternal, an amount of people who had predicted that,
oh, Mugabe's died, Mugabe's died, and, you know, each time you
could say, not really. So that's why he is making a stupid boast
in 2013 that he'd beaten Christ, who'd only raised from dead once,
and I've been raised many times. Well, now he can explain himself
to the Creator directly. When justice is done, it brings
joy to the righteous, but terror to evildoers. It is a fearful
thing to fall in the hands of a living God. You'll recall when
Mugabe fell, Zimbabwe celebrated. And as I say today, as Mugabe
dies, the nation mourns. When Morgan Tsvangirai, the head
of the opposition, who had actually, as I said, Zimbabwe is the one
country in the world where the opposition got more votes than the government.
And he did. He won the 2008 election straight,
but he still was not allowed to take power even after he had
won the elections. When Morgan Tsvangirai died, the country
genuinely wept and mourned. I don't know how much mourning
there's been for Mugabe. I saw video of the stadium packed,
well, the stadium was meant to be packed out. The stadium was
mostly empty for the Mugabe coffin viewing and what have you. In
Zimbabwe's capital Rori, parliament was a scene of unprecedented
jubilation when the Speaker of the House read Robert Mugabe's
resignation letter. The house erupted in cheers and
singing and dancing and clapping and celebrations with members
of parliament leaping up and jumping on the chairs and tables,
flinging their arms high above their heads, shouting with joy
and exuberance. Does this look like the people were sad to see
Mugabe go? Does this look like they're really
mourning him now? The hypocrisy of the whole thing.
And then you have someone like Thabo Mbeki saying he enjoyed
unprecedented support amongst the people of Zimbabwe and not
one person wanted him removed from power. The atmosphere was
electric throughout the country as people by the hundreds of
thousands poured in the streets to cheer and shout and dance
and sing at the news. There's extraordinary scenes
of people dancing, car horns blaring, flags waving with jubilation,
singing in the streets. They have never seen such exuberation
like this. I mean, this was akin to South
Africa winning the World Cup rugby in 1995. Tuesday 21 November
will be remembered and celebrated for a very long time in Zimbabwe
as the day in which Zimbabwean dictator Robert Mugabe finally
gave in to decades of protest and pressure to force him to
give up his despotic rule. At that time he was 93 years
old. He died at 95. Mugabe was the oldest, longest-running
dictator still in power in the world. For 37 years, the people
of Zimbabwe were brutalized, terrorized and oppressed by his
Marxist ZANU-PF reign of terror. This is in what used to be Jamison
Avenue. This is now called Samora Michelle
Avenue. Boot on the neck. Police armed with AK-47s with
helmets whipping the people on the ground. Now earlier that
month at a ZANU-PF rally in Bulawero, the capital of Madibili, Mugabe
aggravated the Madibili people by speaking to them in Shona.
His wife, Grace McGarvey, often called Graceless or Gucci Grace,
because of her exorbitant, lavish lifestyle, was heckled by the
people chanting at her, you know nothing, and sing the Matabili
song, which translates to, we hate what you do. Grace responded
to the crowd, I don't care, I am powerful, even if I become vice
president. Is anything wrong with that?
The people contencing, we hate what you do, which is a popular
song, but they're obviously directing it at her. The visibly incensed
Robin Mugabe poured out his wrath on his vice-president, Emerson
Mnangagwa, the crocodile, publicly threatening to fire him. If I
made a mistake by appointing Mnangagwa, tell me. I'll drop
him as early as tomorrow. We're not afraid of anyone. We
can decide even here, Mugabe roared. Mugabe was openly booed
by many in the crowd of Marabele in Bulawera. And when Mugabe
followed this up by actually sacking his vice-president, Emerson
Mnangagwa, this provoked the Zimbabwe Defence Force to swing
into action. They weren't protecting the people of Zimbabwe. They
would protect themselves from getting Grace or Graceless Mugabe
as the next President. So on the 14th of November 2017,
armed personnel carriers rumbled into Harare. By the way, our
news reports on SATV said tanks were rumbling. Those are not
tanks. Those are armed personnel carriers. But it just shows you
how journalists don't even know the difference. The President
was taken to what the military called protective custody. The
ZDF secured the public broadcast to other strategic points, and
the commander said they're targeting criminals around Mugabe who are
committing crimes that are causing social and economic suffering
in the country to bring them to justice. Now, this is all
caused by the power struggle, and it marked the end of the
political ambitions of 52-year-old Grace Mugabe. It's the high-profile
firing of the vice-president Malin Ngagwa and the purging
of party loyalists who didn't support Grace and a desire to
become vice president and the next president was the final
straw. They weren't actually operating to help the local people.
Grace had also been involved in numbers of assaults, including
in August 2017, when she lashed a model with a plug in a hotel
in South Africa, causing severe damage and injury. But she is
allowed to escape justice, claiming diplomatic immunity, which she
actually didn't have. She wasn't an ambassador or anything
like that. And she was behind the dismissal of many party favorites
of Zaneh Piaf. Mugabe will be remembered for
having implemented the disastrous socialist policies, the land
invasions, the military adventurism in the Congo, which led to the
worst hyperinflation ever seen in history. This is the same
building, aflame and afterwards, that same farm. Ceausescu called
Dracula in Romania when he met with Mugabe. Land reform, this
is the face of land reform in Zimbabwe. This is the face of
his non-racial policies. the targeting of people just
because of their race. The destruction of savings, earnings,
and pensions was absolutely catastrophic, destroying lifetimes of savings
and earnings, making the pensioners absolutely destitute. Yet while
it destroyed the livelihood of most Zimbabweans, it made the
Zanu PF elite spectacularly wealthy. For I, the Lord, love justice.
I hate robbery. And yet we have got Christians,
like Sherrilyn Dudley of the ACDP, giving eulogies and praise
for Mugabe. And I've heard that even Kenneth
Meshie sent some condolences to the people of Zimbabwe, and
speaking as though Mugabe was somewhat a liberator, which is
unbelievable how Christians can do that. Do we not hate what
God hates? Mugabe meant to take country
which had been a breadbasket of Africa to a basket case. He
turned the paradise of Rhodesia into a hell of Zimbabwe. Rhodesia
really was a paradise, a nature paradise, tourist paradise, well-run,
efficient, fun country. Where else in the world could
you find a giraffe in your swimming pool? A man who was an ethical
leader, he didn't steal anything. He rode to work on a bicycle. He was not a man who was interested
in accumulating wealth. He was a very simple, straightforward
man, a farmer, a pilot. six years, fought in the Second
World War in the Royal Air Force, Royal Rhodesian Air Force. Rhodesia
turned the wilderness into a paradise. Mugabe got all this and he turned
a country which had flourished even under international sanctions
in the midst of a vicious war against Soviet and Red Chinese
back terrorists and he turned it into a failed state and that
even with massive international foreign aid. How do you do that?
And Britain is still spending two million pounds per week on
aid to Zimbabwe. One of the lies of Mugabe is
that his failures are because of sanctions, but it's not true.
He's never had sanctions put on Zimbabwe. Sanctions were placed
on Mugabe and some of his upper ZANU-PF echelon personally, not
in the country. In fact, foreign aid is poured
in from Britain and America and South Africa by the billions
into this country. So they've been getting foreign
aid. Forget about it. They never had sanctions like Rhodesia had.
But he's managed to run it off the road, off the bridge, upside
down, and the poor people have to carry things. This month's
special, no fuel. The whole economy is like this.
It's overloaded, chaotic, shambles. What did the people have in Zimbabwe
before candles? Electricity, exactly. What did
you use to drive before ox-drawn carts, cars? the new Toyota Corolla. Change is not necessarily progress.
The people have to be very innovative just to survive over there. How
do you get hot water? Where are our 2.2 million jobs
that were promised? Which of course, you know, politicians
make all kinds of promises. But under Mugabe, Zimbabwe collapsed
into economic chaos. People fleeing the country. With
the most obscene opulence and extravagant excesses, Zimbabwe
became one of the poorest countries in the world, while Mugabe became
one of the richest people in the world. Certainly the richest
person in Africa with a net personal wealth of more than 15 billion.
Now, tomorrow I'm going to be taking a guided tour of Rhodes'
cottage in Musenburg. Very humble little cottage. Interesting,
Cecil Rhodes was the richest person in Africa at the time.
And yet, he put his money into education to the extent that
Mugabe sorry, Mandela said, all the education he received, primary
school, secondary school, high school, university, all came
from Cecil Rhodes' fund, the Rhodes Trust. And it's an interesting
thing, not that I like Cecil Rhodes, I don't think he's a
good person, but he's a great person, and he left Cape Town
the wealthier, with Newlands Forest protected from development,
University of Cape Town, Runderbosch Common, Kirstenbosch Gardens,
for obscure states, all these things donated. He didn't build
an encandila and charge it to the local people. He didn't even
take a salary when he was Prime Minister. But these people, what
did Mugabe do to donate to the people of Zimbabwe? He stole
from the people of Zimbabwe. While he was dining on giraffe
meat and lion meat and elephant meat, his people living in absolute
destitute poverty. As far back as 2001, Robert Mugabe's
net worth was rated at 1.75 billion, invested in Switzerland, Channel
Islands, Bahamas, and even owning castles, plural, in Scotland. It was just one of his estates. And he would have these, while
the people were starving, he would have cakes like this with
his own picture on top, honestly. At his 90th birthday, he boasted
of dining on elephants and lion meat. The obscene extravagance
of Mugabe and his wives and his sons is in stark contrast of
the destitution of most of the people suffering under his maladministration,
to put it nicely. Mugabe described his political
ideology as Marxist-Leninism. He was educated at Kutuma College
and the University of Forte, then he worked as a schoolteacher
in Rhodesia and Ghana. Mugabe Tesfadros, the scholarship
he received in 1949 to study at the University of Forte in
South Africa that led to his involvement in politics. He joined
the African National Congress and was introduced to Marx's
ideas by Jewish South African communists. Like, I presume,
Joe Slovo and co. type of people. He described
his time at Forte as the turning point in his life. Forte, by
the way, used to be a Presbyterian college, mission college. given
to the government and they turned it into absolute socialist, secular
humanist, atheist hellhole. He described his time at 40 as
a turning point in his life. He was convicted of sedition
in prison between 1964 and 1974 when he earned four doctorates,
sorry, a master's and four other degrees while he was in prison. Now I don't think any poor soul
in Chikorubi prison in Harare these days gets a chance to study
outside, so I don't know why Sharon Dudley's saying how evil
it was for Ian Smith to lock up this mass murdering thug and
criminal dictator in prison there. He was hardly mistreated there.
You know, how many of us wouldn't mind getting a free education?
Released in 1974, Amnesty moved to Mozambique to oversee Zanu's
revolutionary terrorism campaign. By the way, here you can see
Tonga Gara, the head of the army, and there's Robert Mugabe. I
don't know what this tells you, but these guys look comfortable in their
camouflage and with their ammo and weapons, but this chap, what
does he look like? He doesn't even know what a press-up
is. He doesn't know what it is to be in the army. This man's,
he's not a soldier. For him to be called a guerrilla
leader, I don't think they've seen real guerrillas. All elections
in Zimbabwe have been dominated by state violence and blatant
electoral fraud. Like, these poor people had their
arms broken and legs broken because they voted for the MDC in the
2008 elections. Even when defeated, like in 2002,
2008, 2013 presidential elections, Mugabe stayed in power and continued
to brutalize and terrorize the population that he claimed to
serve, and you have the DA calling him a president. and people speaking
about how he was so supported by the people. But you could
see on the ground, the support for Mugabe was such that he had
to be surrounded by his police all the time. Ian Smith, when
his farm was invaded, they asked him for reaction. He said to
BBC, I'm not worried. He says, I've still got more
black friends in Zimbabwe than Mugabe has. I challenge Robert
Mugabe, join me in Samora Michelle Avenue without his security.
Let's see who gets the other side of the street alive. that's
true. Chongagora, Morgan Chongagora
was very, very, very popular. Chongarai. And Morgan Chongarai
had these massive rallies and you could just see he had support. Well, he won the elections, I
mean, there's no doubt. And the frustration, these poor
people, how many times, for 37 years, they thought that their
vote would count. But no, there was all kinds of intimidation,
all kinds of These are 2008 kinds of, you know, you won't believe
it, but the dog's eaten election results. And all these sort of
things. And let's say he knocks world
opinion out of the court with his bloodstained baseball bat.
Vote until you get it right. And vote for me or die. Why so subtle? Zimbabwean democracy
pierced through the heart by Vote Mugabe. When he had the
second election after he lost, he bludgeoned the people of MDC
to the point that they pulled out. Just not cricket, as the
British put it. Well, they had given him the
country. And here's his presidential brigade, the presidential squad
are the ones who run the meringue diamond fields. How long will
the land lie parched and the grass in every field be withered
because those who live in it are wicked, their birds and animals
have perished? Robert Guest, the African editor
of The Economist, observed in his book, The Shackled Continent.
For half a century now, the continent's been deluged with foreign aid,
but this aid has failed to make Africa any less poor. It has
bankrolled tyrants or idealists with hopeless economic policies.
Both types of aid have been wasted. Doing business in Africa can
be tricky. Bad roads, punctured by roadblocks, manned by bribe-hungry
policemen make it slow and costly to move goods even short distances.
Local firms, meanwhile, have been held back by arbitrary local
government regulations, dysfunctional legal systems, that's a good
term, dysfunctional legal systems, and the difficulty, without political
connections, of raising capital. If Africa was better governed,
it would be richer. Africans are poor largely because
they're not yet free. That's a fact. They live under
predatory, incompetent governments which impoverish them in many
ways through corruption, through bad economic policies, and sometimes,
as in Zimbabwe, by creating an atmosphere of terror. Robert
Guest, economist from Britain, he's nailed it in The Shackle
Continent. They promise them freedom while
they themselves are slaves of depravity. It's not just Zuma,
it's a whole bunch of them. And, of course, Mugabe was kept
there by his corrupt Zombie PF. A group waiting for judgment,
but judgment is coming. And this is some of the timeline
leading to what they thought would be freedom. And they thought
this would be their liberator, Emerson Mnangagwa, but new face,
same tyranny. I've been asked, have you shared
the gospel of Mugabe? Yes, I have. by letter, I've
written to him directly. And one of our board members,
Bishop Wanali Ferry, met with and prayed with Robert Mugabe
and presented him with a gift of Bible while he was present
in State House in Harare. We cannot anticipate too much
change in policy as Manangagwa was a loyal Mugabe henchman until
very recently. He's been complicit in all the
crimes of Mugabe's Zanupi gangsters over the last 39 years. Those
who think only Mugabe has been a problem don't understand the
insidious role of communism. It's not Mugabe. It's the whole
communist system. After Vladimir Lenin there was
Joseph Stalin. After Joseph Stalin there was
Khrushchev. After Khrushchev there was Brezhnev. After Brezhnev
there was Chernenko, Andropov, Gorbachev, and even under Gorbachev. A million Christians were in
the concentration camps. Five million in concentration
camps, a million were therefore religious offensive, under Gorbachev
during perestroika in Glasgow. Mugabe is just one of many Marxist
mass-murdering thugs available to Zanupiev. Deliver me, oh my
God, out of the hand of the wicked, out of the hand of the unrighteous
and cruel man. Freedom requires the eradication
of communism and corruption. Although the regime governing
Zimbabwe will try to make it appear that freedom has come
with the death of Mugabe to entice investment so that they can overtax
and later confiscate, things are still bound to continue to
deteriorate until the people of Zimbabwe rise up to overthrow
the whole corrupt communist structure and uproot the destructive ideology,
socialism, secular humanism, Marxism, which has permeated
and poisoned the country. Destructive forces are at work
in the city. Threats and lies never leave
its streets. However, the masses of people have turned out in
the hundreds of thousands to celebrate the downfall of Robert
Mugabe and now his death, are desperate for hope and they're
desperate for real change. We need to continue to pray and
work for biblical reformation and spiritual revival, because
when justice is done it brings joy to the righteous but terror
to evildoers. Our Mission Frontline Fellowship
has been dedicated to missionary work in Zimbabwe since 1982.
I've driven from one side to the other of the country, ministered
to their soldiers, Birchenoff Bridge, right through to Mitari,
been locked up by 3rd Brigade, interrogated by CIO, ministered
to these people. For over 38 years, our mission
has been distributing Bibles and Bible teaching materials,
conducting leadership training seminars, evangelism workshops,
every kind of outreach, distribution of food, boxes of love, ministering
in schools, prisons and hospitals, and the streets and the marketplace,
seeking to lay solid biblical foundations for long-term biblical
reformation, warning the people that The problem is not just
Mugabe, and the problem is not just Zanapiev. The entire country
needs to repent and needs to turn to God. And so from this
mission house, we have been driving long and far and wide, taking
these boxes with love. Since 1982, we've been putting
together Boxers' Love and every year delivering, sometimes multiple
times in a year, simple resources like these and literature to
make life a little easier for the pensioners in particular,
the destitute pensioners, and to help some pastors and prisoners
as well with these Boxers' Love. So this is just one of the Love
in Action parts of the mission. Leadership training, literature
distribution, and Love in Action, those are the three main L's
of the work. And so we can't do everything
but we can do something and we've got to do everything we possibly
can to help the people in Zimbabwe at this desperate time. The poverty,
the suffering, it's just unbelievable. And so we know Zimbabwe and we
care for the people of Zimbabwe and we love the people of Zimbabwe
and I'm outraged that you can get Christians falling over themselves
to praise a Marxist dictator who has abused the people, who's
been a persecutor of the church, who's been an enemy of Christ,
and that they somehow think that who they're going to please.
And instead of following examples like Zimbabwe, how about following
examples of excellence like Singapore where they actually, that's the
kind of place where they produced the hospitals where Mugabe wanted
to go. He didn't want to go to his own hospitals. The Bible
maintains capital punishment for murder, rape, and kidnapping.
Believers are to pray imprecatory psalms of justice against the
wicked. God will ensure justice in eternity. Mugabe may not have
faced justice on earth, but he will face justice at the hand
of God. For I, the Lord, love justice. I hate robbery. And
Mugabe is certainly a robber. We're in the middle of a world
war of worldviews, a battle for the mind, a battle for the heart,
a battle for the future, and the choices before us are clear.
We can choose the lies of the world or the truth of God's word,
indoctrination or education, communism or Christianity, the
broad road to destruction or the narrow way to life, heaven
or hell, the grace of God or the wrath of God. See, I've set
before you today life and good, death and evil, in that I command
you today to love the Lord your God, to walk in his ways, to
keep his commands, his statutes and his judgments, so that you
may live and multiply and the Lord your God will bless you.
in the land which you go to possess. But if your heart turns away
so that you do not hear and are drawn away and worship other
gods and serve them, I announced to you today that you will surely
perish. You shall not prolong your days in the land which you
cross over the Jordan to go in and possess. I call heaven and
earth as witnesses today against you that I've set before you
life and death, blessing and cursing. Therefore, choose life
so that both you and your descendants may live. Is Jesus Christ your
Lord and Savior? If not, he will be your judge.
Because it's appointed unto men once to die, and after that to
face judgment. Questions? Comments? Observations? Mo? I recently took a pastor,
a friend of mine, an elderly man from Zimbabwe, from Nauru. I took him overseas to Jerusalem.
He needed some specialized occupational therapy. And I was shocked to
hear that the electricity in Zimbabwe comes on at 10 o'clock
at night and it's on for 5 o'clock in the morning, something like
that. His daughter has to wake up at 3 o'clock in the morning
to set the washing machine, to start the washing machine. And
that's the truth I'm getting at first hand. That's how many
hours of electricity I have every day. I've been told by some people
that in fact if the electricity comes on, you show the presence
wanting to make a statement that he wants you to see on TV. Because
most of the time there's no electricity. That's shocking. Any other comments,
observations? Aubrey, you've been there fairly
recently. What do you think? Yeah, I just
maybe want to comment on the current situation there. The
people don't trust the current president otherwise they would
have moved back. Two million Zimbabweans come and tell us
how beautiful is their country and how good it is. So they don't
trust the president at least at this time. But I mean it's
too sad. It's crazy how like My friends
and a lot of people like in Tanzania, just local people like in Congo
and other places don't know anything about Zimbabwe. They speak like
how he was the only person who was dedicated to fight the white
people and that's why they basically sanctioned this country and that's
why they're in all these economic problems. It's because he tried
his best but That's such total lies. Yeah and they keep on like
telling my friends like no this is not right, this is wrong and
I try to explain to them like no you are wrong because actually
you've never been in Zimbabwe. I'm like have you guys been in
Zimbabwe? They have not been in Zimbabwe either. No well no
Zimbabwean would talk like that unless it was on a pier. It's
crazy like there's just all this idea out there. Toby, any comments
from you? You were in Zimbabwe last year.
It's bad. Yeah, you've shown some of, yeah,
there's worse stuff that has happened than what you have shown,
but it's really bad. It's like the whole country,
all is, it has just collapsed and the only parts that are still
working is what people are privately trying to keep running. The government
or Big corporations just cannot
survive. Yeah, and these poor pensioners. It's just staggering. Actually,
maybe I can tell a story about a pensioner. His name is Johnny
Young. I forgot his name, but his name was Johnny. I don't
know if you remember. But there was another American
missionary with me, Daniel de Villiers. Maybe some of you know,
he's a very lively chap. So anyway, we said, we're going
to see if we can go to the restaurant and eat something. Obviously, we wanted to take
Johnny. I know him for a few years now. And we sat at the
restaurant. We tried to make plans. We were
low on American dollars, and you can't draw money at any place.
But you know, you can barter with what you have. I said, Johnny,
what do you like on your burger? He said, I just want the egg
on my burger. I did not add any eggs for a
few years. He said, no, man. Do you want
meat, whatever? So it's just that is the thing
with people. They can't even add eggs. He wrote a letter to me, and
he said he's now in a retirement village. He said, it's so nice. He said, first time in, I think,
five or six years that he has hot water when he's bathing. But you know, I must say, one
of the most, he's teaching people to mine for gold, but he's also
sharing the gospel. You know, he said all these horrible
things that have happened with his family and things, but he's
so encouraging, he's sharing the gospel. Are you done with
spiritual? for things to share the Gospel.
I think that is so. There was another Tanim. Actually
I have lots of stories of Tanim. I can't remember Tani's name,
but she's well in her 80 years. So when Daniel de Villiers came
to Vienna, and she called the people and said, here's a world-renowned
pianist coming to Zimbabwe. You must come and listen. And
Tani, later, she said, now let's sing hymns. Tani's shaking. She said, my fingers can't play
the piano, but we must at least sing some hymns. We sing maybe
seven or eight. maybe 10 hymns, we just sang,
she called the people and we sang it together. So you know,
I've realized although they are poor in positions they have,
they're rich in Jesus Christ. Because you know, the position
in God has not changed. I hope our country, our white
people, our people that serve in God, they realize that. You
know, although they take our palms from us, they take our
land from us, they cannot take God from us. It will happen forever. That's the hope that they have,
and I hope we can learn from them. He generally seems to be very
hated. I do employ Zimbabweans. Almost 100% of the people that
I've come to know, they have a very high work ethic. And he's
just roundly hated. And the white friends that I
have, Eventually they were just forced to leave, just lost absolutely
everything, literally stolen from under their feet. So there's
no doubt in my mind that he was an extremely wicked and evil
man. What bothers me is that if we're going to praise him
or even just be polite, you give You betray the Christians of
Zimbabwe, you betray the people of Zimbabwe, you betray the victims
of communism and the people continue to suffer there. And you also
tell people outside of Africa, don't ever trust Africa. You
can't trust what we say, you can't trust what you do. You
cannot trust Africa for investment or tourism or anything, because
if Africa can praise a thug like Mugabe, who tears up agreements,
whose promises mean nothing, people's rights mean nothing,
the law means nothing. He even had the Supreme Court
justice beaten up in his chambers by his mob and kicked out. I
mean, when the Supreme Court just found a gangster on several
occasions, he just fired them, brought them somewhere else,
after them getting beaten up in their chambers. Journalists got beaten up, the
radio station got blown up, the newspapers, the only independent
when they opposed him, and his police were just standing around
laughing while it happened. Nothing ever happened to the people who
caused this. Imagine that even a Supreme Court
justice can get beaten up because he opposed, he fought against
the president on some point of mind. And if we can praise him,
it means there's no hope for Africa, none. And I think the
people who are praising Mugabe are voracious and coward. Because what they're saying is,
if a white man had done 1% as bad as Mugabe, he'd be damned
to hell. But because he's black, we don't expect better. We don't
expect black people to have a high stand. We don't expect them to
produce anyone better than a Mugabe. And therefore, it's racist to
praise a man like that. If you can praise someone who's
such a failure and disaster and so malicious and so selfish, or completely not a liar, or
absolutely evil. I mean, it's just unbelievable. So to me, because I believe the
people of Africa deserve better, and the people of Zimbabwe deserve
better, and everyone's held to the same standard, and I'm darned
if I'm gonna praise someone who's an enemy of God and a blasphemer
and a Marxist. It doesn't matter what color he is. We do not support
Marxists and murderers, simple. And so what do I say to the,
Kenneth Meshus and the Sheridan Dudleys of this world, who are
Christians, who've praised him. I know they're not stupid, but
I fear they're cowards. And this is not a time for us
to be cowardly. We've got to make a stand and say, this is
unacceptable. We cannot. This is not just some
minor official. This is the top leader for 37
years of Zimbabwe. And if we can't condemn this,
then honestly, we have no standards at all. To me, if somebody says
I have been racist in criticizing MacGarvey, I say no. Racism is
when you've got different standards. I want to hold MacGarvey to the
same standard I'd hold anyone else to, which is God's law.
So shame on the people who can't say that a dictator is a dictator
and a Marxist blasphemer is a Marxist blasphemer. Just imagine what
we will have to say when we face God If I praise the enemies of God, who wants to be on the other
side? Remember it was well put by Ronald Reagan, he says, we
do not have the right to ask if God's on our side, but we
should ask, are we on his? now that actually is the right
attitude because God's not on our side but we've got to be
on his side yeah who's on the Lord's side as Moses said so
but i think we can say the same like Jesus said about Jesus you
know it would have been better for him if he was never born
and i think why don't they I don't think there are true Christians,
honestly, people that say he's the error, but why don't they
say that? Well, cowardice is pretty epidemic right now. We're
living in an age of apostasy, so we've got to assume the best,
but we've got to call people back to repentance. There is
forgiveness on the other side of repentance, but it's un-repentance.
believable that Christian leaders can be so cowardly or lacking
in discernment as to join the throng. I mean we saw it with
the Mandela worship, we've seen it with the Martin Luther King
worship, Winston Churchill and all these other characters. There's
a lot of people who don't deserve praise from Christians. We've
got to have higher standards than that, but this is about
as extreme as I've come across in my life. This must be one
of the most evil people on the planet that's lived during our
lifetime. Marxist or anything else. But
for us, let's give a very clear statement. So Alpha has put on
the table some of our older newsletters as well, which is very historic,
like Zimbabwe, A Lesson in How to Destroy a Christian Civilization,
Zimbabwe Mission, Mugabe Tsunami in Zimbabwe, and the 2008 one
over there, you can see, yes, that's a Christian action, Zimbabweans And that's when Tsongara, without
question, won the election. As I said, the only opposition
in Africa where the opposition's got more votes than the government.
And then at this one, we've got, at the back of this more recent
newsletter, we've got on Zimbabwe celebrating its Mugabe falls,
which is a whole, a tremendous expose on what's going on there.
So these are some historic ones. And in notes from tonight's presentation
is the text printed out there as well, if you want those. So,
of course, we're going to upload this video and audio so that
this is something we can share and have people challenge with
the other side. I wouldn't have thought that
we needed to say a lot of these things. A lot of what I've said
should be so obvious. But unfortunately, because we're
living in so much disinformation, and if you've got spineless media
out there singing us praises, Just the BBC could say he broadened
access to healthcare and education in Zimbabwe. There was a time I thought the
BBC was a good news service, but those days are so long and
far gone. What a bunch of propagandists.
When we were in Zimbabwe in a rural area they had that flask and
we have a photo somewhere of it and a picture of Robert Mugabe
on top of the picture of Mugabe keeping you warm. It's funny, the latest information
that I got about his death and everything saying that the problem
with Zimbabwe right now is not his fault, it's because he tried
his best, so the world kind of forced him into this corner,
forced Zimbabwe into this corner of poverty, they blocked everything
around him. By giving him foreign aid, by
the millions, yeah. And it's crazy, like that's what is going
out there, saying that if Zimbabwe is in trouble today, it's not
Mugabe's fault. He tried his best, but the world
blows everything around him. And yet, they took hundreds of
thousands of tons of free food into Zimbabwe to help them. And
in many cases, the food grown in Zambia, for example, that
came back to the people in Zimbabwe were grown by Zimbabwean farmers
who'd been kicked out and were now in Zambia. And so people
recognize the names even, but these are the farmers who we
kicked out and they provided the food for us in our store.
It's unbelievable. Nobody gave Rhodesia anything
free ever. And Rhodesia, nobody starved
in Rhodesia ever during the war. This chap gets foreign aid. and
he still wrecks everything. It's even worse than that. It's
not just that they bring food in. When we took food in, they
want to confiscate all the food you have because you're not allowed
to take it in. That's true. I've forgotten that.
And they want to charge you tax on bringing in food aid one time
and then by the time you're taking it, they want to completely confiscate
it. So, yes, it's even worse than
the fact that they need him to live on charity. They even want
to steal the charity and not let it get to the people. This
is the problem. You see, you could believe most
of what they say, if we weren't a mission that works in Zimbabwe.
But when you work in Zimbabwe, and you've got Zimbabwe friends,
and you know what's going on there, this is all just unbelievable.
But I suppose a person who's got no personal contact with
Zimbabwe or Zimbabwe might believe this. I want to tell a story
that really happened. The police pull you off, and
they must stay on the spot. You can just tell them, hey,
you don't have cash, and then what can they do? Now they have
a card machine along next to the road, so you can pay with
your card at the police store. So they are so crooked. So I
tell you what, from the earliest days, I've always been corrupt.
But since 1982, I knew they're going to ask me for bribes at
every roadblock, everywhere. So when I was leaving Bytebridge,
at Nassina, which is about, what, 12 kilometers from the border,
go past the bakery first thing in the morning, load up with
lots and lots and lots and lots of loaves of bread, every place
piled up. And so you open the window and
there's this beautiful smell of fresh bread. Oh, would you
like a loaf? And they're just beaming. No money changed. I was just
handing out loads, fresh loaves of bread all the way. And these
people were just so happy. And so, I mean, it's just one
of the tactics we've used. In 2015, when David Fook got
two fines, one of them we were with Long Wheelbase Barking and
said just two people can sit in front, so we were three people
in front, so that's fine. And then they stop us again.
We got another fine for a passenger sitting next to the That's not allowed in the country.
They're getting creative. Because in many cases they're
not being paid. They're expected to get their money from fines. You
can't argue with them, they have a book with all those rules and
then they pull out the book and show you in the book. Well, of course, you're going
to go to jail. Well, I found at Roadblocks,
the first thing is you start a conversation with them, you
give them things like, you know, the other thing I did in the
80s, they all wanted bribes. So at that stage, you could get
at, I forget the place where it was, up in Joburg areas, you
could get for under 2 Rand these digital watches, this sort of
digital watch. So I'd buy 12, 20 pound, you'd
get a discount for getting a lot. And so I'd, you know, not even
take my own watch, and I'd just have one of these on there. So
a lot of people then, you know, well, you take your own watch
and then you give them the watch, whatever happened. And they were really, really
inexpensive. When I mentioned this to Will Bethany, he said, oh,
he did the same thing with calculators. Because when calculators came
out in the West, nobody in Eastern Europe had them. So he'd have
these calculators, and then he'd say, you know, it's going to
cost you this or that. He'd pull out his calculator, and then he'd see
this chap's eyes widen, and he'd say, oh, would you like this?
And give him the calculator. Because he's got a lot of others.
These calculators were cheap. Anyway, you've got to get crafty
to just get through roadblocks in Africa. It's a major problem.
You've got to find out what they want and then use that. And the thing is, we can work
out the solutions now, but the next trip the rules may have
changed and you've got to work out a whole lot of new things
in the field. So, Tobi knows, don't you? Every border post,
every roadblock, you need ingenuity and wisdom from the Lord.
Mugabe's Legacy -Learning from the History of Zimbabwe
Series Reformation Society
| Sermon ID | 92019821563140 |
| Duration | 1:35:40 |
| Date | |
| Category | Teaching |
| Language | English |
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