We think it’s about time a Twitter officer comes and reads the following right to AKA: ‘YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO REMAIN SILENT, ANYTHING YOU SAY OR DO ON THIS PLATFORM WILL BE USED AGAINST YOU IN THE COURT OF BLACK TWITTER.’
After all, it seems like everything the rapper says or do is used against him!
As Johannesburg Water works to repair the biggest leak in its history, rapper AKA has taken to social media to question whether peoples’ response to the water shortages would have been different if the ANC was still in power in the city.
Taking to Twitter, AKA posted a picture of a bottle of water he had bought and claimed the best thing about the shortage was that people could not blame the ANC, and that was it!
“Went to Woolies (Woolworths) in Bryanston today. Water sold out. Can you imagine what these TL’s (timelines) would have looked like if we still ran JHB. They must be livid. The awesome thing about this water crisis in the North, is that for the first time they can’t blame the ANC,” he wrote.
AKA has never been shy to talk about politics on Twitter before, but his followers were not impressed by his decision to speak out on the matter and told him to sit down.
https://twitter.com/akaworldwide/status/933434380479025152
leave politics to politicians bro? pic.twitter.com/jlKWRmqjvB
— ҡօքaռօ?? (@evans_mashao) November 22, 2017
I love your music but please stay out of politics and things not in your control only God can judge
— gavin adams (@gavinadams7) November 23, 2017
How much are they paying you pic.twitter.com/WJB1SJ2MQn
— Mthokozisi Poh Ndlovu (@pohmthokoh) November 22, 2017
Shhh vala lah pic.twitter.com/9CQnvJeCUe
— Ⓜlungisi °?? (@Jurganer) November 22, 2017
We don't care we still don't want Zuma pic.twitter.com/YifrJSUFpe
— Fulu Singo (@FulufheloSingo) November 22, 2017
Residents in the northern suburbs of the city faced serious water shortages this week after a massive leak was discovered and water pressure began to drop in the area.
“Our main concern is the people who are working here. We have to be careful because you could have people buried alive. The land is unstable and there is groundwater coming out of the walls of the trench,” member of the mayoral committee for environmental and infrastructure services Nico de Jager told TimesLIVE at the site of the repairs.
Water is expected to be restored in affected areas on Thursday.
Picture credit: The Citizen
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