Unfortunately that's humans, I guess apartheid has really damaged us SA more than we are made to believe. SANs have became extremely entitled beings, we don't seem to appreciate anything. Maybe it's because most are not really exposed to the condition in other countries. We tend to have a more inclined view of everything more like thinking inside the box than seeing SA as part of the world. But I guess when the country open up to the world post apartheid, the country experienced what I can call cultural shock which most where not ready for.
@@nomagcisacawe3297 the blame lie squarely with our government, had it done it's job from the get go we wouldn't be in this mess. 1) their policy on asylum seekers is way too soft. 2) there is no effective border management and immigration policing. 3) corruption As a result we can't apportion blame on vulnerable people ie Africa is full of despot squandering as leaders. If Zim had caring leaders it could be far when you take the skills of most of it's citizens. DRC with it's minerals, we shouldn't be having poor Congolese as asylum seekers. The less said about Nigerians the better. Africa can be a powerful continent, only if it's leaders can have a vision like those of the gulf nations even though they too are no angels.
Go protest to Zimbabwe government to give u human rights, jobs, grand and good education. Kenyans are protesting, for they rights today . Lona u are cowards u fight against south Africans instead fight for Ur Abusive government. Do the right thing dear foreigners. Go become the leaders & president of ur country the way SA youth fought on 1976.
Zimbabweans ke ma gwala. They will bully you in the work environment, and debate with you about your government but have nothing to say about their government, they all blame Thabo Mbeki.
@@thabisankomo7597 We will never ever stop complaining about criminals from foreign land. We refuse to take instructions from people like you. We know that it is important to be vocal about their degusting activities on Our land. And yes, it is no secrete the we are Proudly Xenophobic
You should have done your research my dear before coming here to study. Otherwise now you sound like you are demanding things to work your way. Why don't you try your home country?
When the opportunity came for me to study in SA I was so excited I never thought about life after varsity and stuff like that I just wanted to come to SA. As for going back home for now it’s not an option coz I have already started with my masters and also I will just finish until phd. It’s much easier to study in the same country considering the laws of SA and Zim are very different
I have studied my law degree in the University of Venda with lots of zim students. They turn out to be one of the best Attorneys and advocates in zim. Some are working for international organisations. Just research more
@@Tariromtin Did you study in South Africa to acquire a permanent resident or to go home and be a lawyer ?' Did you not do your research before coming here to study? This question is based on what's on your caption/thumbnail.
@@MapEve4I regret the time wasted my advice is if you wanna be a lawyer it’s always better to study in your country, coz going back home now with my SA degree it’s a struggle I still have to go back to school and learn Zimbabwean laws and write exams all over again. It’s like I wasted time here in SA. Coming to SA it was better if I had studied something which is not complicated Eg social work you can work anywhere in the world. I hope you understand my regret now. If I wanted to become a lawyer I should have done law in Zim. And if I wanted to study in SA I should have studied something different
I'm a South African I like your video, SA are dissapointing on these comments, it is fine to feel like that and its your fault maybe not researching about LLB in SA I understand but the fact that you still studying and pushing your dream no one can take it away from you ❤
You made my day, thank you so much for the love I needed this at least one positive comment can warm up my heart. The hare here is just too much. I think it’s not about me anymore people are just pushing their agendas in the comment section
Thank you for representing a lot of us who often keep quiet when our fellow countrymen aggressively voice hurtful words towards our fellow neighbours. Your comment was necessary
@@leesparkles101 what do you do, you visit your neighbor and your neighbor bullies you and calls you by all sorts of names, and labels you a thief when actual it is him stealing from himself?
What I love about LLB Degree is that you can work as Executive Manger at a large company, the degree from South Africa can also open international doors for management positions, research, and many more opportunities. Your story is touching and I don't know how you'll get out except by pivoting to either research or management.
I am South African and if i were you i will pass through all the negative comments because its really frustrating to read some of the comments here and some of it is definitely misdirected anger. I love your content and enjoy watching your videos. Keep them coming 🎉🎉🎉
Thank you so much sis for always making me feel better. Yoooo my RU-vid growth has come with hardships 😭😭😭😭Negative comments everywhere, what pains me is that they fighting me but I am documented I’m here legally!!!!!
@@Tariromtin Ignore and Pass through. I feel like they enjoy the attention. Some don't even have passports and maybe angered by the fact that you see the value in what they take for granted. Some of the comments are really frustrating to be honest.
@@glomab2758 google well 😂 a study visa allows you to work. They know very well students also need to survive coz imagine if a study visa didn’t allow you to work we would hv been committing crime to survive. So it’s good at least we allowed to work to survive.
first of all, why do you study the law of another country? Should you be getting an education to improve your country? sometimes as black people, we need to have logic.
Kkkkk I realised that with my kind of videos people will always hate the fact that I’m Zimbabwean 😂😂😂 they always say abahambe etc. the hate is real. At first it used to get to me, I even quitted RU-vid sometime back because I was discouraged but I realised no I should not quit but keep going, I shouldn’t let the negativity get to me but rather let me be positive so I don’t take it to heart that’s why I always respond nicely
To study in another country should not translate in seeking to work in that country. You country has sent you to study so as to be of benefit to your country. This is betrayal you want to do. Zimbabwe needs the skill of its citizens who have gone to study in other countries.
It a makes sense to be honest, even other countries have these restrictions. In some countries foreign students are advised not study law because of its immigration related issues.
I think there is a lady on RU-vid who is from Zimbabwe and studied LLB in SA and is now working in UK and earning a lot. I think the surname is Khumalo or Kumalo. She faced the same issue as you are. I really really caution you against studying for a PhD with the hope of being a lecturer and being getting a critical skill visa. Critical skills list is changed every year and I highly doubt that lecturing law will be on the critical list in 3 years time.
Thanks for information. My niece from Botswana was considering doing her law degree in South Africa next year. I'll forward her this video. More power to you💪🏾👏🏾
From my opinion if she has plans of working as a lawyer in SA it’s not an option it’s always best to study law in your country it’s easy to get admitted. Or maybe if she didn’t get a place in Botswana South Africa can be a second option, but then still it will be hard to get admitted as an attorney
I hear yah! Her intention was to study outside Botswana to expand her experiences and learn to adapt to different cultures and environmental settings...and in turn get opportunities in a bigger economies around. Thank you for the response, and best wishes to you with your studies and carrier 👊🏾
She is welcome to come and study but not use her studying here as a ticket to remain in SA and compete against South African for jobs. Batswana people like their country. Shona’s are too manipulative and they treat other tribes badly in Zimbabwe. They are the ones fighting to remain illegally in SA. They hate their country. They must go back to fix their country
@@TariromtinGo and finish your PhD at home. You want citizenship through the back door. You will argue that you've been in RSA for 10 years. Go home, little rubbish ,
Why is this comment section always dissapointing and why do some South Africans act like they have zero citizens who leave their country for green pastures or better opportunities outside their country. You all have different artists scramming for international recognition and settling outside your country but you dont see anyone telling them to go back home. How do you turn every informative video into a fight?And why are you so angry. What forces one out one's country is different from every person. And how do you seem to have so much information on what Zimbabweans should do and not do, when you have zero knowledge on the peolple's struggles and the political landscape. Stop acting like you are bettter than the rest of Africa. You all have your own political struggles and feuds but no one is out here trying to tell you how to solve them. You are all starting to act like some white Supremacists and think you are better than everyone else.
At this point I’m tired only God can save us the hare is just to much I honestly don’t know my crime, I’m here in South Africa legally and I’m here to study is it a crime to study in a foreign country?
South Africans go just to experience a new environment, but they don't mind coming back home at any given time they don't cling in other people's countries
Alternatively you may add courses to be a commercial lawyer in Zimbabwe so that you should qualify for critical skills in South Africa Law becomes a lucrative profession if you take the commercial stream Banks in South Africa employ commercial lawyers in high demand
Your aim was not only study in SA but to remain here. Law is not on the scarce skill list. Surely you could take your law back to Zimbabwe and use your skills there.
Mr Collin good evening Sir I hope you doing well. Thank you for watching my video. But today I didn’t say anything bad about South Africa so why do you want to fight me 😂😂😂🙌🙌🙌
It's shocking to come across Xenophobic mind sets on social media .....if one day the economic situation takes a dive in SA, I foresee South Africans migrating to neighboring countries like Zimbabwe....what goes around comes around Bro....time will tell...
@@elizabethmutasa1008nope we were in worse situations than Zimbabwe and it was the apartheid era. We stayed in our country and fought. The issue is foreigners wanting to come here and don't want to go back to their countries.
Problems why SAns hate Zimbabwean ia that they have Big mouth they talk too much they want to change rules and laws of SA. Ridiculous. Why Kenyans stay in their country and fight for their rights and not fighting other countries.
@@Tariromtin you still too young for this approach. Keep quiet. Seek the face of God served Him as Lord and Saviour and leave politics. God is your source your creator SA is not your source. Go back to Zimbabwe and call upon your creator God Almighty.
Your story is so correct. I am LLB graduate working for the State, thanks God. Just continue studying until you become a lecturer, that's unfortunately the journey you have to embrace. You might fund breakthrough in RU-vid.
@@nomagcisacawe3297citizenship never, I will forever be a Zimbabwean, why should I force things 😂😂😂 clearly South African don’t like us why would I want to denounce my Zimbabwean citizenship and forcing things on SA where I’m not loved 😂😂😂😂
A lot of INGO and Multilateral organizations recruit people with Law degrees especially in the UN. You can check them i.e if you are not limiting yourself to SA only
It's not law, even in Engineering we have the same problem. I have to defer my studies because of that at University. I Firstly I did Electrical Engineering N1-N6, cannot get practical experience to attain National N Diploma in Electrical Engineering. Every profession is like that, now I am doing German language course A2 online, checking for international companies in Africa and abroad
Just for curiousity sake , is this not something that one considers before applying to study at tertiary institution? In terms where the qualification will be used and what would be required when one graduates, especially if you are an international student who is looking into working in the said country after your studies?
So why don't you go and write your conversion in Zim and be admitted there? You say there's no articles etc there so it should be easier. You are not stuck. And also the lecturer door is closing, NRF is funding LLM's for PhD studies. Under 35's. Then you will be crying with a PhD. Cut your losses, convert and be admitted in your jurisdiction.
One painful truth is that even if all Zimbabweans can go to night, that would not create employment for any South African or will it stop crimes because South Africa has it's criminals.
No offense, you completed your studies so you should go back home. It happens in other countries, that's why a student visa is temporary and it doesn't give a free pass to citizens' benefits.
South Africans should not forget that it is their legal mandate to look after the Zimbabweans and also to give them the space to enjoy freedom of speech.
@@Tariromtin Total freedom is in South Africa, even as foreign national you can also blame the President for being incompetent but in Zimbabwe if you can do that you will be executed.
So what was the reason you studied in South Africa and should you have not done some research before hand. The moral of the story is to research first so when did you realise you had made the wrong decision. Did the university councilors not advise you. Honestly it's your ignorance.
I only realised when I was in my third year, it was too late. As for studying in SA, I always wanted to be a lawyer so when an opportunity to study in SA came I only had law in mind
I assumed you knew all of this before applying for a law degree in South Africa, especially given a case from a few years back. Proficiency in the native language is crucial in law and other people-focused fields. While a law degree can limit you to certain jurisdictions, it also opens many opportunities beyond traditional practice. What are your career aspirations, and what initially drew you to study law?
I always wanted to be a lawyer since a young age. So when the opportunity for me to study in South Africa came I didn’t research 😭😭😭😭 when I applied I just applied law only
These are good questions, I think I will do a separate video answering the questions thank you so much for giving me an idea like I will talk about how I ended up studying law in SA and my career aspirations.
@@Tariromtin you can contact me privately for advice, but here are your three options: 1) Practice law in Zimbabwe, 2) Practice law in the commonwealth country, or 3) Choose a different career path related to law."
Helpful video not only for Zim law students but for everyone who wants to study in a different country. Before applying to study at tertiary institution on needs to consider where the qualification will be used and what would be required when one graduates, especially if you are an international student who is looking into working in the said country after your studies. Hopefully something good comes out of journey. Don't loose hope.
@@tariromugarisi5316problem yangu SA ndoidisa so my life at the moment is centered here but I think k should consider going back home or another country which is better. Aaaa zvakaoma sazi ndodiiko
It makes sense to be honest, even other countries have these restrictions. In some countries foreign students are advised not study law because of its immigration related issues.
There are too many of us qualified lawyers. It has become not critical. Zimbabwe is backward that's everything is critical. Why does this rubbish girl not go back home with her "critical skill"?
@@TariromtinBut abahambe is talking about illegal immigrants whatever that means, but again most if not all countries do deportation of those in their countries without correct paperwork.
@@Mat_Mauyes it’s about illegal immigrants, but in reality it means every foreigner the hate is on all foreigners. Check the comment section, I am documented and I am legal but look how mean people are towards me, look at the hare. People tell me to go back to my country yet I am documented
The fact remains she knows where she belongs. Our words will always ring in her eyes and sting in her heart because words have the power to create something, especially if they carry the truth.
@@SouthyDefensehonestly speaking life in SA is very beautiful I’m enjoying it here 😂😂😂 back home life is stuff worse still I come from a village. Let me enjoy the beautiful South Africa
@@MzansigirlSouth Africa is treating me so well. I’m glowing 😢😢😢 in Zim I wasn’t getting all these I’m having here so allow me enjoy a little. Truth be told SA is more advanced than Zimbabwe and there is better lifestyle here, I’m talking for myself. So maybe after Phd I will go back home
@@thabisankomo7597but I think you safe coz your surname is ndebele which fits well in zulu and I think language wise you safe maybe that’s why you surviving well
@@Tariromtin No one is safe in SA in my sister,any day could be your last day in this country,crime is too much 😫but I haven't had any issues with locals tbh in my community we all get along ,some of them think I'm from here maybe it's because of my name.
Hi Tariro l like your content, lm a Zimbabwe l studied in SA and l regret studied here because l felt like I wasted my time likely l got an offer to study in UK 🇬🇧 now🫶🏿🙏 0h by the way you have gained a new subbie ❤️🩹🫶🏿