Reaz Chuttoo tells it how it is: politicians get contributions from the private sector and then gives away the assets that belong to the people of Mauritius to their financial backers.
did you notice that one newspaper has stories about the biscuits saga every day? Methink this is good investigative journalism. But why do they stop there??? Why not have stories on a minister who wants to sell the CWA to private interests that will no doubt make legal contributions to his party???
"good investigative journalism"...? Like this? Some would call it remue-merde rather. Because just like any other lucrative business here, they are just after selling the most paper they can, until clickbait becomes the norm. The brighter side of the story is that Mauritians are way smarter that these cronies thought: one eagle-eye hinting about the relevance of the printing a fake barcode, another hinting at a widespread voracious appetite for get-rich-quick schemes by whatever means. We need some more to keep our eyes open on the unsaid things, rather than jumping at the is being thrown at us...
Sa bug la pe fer nu perdi tro buku letan ek pe buf nu lenerzi kuma enn gro voras. Anmemtan ler u lir sa bann komanter la u truve ki dimunn pe konpran de plis an plis. PJ ti bizin ranplas li par Sangeet Fowdar ki ti menas pu demisyone lor sa kuyonad privatizasyon CWA la.
Reaz Chuttoo tells it how it is: politicians get contributions from the private sector and then gives away the assets that belong to the people of Mauritius to their financial backers.
ReplyDeleteSir,
ReplyDeletedid you notice that one newspaper has stories about the biscuits saga every day? Methink this is good investigative journalism. But why do they stop there??? Why not have stories on a minister who wants to sell the CWA to private interests that will no doubt make legal contributions to his party???
"good investigative journalism"...?
ReplyDeleteLike this? Some would call it remue-merde rather. Because just like any other lucrative business here, they are just after selling the most paper they can, until clickbait becomes the norm.
The brighter side of the story is that Mauritians are way smarter that these cronies thought: one eagle-eye hinting about the relevance of the printing a fake barcode, another hinting at a widespread voracious appetite for get-rich-quick schemes by whatever means.
We need some more to keep our eyes open on the unsaid things, rather than jumping at the is being thrown at us...
Definitely. They've been trying to drown us in a sea of alternative facts for a long time. Don't think it's working.
ReplyDeleteTuesday joke: Ivan doesn't mind getting evaluated as a minister.
ReplyDeleteSa bug la pe fer nu perdi tro buku letan ek pe buf nu lenerzi kuma enn gro voras. Anmemtan ler u lir sa bann komanter la u truve ki dimunn pe konpran de plis an plis. PJ ti bizin ranplas li par Sangeet Fowdar ki ti menas pu demisyone lor sa kuyonad privatizasyon CWA la.
ReplyDeleteDid this debate ever happen?
ReplyDeleteMore calls for this massively incompetent minister to step down.
ReplyDelete