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Agencies
21 February, 2017, 10:57
Update: 21 February, 2017, 13:58
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Mugabe turns 93, vowing to rule on in Zimbabwe, tells world to give Trump a chance

Agencies
21 February, 2017, 10:57
Update: 21 February, 2017, 13:58
President of Zimbabwe Robert Mugabe at the African Union summit in Addis Ababa on January 30, 2017. He has said he will not retire. Photo: AFP

Harare, Zimbabwe: Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, the world’s oldest national ruler, turns 93 on Tuesday, defiantly vowing to remain in power despite growing signs of frailty and failing health.

He will celebrate with his staff in a private ceremony in Harare while supporters use state media to send their annual gushing messages of goodwill and congratulations.

The main celebrations will be held Saturday at Matobo National Park outside Bulawayo, Zimbabwe’s second-largest city, and are expected to attract thousands of officials and ZANU-PF party faithful.

Large game animals are often slaughtered for the occasion. In previous years Mugabe has reportedly been offered elephants, buffalo and impala for the feast.

Mugabe has ruled out any prospect of retiring soon, saying that ZANU-PF officials believe there is no ‘acceptable’ alternative.

‘The call to step down must come from my party... In such circumstances I will step down,’ the state-owned Sunday Mail newspaper quoted Mugabe as saying in an interview aired late Monday.

‘They want me to stand for elections... If I feel that I can’t do it any more, I will say so to my party so that they relieve me. But for now, I think I can’t say so,’ he said.

‘The majority of the people feel that there is no replacement, a successor who to them is acceptable,’ Mugabe added.

The veteran leader came to power when Zimbabwe won independence in 1980 and his rule has been criticised for ruthless repression of dissent, election rigging, and for causing the country’s economic collapse.

 

Advanced age

Several incidents in recent years have highlighted his advanced age — including a fall in February 2015 at Harare airport.

In September of the same year he read a speech to parliament apparently unaware that he had delivered exactly the same address a month earlier.

Despite growing calls to step aside, his party has endorsed him as its candidate for general elections next year, and he remains widely respected as a liberation hero by other African leaders.

On Friday, his wife, Grace, claimed that Mugabe would be the voters’ choice even after he dies.

She has also vowed to use a wheelchair to transport him to election rallies if needed.

Mugabe has avoided naming a successor, and his party is divided between factions hoping to succeed him.

Grace, 51, was appointed head of the ruling party’s women’s wing in a surprise move that could make her a possible successor to Mugabe.

Another leading candidate is Mugabe’s vice president, Emmerson Mnangagwa.Last year, security forces brutally quelled a series of street protests in Harare, a rare public expression of opposition to Mugabe’s regime.

 

Mugabe for Trump

Mugabe, known for his combative style, said he agreed with US President Donald Trump’s ‘America for America’ approach.

‘When it comes to Donald Trump, on the one hand talking of American nationalism, well America for America, America for Americans - on that we agree. Zimbabwe for Zimbabweans,’ he said.

The state-run Sunday Mail newspaper, which published the comments, said he added Trump might review the sanctions imposed on Mugabe and members of his inner circle by Washington in 2003 over alleged rights violations. The sanctions were extended by the Obama administration.

No reason was given as to why Mugabe felt Trump might re-examine sanctions and his direct comments on the matter were not published.

But Mugabe said he had not wanted Hillary Clinton to win the 2016 White House election because ‘I knew she could slap sanctions on us as a legacy.’

‘We are just now under sanctions imposed not by Donald Trump, but by Obama. What arrogance is that?,’ Mugabe was quoted as saying.

The comments were published in advance of the full broadcast of the interview on state-run TV on Monday and Tuesday.

Critics accuse Mugabe of wrecking one of Africa’s most promising economies through policies such as violent seizures of white-owned commercial farms and money printing. He and his party say the economy has been undermined by western powers.

According to Bloomberg News, Zimbabwe’s economic output has halved since 2000 when many white-owned farms were seized by ZANU-PF supporters, leaving the key agricultural sector in ruins.

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