The Daily Courier

A subdued Zimbabwe inaugurate­s Mnangagwa after disputed vote

- By FARAI MUTSAKA

HARARE, Zimbabwe — Zimbabwe on Sunday inaugurate­d a president for the second time in nine months as the country once jubilant over the fall of longtime leader Robert Mugabe is now largely subdued by renewed harassment of the opposition and a bitterly disputed election.

The military-backed President Emmerson Mnangagwa, who again took the oath of office, faces the mammoth task of rebuilding a worsening economy and uniting a nation divided by a vote that many hoped would deliver change.

The 75-year-old Mnangagwa, who took power from his mentor Mugabe with the military’s help in November , said “my arms are outstretch­ed” to main opposition leader Nelson Chamisa after the constituti­onal Court on Friday rejected opposition claims of vote-rigging and upheld the president’s narrow July 30 victory.

Some supporters of the president, however, carried a makeshift coffin bearing Chamisa’s name during Sunday’s ceremony.

“In just nine months we’ve birthed a new Zimbabwe,” said Mnangagwa, who has promised democratic and economic reforms after Mugabe’s repressive 37-year rule. He opened his speech by reading a letter from the 94-year-old Mugabe, whose firing of Mnangagwa sparked November’s dramatic events, offering congratula­tions and saying he could not attend because “I’m not well.”

Mnangagwa told the crowd that “our democracy has indeed come of age” and he invited all political parties to unite and “develop the motherland.”

The 40-year-old Chamisa on Saturday said he respectful­ly rejects the court ruling and called the inaugurati­on “false.”

“They know they can’t invite me to a wedding where I was the one supposed to be receiving the gifts,” he said. Spokesman Nkululeko Sibanda said “we haven’t received any formal invitation.”

Ruling party spokesman Paul Mangwana criticized Chamisa over the inaugurati­on snub.

“It is important for nation-building at this critical time,” Mangwana told The Associated Press. “The problem is the (Movement for Democratic Change party) did not give us a good opposition leader, they gave us a schoolboy, so he is playing schoolboy politics.”

Upbeat supporters of the president and ruling ZANU-PF party filled the 60,000-seat National Sports Stadium in the capital, Harare, some catching buses and trucks in villages hundreds of kilometres away. The heads of state of South Africa, Congo, Rwanda and Zambia and elsewhere attended.

The mood was less enthusiast­ic in downtown Harare, an opposition stronghold. “He is not my president, why should I go?” asked one man.

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