Global Times

Zimbabwe vows vote to proceed despite rally blast

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The blast that rocked a ruling party campaign rally in which Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa narrowly escaped unharmed, has plunged the country into uncharted waters a month before the first elections in the post-Robert Mugabe era.

But authoritie­s on Sunday ruled out delaying the polls as police said 49 rallygoers, including the country’s two vice presidents, were injured in the attack, some of them seriously.

Mnangagwa has called for calm after the blast which went off “inches” away from him.

Footage circulatin­g on social media showed an explosion and plumes of smoke around the president as he walked down stairs from the podium at the city’s White City stadium in the second largest city of Bulawayo.

Mnangagwa said he was the target of the attack, which also injured vice presidents Kembo Mohadi and Constantin­o Chiwenga, and which the state media is describing as an assassinat­ion attempt.

The device “exploded a few inches away from me,” the president told state broadcaste­r Saturday night, blaming the attack on his “mortal enemies.”

“It’s not the first attempt (on) my life. I’m used to it. Six times my office has been broken into; cyanide was put in my offices so many times.”

The polls in five weeks will be the first since Zimbabwe’s veteran leader Mugabe resigned following a brief military takeover in November last year after 37 years in power.

While investigat­ions are under way, the government has ruled out a delay in the July 30 elections.

“As for the elections being postponed, a state of emergency being declared (due to the Bulawayo attack)... rest assured that the electoral program proceeds as scheduled,” the presidenti­al spokesman George Charamba told the state-run Sunday Mail. Police spokeswoma­n Charity Charamba on Sunday told reporters that “comprehens­ive investigat­ions are in progress.”

 ?? Photo: IC ?? Members of the Zimbabwe Red Cross Society (ZRCS) carry an injured woman after a suspected bomb exploded at a rally addressed by President Emmerson Mnangagwa, at White City Stadium in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, on Saturday. The explosion injured numerous people.
Photo: IC Members of the Zimbabwe Red Cross Society (ZRCS) carry an injured woman after a suspected bomb exploded at a rally addressed by President Emmerson Mnangagwa, at White City Stadium in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, on Saturday. The explosion injured numerous people.

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