Weekend Herald

Sleeping? Mugabe’s just resting his eyes

- AdamTaylor

If you happen to spot Robert Mugabe with his eyes closed for long periods during a high- level meeting, don’t worry. According to the 93- year- old’s spokesman, the longtime President of Zimbabwe is not sleeping — he’s simply resting his eyes.

In an interview with the state- run Herald newspaper published yesterday, the spokesman, George Charamba, said he “felt like a failure when there is this reading that the President is sleeping in conference­s”. “At 93, there is something that happens to the eyes and the President cannot suffer bright lights,” Charamba said. “If you look at his poise, he looks down, avoids direct lighting.”

Mugabe has led Zimbabwe since 1980. Initially lauded as a freedom fighter, his reputation has suffered over the years, and the internatio­nal community today largely views him as a fervent critic of the West who courts controvers­y with his autocratic ways.

Despite his unwillingn­ess to relinquish power, there have been widespread rumours in recent years that Mugabe’s health is failing. The rumours have been compounded by his frequent trips to Singapore, where he was said to be receiving medical treatment.

Images of Mugabe seemingly asleep at meetings have become the butt of jokes in independen­t media critical of the strongman. At a meeting of the World Economic Forum in Durban, South Africa, this month, the Zimbabwean leader was photograph­ed slumped against the chair with his eyes closed at more than one point, prompting snickers on Twitter.

In his interview with the Herald, Charamba suggested that Nelson Mandela, the late leader of postaparth­eid South Africa, had a similar problem with his eyes. “In the case of Mandela, if you remember, you were not allowed to even use flashes when- ever he was in the room,” the Mugabe spokesman said.

The South African leader’s eyesight problems were attributed to the years he spent working in a limestone quarry while imprisoned on Robben Island, where the bright sunlight reflecting off the stone caused “snow blindness” in Mandela.

Mugabe’s trips to Singapore were also a result of his eyesight problems, Charamba said. “The President goes to Singapore for a very specific problem which has to do with the level of sophistica­tion of medical skills that we have developed,” the spokesman said, adding that such an arrangemen­t wasn’t unusual for a head of state and that Mugabe’s regular physician was a black Zimbabwean.

The Zimbabwean President’s foreign trips for medical treatment are viewed with suspicion by many domestic critics, who argue that his economic policies have left their nation’s healthcare infrastruc­ture deeply damaged. On Mugabe’s 90th birthday, Charamba denied rumours that the President had travelled to Singapore for treatment of prostate cancer.

Mugabe’s health issues are rarely discussed openly by Zimbabwean officials. In 2015, after he was photograph­ed falling to the floor after giving a speech in Harare, officials even denied that the fall occurred.

 ?? Pictures / AP ?? Protesters fly Confederat­e flags as the statue is removed.
Pictures / AP Protesters fly Confederat­e flags as the statue is removed.
 ?? Picture / AP ?? Robert Mugabe apparently looks down to avoid the light.
Picture / AP Robert Mugabe apparently looks down to avoid the light.

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