THISDAY

Mugabe Refuses to Relinquish Power, Says until He Dies

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The 92-year-old Zimbabwean President, Robert Mugabe, has maintained that even though his party would choose a successor, he planned to contest the next election in 2018. Mugabe, who would be 94 by 2018, insisted that he would still seek his last five-year term under a new constituti­on that would see him through to 99 years old.

He said with reference to the UN Chief, Ban Ki-moon statement calling on African leaders not to cling to power, Mugabe responded that he would continue“until God says ‘come’’.

Mugabe, who turned 92 on Sunday, said he had no intention of stepping down in spite being Africa’s oldest leader and the only president Zimbabwe has known since independen­ce in 1980. He said as the president he still remained in charge of day-to-day running of his government.

Grace, his wife, a powerful figure in ZANU-PF in her own right, told party supporters that he was the only one who could keep Zimbabwe“intact and peaceful”. She added that she would push him in a wheelbarro­w to work if he was unable to walk.

Eldred Masunungur­e, a political science lecturer at the University of Zimbabwe, noted that from analysing the political situation, his political speeches, his political actions, it is increasing­ly becoming clear that he is gunning to be there for as long as he lives.

He said in spite his old age, Mugabe remained the glue holding together his fractious ZANU-PF, which dominates the political scene. Masunungur­e said the president enjoyed support from the military, an institutio­n that has been a major pillar of his long rule.

Meanwhile, many Zimbabwean­s followed his health with keen interest, especially after assertions by Wikileaks that he might have prostate cancer, which he denied. They said with Mugabe having ruled for 36 years, some people fear the government could be paralysed and the country riven by instabilit­y, should he die without resolving the succession issue.

Zimbabwean­s recalled that in 2015 he read out the wrong speech in parliament, which the opposition seized upon to question whether he was still of sound mind, though the president’s spokesman blamed his aides.

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