Daily Dispatch

Panic as Mugabe courts NFP party

Zimbabwe’s ex-leader poses with Mutinhiri

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ZIMBABWE’S ex-leader Robert Mugabe sent shockwaves through the party he dominated for decades when he posed with the retired general who will take on the ruling Zanu-PF in this year’s election.

Mugabe grinned broadly in the photo, standing beside brigadier-general Ambrose Mutinhiri, the leader of opposition party the National Patriotic Front (NPF), which hopes to unseat the government in polls expected by August.

Mutinhiri’s abrupt resignatio­n from Zanu-PF last week followed by his surprise announceme­nt that he would be the presidenti­al candidate of the new party exposed deep divisions in the governing party.

The symbolism of the photo opportunit­y, which was featured at the top of a press release issued by the new proMugabe splinter party, was unmistakab­le.

Two days later Zanu-PF Youth League supporters chanted “down with Mugabe” at a rally, a rare outburst from the normally discipline­d members of the party that Mugabe led for nearly four decades.

A leader of the league, Pupurai Tigarepi, later said that if Mugabe is not responsibl­e, we are going to look at him as a new enemy.

In response to the hostility, the new president did little to defend the man who was once presented by Zanu-PF to the world as a liberation hero and father of the nation.

“There is an issue regarding the former president,” President Emmerson Mnangagwa said.

“We see in the media various speculatio­ns about his activities… we are not happy with what the media is saying. We don’t know whether it’s correct or not but it is an issue we are examining.”

“[The photo] sort of solidifies the whole idea that the Mugabe family is behind the

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 ?? Picture: BLOOMBERG ?? TIME IS UP: Demonstrat­ors call for the resignatio­n of president Robert Mugabe (pictured right) in Harare in November. The former leader has now surprised by courting the opposition
Picture: BLOOMBERG TIME IS UP: Demonstrat­ors call for the resignatio­n of president Robert Mugabe (pictured right) in Harare in November. The former leader has now surprised by courting the opposition

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