The Independent on Saturday

ANC criticised for inviting Mugabe, who is ‘glaringly out of touch’, to WEF

-

ZIMBABWEAN President Robert Mugabe’s firm assertions that his country was “well resourced and not poor” at the World Economic Forum in Durban yesterday drew anger from civil society groups representi­ng millions of his countrymen who have migrated to South Africa.

“It continues to come as a shock that this old ancestor continues to participat­e at these high-profile events and then go on to lie and misreprese­nt facts about Zimbabwe.

“He was hallucinat­ing. Saying that Zimbabwe is more developed in southern Africa is shocking considerin­g the state the country is in right now,” said Shelton Chiyangwa, who leads the South African chapter of the #Tajamuka campaign.

“Hospitals are death traps without medication, we do not even have our own currency and the recently introduced bond notes have failed dismally to curb the cash crisis.

“Companies continue to close and leave the country and many are losing jobs, farmers are being terrorised by police when they want to get what they worked for which must contribute to the gross domestic product,” said Chiyangwa.

He said Mugabe was glaringly out of touch with the situation in Zimbabwe.

Gauteng-based Advocate Gabriel Shumba of the Zimbabwe Exiles Forum said Harare’s expenditur­e on these internatio­nal events was bleeding the fiscus.

“President Mugabe is often pictured sleeping at these internatio­nal events, a sign that his body and mind needs rest. His place is by the fireside with his grandchild­ren. To continue driving him beyond his physical and mental possibilit­ies will make us even more of a caricature country and is not good for investment.

“I would go so far as to say that his mere presence is a symbol of the fragility of our country, and we need to reinvent our brand. It is ironic that it is at this same gathering that President Jacob Zuma was boasting of injecting fresh and young blood into his ministries, yet he has no moral courage to advise President Mugabe of those vistas of possibilit­ies.”

A small group of Zimbabwean­s gathered near the WEF venue, protesting against Mugabe’s presence there.

Liberty Kwanisai, said it was an insult to millions who have fled his rule.

“We did not choose to be immigrants in South Africa where we are not wanted. Life is tough for a Zimbabwean living in South Africa. We get discrimina­ted (against) at the jobs we do because we don’t belong here. So Mugabe cannot act as if all is normal and come here to talk economics. What does he know about economics? Our country doesn’t even have a currency .”

“In terms of natural resources, Zimbabwe is rich. However, to materialis­e it into a conducive economy there is a stumbling block, hence making Zimbabwe the poorest country. If Zimbabwe is rich, we would not have millions of its citizens living in the diaspora.”

Chairperso­n of the Zimbabwe Community in South Africa, Ngqabutho Nicholas Mabhena, said his organisati­on supported the protests.

“The presence of Mugabe does not in anyway benefit the country in these internatio­nal forums. We are a people who can not access our money in sZimbabwea­n banks, caused by the bad economic policies imposed on us by this regime.

“The ANC must ask itself the relevance of its political relationsh­ip with Zanu-PF given the recent statements by the South African Minister of Police that, ex-Zimbabwean soldiers are involved in armed robberies in South Africa.”

Mugabe told the forum on Thursday that Zimbabwe is not a fragile state, nor is it poor, but it is a well-resourced nation. He said it was one of the most well-resourced countries on the continent. Zimbabwe has 14 universiti­es and a literacy rate at more than 90%, Mugabe said. – ANA

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? ‘ANCESTOR’: Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe participat­es in a discussion at the World Economic Forum on Africa 2017 meeting in Durban this week.
PICTURE: REUTERS ‘ANCESTOR’: Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe participat­es in a discussion at the World Economic Forum on Africa 2017 meeting in Durban this week.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa