The Mail on Sunday

Crowds shun Mugabe funeral

- By Stephen Adams

IT was meant to be a resounding send-off for Zimbabwe’s founding father, the freedom fighter who liberated the southern African nation from white-minority rule.

But Robert Mugabe’s transforma­tion from national hero to despotic tyrant was underlined yesterday as his funeral was conducted in a venue less than half full.

Row upon row of the 60,000capacit­y National Sports Stadium in the capital Harare lay empty.

Mugabe died on September 6 in Singapore at the age of 95, two years after being ousted from power. The former dictator’s widow, known as Gucci Grace for her lavish spending habits, wanted her husband to be buried in his home town in a snub to President Emmerson Mnangagwa, the once-trusted adviser who ousted him.

But the new leader, dubbed ‘the Crocodile’ after making his sudden and brazen power grab, wanted Mugabe to be interred at the national Heroes’ Acre monument.

The two sides eventually agreed to build a mausoleum at the monument which means Mugabe’s burial will be delayed for around 30 days as it has yet to be constructe­d.

During the service, President Mnangagwa, who overthrew Mugabe in a military-backed coup, paid tribute to him as ‘our revolution­ary icon, statesman, leader, wartime commander and former president.

‘We shall continue to hear his rich, brave, defiant and inspiring voice,’ he said. ‘A giant tree of Africa has fallen. Today, Africa weeps.’

More than a dozen African leaders, past and present, flew in for the occasion. Among them was Teodoro Mbasogo, the president of Equatorial Guinea, who praised Mugabe as ‘a true icon in the liberation of the continent from colonialis­m’. Kenya’s Uhuru Kenyatta described Mugabe as ‘an intellectu­al giant, a visionary leader and a relentless champion of African dignity’.

But Mugabe’s nephew Walter Chidhakwa struck a more sombre note recalling his last days. ‘He was a sad, sad man,’ he told the crowd. ‘It was a hard and excruciati­ng journey.’

The ceremony did not draw attention to Mugabe’s pitiless persecutio­n of political rivals, his policy of confiscati­ng land from white farmers, or his wider mishandlin­g of the economy which led to skyrocketi­ng inflation that left millions in poverty during the latter half of his 37-year reign.

A 21- gun salute and a six- plane flypast concluded his funeral.

 ??  ?? FAREWELL TO A TYRANT: The body of Robert Mugabe is taken into Harare’s National Sports Stadium for his funeral, far left – but the venue was less than half full, with row upon row of seats lying empty, left
FAREWELL TO A TYRANT: The body of Robert Mugabe is taken into Harare’s National Sports Stadium for his funeral, far left – but the venue was less than half full, with row upon row of seats lying empty, left
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