Texarkana Gazette

Zimbabwe’s Mugabe emerges, rejects ruling party in election

- By Farai Mutsaka

HARARE, Zimbabwe—In a surprise address to the nation after months of silence, Zimbabwe’s former leader Robert Mugabe emerged just hours before Monday’s historic election declaring that “I will not vote for those who have illegally taken power” and turning his back on the ruling party he long controlled.

Slow and rambling, the 94-yearold Mugabe spoke to reporters on Sunday with bitterness about his dramatic removal in November under military pressure and amid a ruling party feud.

He was coy about endorsing anyone ahead of the election in which the former deputy that he fired, President Emmerson Mnangagawa, faces a 40-year-old lawyer and pastor, Nelson Chamisa. He indicated, however, that Chamisa was the only viable candidate.

“I cannot vote for those who have tormented me,” Mugabe said in a reference to Mnangagwa, who took office with the military’s support. “I cannot vote for ZANU-PF,” the ruling party that has rejected him as well.

Mugabe, who has backed a new political party that is part of a coalition supporting Chamisa, said of him: “He seems to be doing well at his rallies ... I wish to meet him if he wins.”

And he added: “Whoever wins, we wish him well. ... And let us accept the verdict.”

Later on Sunday, Mnangagwa said in a video posted on Facebook that Chamisa had “forged a deal” with Mugabe and that a vote for the opposition leader amounted to an endorsemen­t of the old order.

“We can no longer believe that his intentions are to transform Zimbabwe and rebuild our nation,” the president said.

Chamisa, meanwhile, said at a news conference that he welcomed the vote of Mugabe or any other Zimbabwean and that “you don’t discrimina­te against voters.”

Many in Zimbabwe knew no other leader but Mugabe, who led the country for 37 years after independen­ce from white minority rule in 1980. What began with optimism crumbled into repression of the opposition, alleged vote-rigging, violent land seizures from white farmers and years of internatio­nal sanctions.

The southern Africa nation hopes that a credible vote on Monday could get those sanctions lifted and bring badly needed investment for a collapsed economy. Mnangagwa, a former Mugabe confidante, has tried to recast himself as a voice for reform, inviting back Western dozens of election observers and pledging a free and fair vote.

Mugabe defended Zimbabwe’s election commission after Chamisa and the opposition raised concerns that the vote will be flawed, saying that “it acts quite freely.” And in a breathtaki­ng statement, he asserted that his long stay in office had been free from meddling: “It was not the army that ensured I remained in power.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ Former Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe holds a press briefing at his residence in Harare on Sunday on the eve of the country’s election. Zimbabwe votes Monday in an election that could, if deemed credible, tilt the country toward recovery after...
Associated Press ■ Former Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe holds a press briefing at his residence in Harare on Sunday on the eve of the country’s election. Zimbabwe votes Monday in an election that could, if deemed credible, tilt the country toward recovery after...

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