The Citizen (Gauteng)

Mugabe backs Mnangagwa

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Harare – Zimbabwe’s former president Robert Mugabe, who had vowed not to vote for his old party in July elections, on Thursday said he accepted the outcome of the disputed poll.

Mugabe said on the eve of the ballot he hoped his successor, Emmerson Mnangagwa, and the ruling Zanu-PF party would be voted out of office, complainin­g they had “tormented” him when he was removed from power following a military interventi­on last year.

He hinted that he would vote for the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) after the military and his once-loyal Zanu-PF lawmakers turned against him, ending his 37 years in power in just days.

Mnangagwa won the election taking 50.8% of the vote – just enough to avoid a run-off against the MDC’s Nelson Chamisa, on 44.3%.

Chamisa challenged the result in court on grounds the elections were rigged and lost.

Speaking on Thursday at a wake following the funeral of his mother-in-law in Harare, Mugabe said Mnangagwa was the rightful president.

“Mnangagwa is the winner. Things have been righted. We can’t deny it,” he said.

It was his first public comment since the election.

The 94-year-old had not been seen in public since the election and even missed the inaugurati­on of Mnangagwa on August 26, sending an apology that he was in Singapore for medical treatment.

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