Opposition leader killed in plane crash
RATON: A group of prominent friends, including a key Zimbabwean opposition leader and a Texas-based investor and philanthropist, was heading to a ranch in the US state of New Mexico when their helicopter crashed and burned in a remote area, killing five people aboard.
Friends and family members confirmed on Thursday that opposition leader Roy Bennett and his wife, Heather, had travelled to New Mexico to spend their holiday with friend and wealthy businessman Charles Burnett III at his ranch. Burnett’s friends, pilot Jamie Coleman Dodd of Colorado and co-pilot Paul Cobb of Texas, were ferrying the group aboard a Huey UH-1 when it went down after dark on Wednesday.
All five died, according to New Mexico State Police.
The only survivor was Andra Cobb, the co-pilot’s daughter who was in a long-term relationship with Burnett. She was able to escape before the helicopter burst into flames.
Her voice breaking, Martha Cobb told reporters that her 39-year-old daughter was hospitalised with broken bones.
“She’s just very distraught,” the mother said in a telephone interview. “I’m just glad my daughter is OK, but I hate that my husband of 41 years is gone.”
Martha Cobb and her husband had befriended the Bennetts while travelling on cruises.
Roy Bennett, 60, treasurer-general of the Morgan Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change opposition party, won a devoted following of black Zimbabweans for passionately advocating political change.
Bennett, a white man who spoke fluent Shona and drew the wrath of former president Robert Mugabe, survived a traumatic year in jail and death threats over his work. He was known as “Pachedu,” meaning “one of us” in Shona and was often called the sharpest thorn in Mr Mugabe’s side.
Obert Gutu, spokesman for the MDC-T party, described Bennett’s death as a “huge and tragic loss.”
Burnett, born in England, inherited part of a family fortune and had been friends for some time with the two pilots, said his personal lawyer, Martyn Hill.
Both Mr Dodd and Mr Cobb were experienced aviators who would not have taken unnecessary risks in the helicopter, Mr Hill said. Mr Cobb served in Vietnam and survived being shot down, he said.
A 911 call from Andra Cobb alerted authorities to the crash, whose cause is under investigation.
The group was heading to the Emery Gap Ranch, a mountainous property on the Colorado-New Mexico border. Burnett bought it in February last year, said Sam Middleton, a real estate broker in Lubbock, Texas, who helped with the purchase.