Gulf News

Four in court after Mugabe wife heckled

Suspects arrested after attending a ruling Zanu-PF party rally in Zimbabwe

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Four people have appeared in court in Zimbabwe on charges of underminin­g the authority of President Robert Mugabe after his wife was heckled while addressing a rally, a state-owned newspaper reported yesterday.

The Herald said the four were arrested after attending a ruling Zanu-PF party rally in the country’s southweste­rn city of Bulawayo where Grace Mugabe was jeered during a speech on Saturday.

Song of protest

Prosecutor Jerry Mutsindikw­a told a magistrate court that “the quartet, with others allegedly sang the song Into oyenzayo siyayizond­a - whose lyrics in Ndebele mean “we hate what you are doing” — while Grace addressed the rally.

They are “facing a charge of underminin­g the authority of the president,” he said.

The incident angered Mugabe who spoke at the same rally shortly after his wife, accusing his deputy Emmerson Mnangagwa of organising and sponsoring the hecklers.

He vowed to fire Mnangagwa, which he did two days later, in a dramatic move that appeared to open the way for his wife Grace to succeed him in office.

Grace Mugabe could be appointed as one of the country’s two vice presidents at the party congress next month.

Mnangagwa who had been touted as an obvious successor to Mugabe, fled into exile this week. His whereabout­s is unknown.

The arrest of the four Zanu-PF activists came as the Zimbabwe high court Thursday granted bail to Martha O’Donovan, a 25-year-old American journalist charged with insulting Mugabe on account of an alleged tweet that described the ageing leader as “selfish and sick”.

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