Los Angeles Times

Mugabe’s body is returned to Zimbabwe; few pay heed

People are busy dealing with an economic crisis the ex-leader created

- Associated press

HARARE, Zimbabwe — Zimbabwe’s founding leader Robert Mugabe made his final journey back to the country Wednesday, his body flown into the capital amid the contradict­ions of his long, controvers­ial rule.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa, Mugabe’s closest ally and vice president before joining the militaryle­d effort to oust him in 2017, addressed an airport gathering of about 1,000 people, praising Mugabe as “our revolution­ary commander ... an icon of pan-Africanism” and “the man who created our nation.”

The former guerrilla leader, who died Friday at 95 in a hospital in Singapore, led the fight to end white minority rule in what was then Rhodesia, and ruled Zimbabwe from its independen­ce in 1980 until he was deposed. During his 37-year authoritar­ian leadership, Zimbabwe descended from prosperity to economic crisis marked by hyperinfla­tion, unemployme­nt and a drastic drop in living conditions for its 16 million people.

Wednesday’s subdued airport gathering was a far cry from the tumultuous crowd of 100,000 that swarmed the airport in January 1980 to welcome Mugabe back after years in exile. That boisterous greeting rocked Rhodesia and was a dramatic signal that its days of white minority rule were numbered. Within months Mugabe was elected president and sworn in as the leader of the new nation of Zimbabwe.

By contrast, no supporters were seen lining the streets of Harare, the capital, on Wednesday to mark Mugabe’s passing. The city otherwise bustled with residents scrambling to cope with the country’s economic deteriorat­ion, with vehicles lined up for scarce fuel, people gathering to pump water from neighborho­od wells because of a widespread shortage, and currency dealers selling cash.

The shortages and power cuts lasting up to 19 hours a day are the latest symptoms of Zimbabwe’s economic decline that began in 2000 when Mugabe launched the seizures of farms owned by whites. The chaotic, often violent confiscati­ons triggered a collapse of the onceproduc­tive agricultur­al sector and began a downward economic spiral. Further mismanagem­ent brought about hyperinfla­tion reaching more than a billion percent in 2009, which was halted only when the country abandoned its currency for the U.S. dollar.

Mnangagwa has vowed to return Zimbabwe to affluence, but in his nearly two years in office he has not succeeded in eradicatin­g corrosive corruption or achieving substantia­l economic growth.

Mugabe’s body was to be displayed at several historic locations before burial Sunday at an as yet unannounce­d site, a sign of the friction between the former leader’s family and the government.

Widow Grace Mugabe, her face covered in a heavy black veil, sat next to Mnangagwa as Mugabe’s casket, draped with a Zimbabwean flag, was wheeled to a podium by top military generals, several of whom had participat­ed in his ouster. Grace Mugabe had bitterly denounced Mnangagwa before her husband’s downfall, yet there was no show of antagonism during the short ceremony.

Mugabe’s casket was then taken to a nearby military barracks for prayers before going to the family’s 25bedroom home in the posh Borrowdale suburb for an evening gathering. At Blue Roof, Mugabe’s expansive mansion named for its striking bright blue Chinese-tiled roof, dozens of wailing relatives and friends welcomed Grace and her husband’s coffin, carried by members of the presidenti­al guard, before a church service got underway.

Earlier, about 500 mourners gathered in Zvimba, Mugabe’s birthplace about 55 miles northwest of Harare. The former leader’s body was expected to be taken there Thursday, as well as to a stadium in the capital’s poor Mbare neighborho­od for public viewing before being moved Saturday to the National Sports Stadium, where African heads of state, dignitarie­s and the public will attend a service.

 ?? Ben Curtis Associated Press ?? THE BODY of former President Robert Mugabe is brought back to Blue Roof, his 25-bedroom mansion in Harare, Zimbabwe. His countrymen did not line the streets of the capital to greet his final trip home.
Ben Curtis Associated Press THE BODY of former President Robert Mugabe is brought back to Blue Roof, his 25-bedroom mansion in Harare, Zimbabwe. His countrymen did not line the streets of the capital to greet his final trip home.

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