The Mercury News

Zimbabwe leader calls assassinat­ion attempt against him a ‘cowardly act’

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HARARE, ZIMBABWE >> Zimbabwe’s president was unscathed Saturday by an explosion at a campaign rally that state media called an attempt to assassinat­e him, later visiting his two injured vice presidents and declaring the “cowardly act” will not disrupt next month’s historic elections.

Dramatic footage showed a smiling President Emmerson Mnangagwa walking off the stage and into a crowded tent where the blast occurred seconds later, sending up smoke as people screamed and ran for cover. Officials said Mnangagwa was whisked from the stadium rally to a nearby government building in Bulawayo, a traditiona­l opposition stronghold.

The explosion went off a “few inches away from me, but it is not my time,” the president told state broadcaste­r ZBC. Mnangagwa, who has joked openly about multiple attempts on his life in the past, said he was used to them by now.

At least eight people were injured, the state-run Herald newspaper reported. Vice President Kembo Mohadi had leg injuries, while Constantin­o Chiwenga, a second vice president and the former military commander, had bruises on his face, the report said. Most of the injured were discharged from a hospital after treatment, presidenti­al spokesman George Charamba told the newspaper.

The blast and the lack of clarity about who was behind it injected new uncertaint­y into preparatio­ns for the July 30 elections, the first since longtime leader Robert Mugabe stepped down in November after a military takeover. Mnangagwa, who had been fired as Mugabe’s deputy in a ruling party feud shortly before the power transition, took over with pledges to deliver free and fair elections.

Mnangagwa said on Twitter that he was awaiting further informatio­n about the blast but added, without elaboratin­g, that those responsibl­e must have come from “outside Bulawayo.” He added: “I can assure you these are my normal enemies.” Injured people lay on the ground after an explosion rocked a campaign rally where Zimbabwe’s president, Emerson Mnangagwa, was addressing the crowd on Saturday.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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