Mugabe appears in public, ending death rumors

Politics
President Robert Mugabe appeared in public for the first time in several weeks on Sunday to mourn the death of his sister

HARARE – President Robert Mugabe appeared in public for the first time in several weeks on Sunday to mourn the death of his sister, ending speculation that he may be bed-ridden, in declining health or even dead.

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The health of Mugabe, who is 89 and has ruled since the former Rhodesia’s independence from Britain in 1980, is the hottest news topic for Zimbabwe’s 13 million people and its ruling ZANU-PF party.

ZANU-PF is struggling to keep a lid on a battle over succession and there are fears it could implode in a bloody factional fight that might even suck in the army if Mugabe dies without resolving the issue.

Mugabe, who has spent two weeks of his current bout of annual leave in Singapore, appeared at his official State House residence to accept condolences for his 78-year-old sister Bridget, who died in Harare on Sunday after three years in a coma.

Mugabe appeared downcast over his bereavement but showed no visible signs of ill health as he greeted senior party officials and spoke of his sister’s life.

Rumors sparked by his recent absence from the spotlight have been swirling around Harare in the last two weeks, some suggesting that the veteran leader was seriously ill and other even suggesting he had died.

As with previous rounds of speculation, his lieutenants dismissed the rumors as baseless. Mugabe has denied that previous trips to Singapore were for prostate cancer treatment.

Joice Mujuru, Mugabe’s vice-president both in government and in ZANU-PF, is frontrunner in the race to succeed the president. But her main rival, Justice Minister and former defense minister Emmerson Mnangagwa, has not given up, analysts said.

Mugabe himself maintains there is no crisis, arguing that the party is strong and organized enough to choose his successor at the right time. His critics say he wants to die in office.

Senior government officials said Equatorial Guinea President Mbasogo Theodore Nguema had cancelled a planned visit to Harare on Monday following Bridget’s death. Mugabe had been expected to break his holiday to host Nguema.

– Reuters