Mugabe marks 93rd birthday in opposition area

Age does not seem to deter the Zimabwean President who says he will run again in 2018 polls.

February 25, 2017 07:32 pm | Updated 07:33 pm IST - MATOPO HILLS (ZIMBABWE):

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe and his wife Grace attend his 93rd birthday celebrations in Matopos on the outskirts of Bulawayo on February 25, 2017. Age has not withered his spirit as Mr. Mugabe is defying calls to resign after nearly four decades in power and has declared he will run for office again in 2018 elections.

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe and his wife Grace attend his 93rd birthday celebrations in Matopos on the outskirts of Bulawayo on February 25, 2017. Age has not withered his spirit as Mr. Mugabe is defying calls to resign after nearly four decades in power and has declared he will run for office again in 2018 elections.

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe celebrated his 93rd birthday on Saturday (his actual birthday was on Tuesday, February 21) amid granite hills where ancient spirits are said to dwell, defying calls to resign after nearly four decades in power in a region known for opposing the man who says he’ll run again in 2018 elections.

Thousands of government supporters, some wearing clothing adorned with Mr. Mugabe’s image, converged in Matabeleland for a birthday bash and show of strength for the ruling ZANU-PF party, beset by squabbling in the past year as the elderly President weakened and factions, one including his wife Grace, sparred ahead of an expected power vacuum.

His long life their heartache

Mr. Mugabe, a former rebel leader who took power after independence from white minority rule in 1980, declared a few days ago that most Zimbabweans think nobody can replace him. The longevity of the world’s oldest head of state is a source of heartache for Zimbabwe’s splintered opposition and uncertainty for investors, leaving the economically struggling country in limbo.

Mr. Mugabe on Saturday wore dark glasses and a multi-coloured jacket bearing an image of himself in younger days, sitting impassively as speakers praised his leadership and delegates from ruling parties in Botswana, Namibia, Angola and Zambia kneeled at his chair to greet him. The Chinese Ambassador read a congratulatory message from President Xi Jinping.

At one point Mr. Mugabe raised his fist in salute, but he also rested his drooping head on one hand. His wife adjusted his glasses.

‘Long, long journey’

Much of the President’s speech, which lasted more than an hour, was personal. He described his life as a “long, long journey,” saying it was difficult to predict how long it would last. “The decision that you continue to live and to enjoy life is that of the one personality we all call the almighty God,” he said.

Zimbabwe’s challenges include drought and a strike by doctors over working conditions that has forced army and police doctors to deploy in public hospitals. The government has endured other crises, rejecting decades of opposition and Western allegations about human rights violations, voting irregularities and economic mismanagement.

Wishing him many more b’days

Mr. Mugabe also has been serenaded at a palace cake-cutting by singers who wished him “many more” birthdays. Air Zimbabwe, the cash-strapped national carrier, and other entities took out birthday notices in pro-government media. Dancers and musicians performed ahead of Saturday’s party at a school in Matopo Hills, on the outskirts of Bulawayo city with caves and rock art dating back thousands of years.

The region, whose mystical-looking rock formations have been the setting for religious ceremonies, is also associated with the often violent fissures of pre- and post-colonial Africa. British colonialist Cecil John Rhodes is buried here. It is also the site of mass graves of some of the thousands of Ndebele people killed in the 1980s by a North Korea-trained military unit loyal to Mr. Mugabe, a member of the rival Shona ethnic group.

The memory of that episode prompted some anti-government activists to denounce the selection of Matopo Hills for Mr. Mugabe’s birthday party, though ruling party figures said it would promote tourism in the area.

Possible successor

Mr. Mugabe’s state security minister at the time of the killings, Emmerson Mnangagwa, is now a Vice-President and possible successor. Some ruling party members who support him have criticized Grace Mugabe, a leader in a rival faction who recently said her husband should run as a “corpse” if he dies before the next elections.

Mr. Mnangagwa is also sticking to the official script that Mr. Mugabe is the only option for now, denouncing any “mad young people” in the ZANU-PF party who want him to oust Mr. Mugabe.

The ruling party, Mr. Mnangagwa has said, “will rule forever” and will vote for Mr. Mugabe in next year’s elections.

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