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Zimbabwe News and Internet Radio

Mugabe savaged over Far East trip

By Gift Phiri

President Robert Mugabe has once again come under heavy fire for taking his family on a long and expensive annual holiday to the Far East — and, as usual, shunning local tourism destinations.

President Robert Mugabe has been in power for 36 uninterrupted years
President Robert Mugabe has been in power for 36 uninterrupted years

Mugabe flew out of Zimbabwe on Tuesday night, accompanied by his family and a large contingent of aides, for his year-end jaunt which is fully-funded by long-suffering taxpayers.

According to the 2017 National Budget, the President’s Office was allocated a whopping $175 million, at a time that Zimbabwe’s collapsing public health sector — which has seen hospitals running out of drugs and potable water among other things — was once again overlooked as a priority area and got a substantially reduced vote.

It has been estimated that most of Mugabe’s overseas sojourns blow up at least $3 million per trip, with the nonagenarian having visited Singapore alone on more than 10 occasions in 2016.

Analysts and opposition figures who spoke to the Daily News yesterday said Mugabe seemingly “hates anything African”, as Zimbabweans had never been told that he was vacationing at home or in other tourist-friendly countries on the continent such as Malawi, Kenya, Botswana, South Africa and Mauritius.

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Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai’s MDC also said it was “immoral” that the nonagenarian should “even think” of taking a holiday at this time when Zimbabweans were suffering “untold economic pain” as a result of his continuing misrule.
Its spokesperson Obert Gutu, also said travelling abroad now appeared to be Mugabe’s way of “escaping from the problems he has created at home”.

“This is a colossal embarrassment to have the entire First Family and their in-laws flying more than 10 000km away for an extended holiday at State expenditure.”

“Other leaders like President Jacob Zuma of South Africa are spending their holidays at their rural homes in Nkandla, KwaZulu Natal, but Mugabe can never spend his annual holidays at local tourist resorts such as the Victoria Falls, Kariba or Nyanga,” he said.

“Whilst more than 90 percent of Zimbabweans are going to experience a bleak and miserable Christmas holiday because they have got no money, Mugabe and his extended family will be blowing millions of State funds somewhere in Singapore, Hong Kong and Dubai. This is tragic,” he added.

The spokesperson of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Jacob Mafume, noted sarcastically that Mugabe “has been on holiday the whole year”, adding that he appeared to have no problem leaving ordinary citizens suffering under the weight of the myriad crises that he had triggered.

“The pretence that he is going for a holiday is as fake as the legend of Father Christmas itself. He needs to retire and allow Zimbabwe to recover,” Mafume said.

Before he was slapped with targeted sanctions, Mugabe used to go to the West for his long holidays, and was a regular visitor to the UK in particular.

On his way back from the Far East, the increasingly frail and ever globe-trotting nonagenarian will pass through Addis Ababa on January 22, 2017, for the 28th summit of the African Union (AU) — where the election of the new AU chairperson, to take over from South Africa’s Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, will be held.

In his absence, Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa will act in his position. Daily News

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