Tired Mugabe gets emotional

Must Try

Trending

By Blessings Mashaya

President Robert Mugabe showed both his advanced age and  human side when he told thousands of Zanu PF supporters who gathered in Matobo at the weekend for his 93rd birthday celebrations how the deaths of his parents and siblings had left him feeling very lonely.

President Robert Mugabe slammed for 'empty' State of the Nation Address
President Robert Mugabe

While most thankful to his creator for his long life, Mugabe went down memory lane, revealing how over the years death had robbed him of members of his family, including his sisters.

“I thank the Almighty God that I was able to live from 92 last year to 93 this year.

“That’s a long journey. It’s a long journey to have walked, a journey with its own joys, displeasures, its own sorrows.

“The joys are those when mother, father and you are still together, your brothers and sisters are still together with you. And the sorrows are those that arise through missing these. I have missed them.

“I have just one sister left by my father’s second wife, Regina. When I look back I say Oh Lord, why were these taken before me and why have I lived so long alone and alive,” an emotional Mugabe told his supporters

The nonagenarian is the only leader Zimbabweans have ever known since the country gained its independence from Britain in 1980. He is also the oldest leader in the world.

He is facing increased pressure from both within Zanu PF and outside to bring to an end his long but tumultuous rule, by paving the way for a successor.

In Matobo, Mugabe also appeared to hint that he was beginning to feel the strain of his job, as well as the trials and tribulations of poor health and advanced age.

“It’s not always predictable that if you are alive this year that you will be alive next year and the year after next. It doesn’t matter how healthy you might feel, the decision that you continue to leap and to enjoy life is that of the one personality we all call the Almighty God.

“And so, on this occasion, we should thank the Almighty God. I cannot answer that … but I think sometimes I hear a silent voice saying, ‘All of you, each man, each woman has a mission to fulfil in this world’.

“You have a mandate. That mandate might run a short time. Other mandates run longer times. But your own mandate, your own mission … I have been allowed to run for as long as you are still alive.

“You must discover what it is, and I cannot discover it more than saying I am one amongst many and not just one amongst many, but one who has been made by the many their leader,” the tired-looking Mugabe said.

Mugabe celebrated his birthday at a time that Zanu PF is being devoured by its ugly tribal, factional and succession wars, which have worsened over the past few weeks.

His warring party is split between two bitterly opposed groups — Team Lacoste, which is rallying behind Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s mooted presidential aspirations, and the Generation 40 camp which is rabidly opposed to the Midlands godfather succeeding him. Daily News

Related Articles

Moses Tofa is a Research Leader, political analyst, and self-critical Pan-Africanist. He holds a PhD in Politics from the University of Johannesburg and a PhD in Conflict Studies from the University of KwaZulu Natal. (Picture via Facebook - Moses Tofa)

Who will drive the bus: Mamvura or General Chiwenga? Will President Mnangagwa retire peacefully?...

0
Zimbabwe is at a crossroads where critical and cruel decisions are being made in the corridors of power. These decisions will determine the country’s direction for many years to come.
Chatunga Mugabe (28) and his co-accused, Tobias Mugabe Matonhodze (33), appeared before the Alexandra Magistrate’s Court in Johannesburg (Picture via SABC News)

Trauma, power and the unfinished healing of Zimbabwe: The case study of Mugabe and...

0
Zimbabwe’s modern political history is often narrated through elections, constitutional changes, economic collapse, land reform, sanctions, liberation-war heroism, tribalism, authoritarian rule and the emerging culture of a cargo cult.
US Donald Trump and Zimbabwean president Emmerson Mnangagwa (Picture via Shealeah Craighead, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons and X - @edmnangagwa)

Mnangagwa halts US$350 million health deal talks with Trump administration

0
HARARE - The Government of Zimbabwe has abandoned negotiations for a proposed US$350 million health funding agreement with the Donald Trump administration after Emmerson Mnangagwa directed officials to halt discussions, arguing that national sovereignty outweighed the potential benefits of the deal despite mounting challenges in the country’s health sector.
Caricature of Professor Jonathan Moyo (Picture via AI)

Those we reject: On exile, power, and the need for a home in Zimbabwean...

0
Zimbabwe stands once again at a constitutional crossroads. The ruling party’s push to extend President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s term to 2030 has stirred outrage, anxiety, and exhaustion.
Picture illustration of President Emmerson Mnangagwa shredding the constitution (Graphics by Gabriel Manyati)

Mnangagwa’s midnight amendments: Why Agenda 2030 is already a done deal

0
In Zimbabwe, constitutions are revered in theory but are in practice rearranged at the whim of the ruling elite. I therefore pen the words below with a heavy heart, fully aware that they may very well induce learned helplessness in the reader thanks to the fatalistic tone.

Don't miss a story

Breaking News straight to your inbox.

No spam just news !

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Donate to Nehanda Radio

Latest Recipes

Latest

More Recipes Like This