spot_img

Mugabe leaves ‘developed’ Zimbabwe for medical checks in Singapore

Must Try

Trending

Nehanda Radio
Zimbabwe News and Internet Radio

By MacDonald Dzirutwe

President Robert Mugabe has left the country for medical checks in Singapore, the government said in a statement, about two months after his previous such trip to the south Asian nation.

- Advertisement -
File Picture: President Mugabe and First Lady Grace Mugabe arrive at Charles de Gaulle Airport. The President was in Paris to attend the 21st United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (Picture by Presidential photographer Joseph Nyadzayo)

Aged 93, Mugabe is the only leader the southern African country has known since independence in 1980, and his health is a hot topic ahead of a presidential election scheduled for next year that he is due to contest.

He flew to Singapore late on Monday. The Ministry of Information said he was expected to return home at the weekend.

Mugabe now struggles to walk, with security aides forming a human shield around him in public, often making it difficult for reporters to film or take pictures of him.

- Advertisement -

Last week at a World Economic Forum Summit in South Africa, Mugabe sat slumped in his chair, wringing his hands, as he told a panel discussion in a low murmur that his country was not a “fragile state”.

Critics say his infirmities make him unfit to hold office but he continues to exercise tight control over his ZANU-PF party. In February he said the party and Zimbabwe’s people saw no viable alternative candidate to him for next year’s elections. Reuters

 

Related Articles

Then Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe speaks at a ceremony of the National Day for the Republic of Zimbabwe in Expo park in Shanghai, China, August 11, 2010 — Photo by IC Photo via DepositPhotos.com

National Trauma: The CURSE study of Robert Mugabe and his political and family trajectory

Mugabe is often described in binaries: hero or villain, liberator or dictator. Both are true and yet neither is adequate. Because Mugabe was not only a political figure. He was also a psychological case study of something far more unsettling:
Harare,Zimbabwe,18 November 2017. Flag waving anti-Mugabe protesters taking selfies in front of an army truck during anti -Mugabe demostrations in solidarity with the miullitary intervention. — Photo by Maboss283 via DepositPhotos.com

Mnangagwa reproducing the very conditions that facilitated Mugabe’s downfall

0
British historian Lord Acton once plainly stated, “power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely.” That sincere observation gives a precise diagnosis of Emmerson Mnangagwa’s unraveling presidency in Zimbabwe.
President Mugabe caps Forget Mutema who graduated with First Class Bachelor of Accountancy Honours Degree at the Bindura University of Science Education’s 16th graduation ceremony in Bindura yesterday, looking on is Higher and Tertiary Education minister Professor Jonathan Moyo. —(Picture by Tawanda Mudimu)

The thinker and the tactician: Why Robert Mugabe was more intelligent than Jonathan Moyo

1
Zimbabwe has produced many politicians who could shout, scheme or survive. It has produced very few who could genuinely think. Among those few, two names inevitably surface: Robert Gabriel Mugabe and Jonathan Nathaniel Moyo.
Then Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe speaks at a ceremony of the National Day for the Republic of Zimbabwe in Expo park in Shanghai, China, August 11, 2010 — Photo by IC Photo via DepositPhotos.com

The road not taken: Britain, Mugabe and the limits of military power

0
In the quiet release of declassified British government files, history has once again intruded into the present. The documents reveal that at the height of Zimbabwe’s political and economic crisis in the early 2000s, the United Kingdom seriously debated a range of options for removing Robert Mugabe from power, including, however briefly, the military option.
File picture of an illustration of South Africa's then president Nelson Mandela with the country's flag in the background (Picture by Frizio via DepositPhotos.com)

The Dangers of Comfortable Lies: Why Mbofana misreads Mandela and misrepresents Mugabe

3
Tendai Ruben Mbofana’s defence of Nelson Mandela on Nehanda Radio reads like an attempt to enshroud the past in bubble wrap.

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
- Advertisement -spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Latest Recipes

Latest

More Recipes Like This