spot_img

Zanu-PF regularises Blue Roof title deeds

Must Try

Trending

By Joseph Madzimure

ZANU-PF has title to the late former President Robert Mugabe’s houses namely the imposing Blue Roof mansion in Borrowdale and a Mount Pleasant house occupied by his daughter, Bona.

- Advertisement -
The Blue Roof mansion in Borrowdale, Harare
The Blue Roof mansion in Borrowdale, Harare

President Mnangagwa is now working on modalities to transfer the title deeds of the two houses to Cde Mugabe’s family to ensure they have decent accommodation.

The Mugabe family spokesperson, Mr Leo Mugabe, confirmed yesterday that Zimbabwe’s late founding father did not own the houses.

Addressing journalists in Zvimba yesterday, Mr Mugabe said; “The issue of properties is being handled by the President. He is handling the issue to ensure the family is safe.

- Advertisement -

“I was told by President Mnangagwa that the party will help to transfer the title deeds of the properties to the former President’s family. I do not want to jeopardise the process.”

Mr Mugabe said Zanu-PF owned the land on which the two houses were constructed.

“It’s so funny the party (Zanu-PF) is the one that bought the first house in Mt Pleasant and the land on Blue Roof property.

“It leaves the former President Mugabe without a house in Harare,” he said.

Zanu-PF Secretary for Administration, Dr Obert Mpofu, confirmed the development saying they were doing the paper work to transfer the properties. “The process is currently underway to transfer them to the (Mugabe) family,” said Dr Mpofu.

President Mnangagwa, who was a special assistant to the former President during the liberation struggle, has repeatedly said he will ensure the family was well taken care of.

In his tribute to Cde Mugabe during a State funeral held at the National Sports Stadium in Harare on Saturday, President Mnangagwa said Cde Mugabe’s legacy was a springboard for economic development.

He described Cde Mugabe as a “giant African tree that has fallen”. “He taught a generation, led a nation, inspired a continent, spoke for the oppressed and defined the politics and economics of an epoch. The man who lies before us was for years our leader, our commander, mentor and President, both in the party and Government. . .

“Today, Southern Africa mourns the sad loss of front-liner. Today, Africa weeps, grieving over the loss of a true Pan-African,” he said.

President Mnangagwa said during his lifetime, Cde Mugabe was vilified and given “many false names” to present him in bad light, but he remained a true African icon.

“But today, the truth is laid bare and open, we honour and remember our late African icon in our own special way, demonstrating that he had many friends, allies and followers.

“As he moves on from this life to another, his star rises; his shines high and bright. We, who remain, shall continue to hear his rich, brave, defiant and inspiring voice — which we grew accustomed to on various international platforms — beyond his grave, encouraging and warning us to be vigilant and astute; always guarding and protecting our freedom, our independence and indeed our God-given resources.” The Chronicle

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.
Former First Lady Grace Mugabe and President Emmerson Mnangagwa, March 2026 (Picture via Ministry of Information)

The uneasy peace: Grace Mugabe, Mnangagwa and the politics of controlled memory

0
At a recent public function, the opening of The Sprout Restaurant in Harare, we saw former First Lady Grace Mugabe moving within the same orbit as senior ZANU PF figures, her presence neither resisted nor theatrically embraced.
Vice President Constantino Chiwenga and President Emmerson Mnangagwa during a Zanu PF Central Committee meeting (Picture via X - @SokoCindy - Zanu PF Celebs)

Who will drive the bus: Mamvura, General Chiwenga, or someone else? Will President Mnangagwa...

0
In this second and final part of the article, I continue to examine the potential outcomes of ZANU-PF’s succession politics, focusing on whether Kudakwashe Tagwirei (whom I metaphorically refer to as “Mamvura”) will succeed in his presumed bid for the presidency, whether General Constantino Chiwenga will recover his political standing and take over, whether someone else will ascend to the throne, and whether President Mnangagwa will ultimately retire in peace.
President Emmerson Mnangagwa officially opening the 22nd ZANU PF National People’s Conference in Mutare, 17 October 2025 (Picture via X - @edmnangagwa)

How can people who rejected a president in two elections now want him to...

0
The political narrative currently being spun by loyalists of President Emmerson Mnangagwa is as audacious as it is intellectually dishonest.

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