Clean-shaven Mugabe sets social media ablaze

Source: Clean-shaven Mugabe sets social media ablaze – DailyNews Live

Gift Phiri      14 April 2017

HARARE – Just like he did when he recently received a “special massage
chair” from his Cabinet lieutenants, President Robert Mugabe has sent
social media into a frenzy over his shaven head.

This comes after the nonagenarian’s striking chiskop also caught mourners
at Wednesday’s burial in Harare of the late Brigadier General James
Murozvi at the National Heroes Acre by surprise.

Mugabe’s bald head is not only a major dinner talking point, it has gone
viral on popular social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter and
WhatsApp.

For long famous for his conservative dressing sense, including expensive
designer suits and smart short hair, the nonagenarian has recently been
embracing an atypical dress style – culminating in his shaved head
“hairstyle” on Wednesday.

“Seeing him with his chiskop hit us like a bolt from the blue, and for a
moment some of us were even confused whether it was him or not on
Wednesday,” a surprised Zanu PF politburo member told the Daily News
yesterday.

But Information minister Chris Mushohwe was among the many other bigwigs
who saw nothing “unusual” about Mugabe’s new hairstyle.

“They want to tell the president how to cut his hair? What kind of society
is this? That’s absolutely nonsensical . . . they are mad,” he said.

Still, Mugabe’s new hairstyle almost broke the Internet, drawing all kinds
of responses and speculation.

Some people said light-heartedly that the bald head gives Mugabe “a
sophisticated look” which made him look much younger.

But others were not so charitable, wondering why he had decided to ditch
his traditional short hair and even speculating that this suggested that
he was not well.

One Twitter user, Discent Collins Bajila, cheerfully predicted booming
business for barbers, saying Mugabe’s shaven head was likely to trigger a
new national craze for bald heads.

“If you have a barbershop, please prepare yourself for a stampede of Zanu
PF people coming for chizkop, thank me later,” he tweeted.

Australia-based Zanu PF supporter, Reason Wafawarova, also posted Mugabe’s
picture and captioned it: “Unconquerable”.

A prominent businessman who also gave Mugabe’s new hairstyle the thumbs up
pointed to research that suggested that men who shave their  heads “often
appear tougher and more powerful than others”.

“A shaved head indicates dominance, authority and being in control. Even
some of Hollywood’s leading stars such as Bruce Willis, Dwayne Johnson and
Vin Diesel like shaving their heads and come across as tough guys in their
movies,” he said.

Two weeks ago, Zimbabwe was also abuzz after Mugabe was given a “special
massage chair” by his ministers, as part of gifts to mark his 93rd
birthday celebrations.

The gift immediately raised eyebrows – sparking both mirth and frenzied
debate, especially on social media, about its “meaning” and symbolism in
the light of Mugabe’s advanced age, declining health and his wife Grace’s
recent controversial statement that he could rule from a wheel chair.

At the brief chair presentation ceremony in Harare, which was exclusively
covered by State media, Mugabe was also given a 9-carat gold watch and pen
by his lieutenants.

But it was the chair which set tongues wagging after the gaffe-prone State
broadcaster, the ZBC, described the chair in its initial online reports as
a “special mobile chair” – giving the erroneous impression that this was a
wheelchair.

The much-derided broadcaster later changed this to reflect that this was
“a massage chair”, although by then the damage had been done.

The only leader Zimbabweans have known since the country gained its
independence from Britain in April 1980, Mugabe – who is also the world’s
oldest elected leader – has in recent months appeared very tired and
jaded.

This much became more evident during the nonagenarian’s 93rd birthday
celebrations that were held in Matobo, Matabeleland South, in February.

While still very sharp mentally, especially given his age, Mugabe also
struggled with his speech during his earlier annual birthday interview
with the ZBC, in which he frequently paused for breath in between his
answers.

Mugabe’s health has over the past 10 years or so become a major topic of
discussion both at home and abroad.

This has been more so as the nonagenarian has in recent years been making
regular visits to Singapore for medical checkups – amid wild speculation
about his real state of health in the absence of official information.

In February this year, Mugabe once again visited his doctors in the Far
East in what his office said then was a scheduled trip, even as this came
on the back of another visit during the festive season for what was also
described at the time as a routine checkup trip.

The nonagenarian has suffered a number of public mishaps in recent years,
including his widely-reported tumble at Harare International Airport in
February 2015, as he walked off a podium.

This happened after he had just finished addressing his supporters after
returning from Ethiopia where he had gone to take over the rotating
chairmanship of the African Union.

Although he appeared unhurt after the fall, the incident – which occurred
in the full view of gathered bigwigs, Zanu PF rank and file members and
journalists – triggered panic among senior government officials and
security chiefs, who all scrambled to help him get on his feet, and to
ensure that he was alright.

Mugabe also later stumbled in New Delhi, at an India-Africa summit, and
had to use a wheelchair at the 60th Asian-African Conference Commemoration
that was held in Indonesia.

Offensively, the nonagenarian has also had to endure sickening jokes and
false reports about his alleged death – prompting him to put down these
sadists by saying that he had “died” many times more than Jesus Christ.

“I have died many times. That’s where I have beaten Christ. Christ died
once and resurrected once. I am as fit as a fiddle. At this age, I can
still go some distance, can’t I?

“There are things one must do for oneself. Don’t drink at all, don’t
smoke, you must exercise and eat vegetables and fruit,” he said an
interview with the ZBC, ahead of his 88th birthday in 2012.

Despite his advanced age and deteriorating health, as well as the growing
pressure within his ruling Zanu PF for him to step down, Mugabe has thus
far not dropped any hint of his retirement plans – moving recently to
effectively shut the door on his lieutenants in his fractured party who
are angling to succeed him.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 8
  • comment-avatar

    Maybe he has been given chemotherapy

  • comment-avatar
    Ngoto Zimbwa 7 years ago

    Ain’t that just sad?
    What should be setting anything ablaze, would be for this man to leave us to rebuild our country, i.e. bugger off somewhere for good.

  • comment-avatar
    Chatham House 7 years ago

    This is such exciting news – Mugabe’s hairstyle – a bit like the North Korean Dear Leader. The world hangs on to the Dear Leaders from Zimbabwe and North Korea’s every word and fashion statement. We are so lucky to have them and the likes of the Dear Leaders from Syria, Russia and Turkey. What a blessing their people have been given with such wonderful leadership?

  • comment-avatar
    Doris 7 years ago

    Probably got lice.

  • comment-avatar
    harper 7 years ago

    The evil British have put sanctions on black hair dye.

  • comment-avatar
    Mazano Rewayi 7 years ago

    He looked a bit like Kamuzu Banda, behaves very much so, and probably will end so.

    • comment-avatar
      harper 7 years ago

      Kamuzu translates as tap root – in other words very difficult to dig out.

  • comment-avatar

    Confusion in public appearances from one who is usually razor sharp is more a sign of negative cognitive side-effects from certain drugs, not necessarily advanced age. A clean shaven pate = camouflaging escalating side-effects from treating advanced disease (in the context of much more frequent check ups). Details can be kept secret when treated by specialty clinics abroad. Local tongues wag. If not those of physicians and supporting healthcare professionals, certainly those of “general” ancillary staff.