Mugabe lone foreign leader at Malawi event

via Mugabe lone foreign leader at Malawi event 06 July 2014 by Staff Reporter

PRESIDENT Robert Mugabe flew out to Malawi Saturday to attend the former British colony’s Golden jubilee, even skipping the burial of national hero Stanley Sakupwanya who was a member of his Zanu PF’s politburo.

But few Zimbabweans would know their leader was the only foreign Head of State in the world who attended the ceremony.

When Mugabe left Harare for Lilongwe on the eve of the celebrations Saturday, the state media claimed, “Several Heads of State and Government from SADC and beyond are expected to attend the Golden Jubilee Celebrations.”

But what turned out to be several heads of State and government was in fact, the lonely figure of the 90-year-old leader. In fact, the closest to a foreign head of state except for Mugabe was Tanzania’s Vice President Mohammed Garib Bilal.

Other world leaders with an interest in the rice producing country sent their juniors to the fete.

“Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe is the only head of state who will be joining President Peter Mutharika and Malawians in celebrating the golden jubilee that will take place on Sunday in Lilongwe,” Malawi’s Nyasa Times reported Saturday.

“The octogenarian leader looked fit and well on arrival and was spotting a jovial mood.”

President Mugabe, who has never missed an opportunity to fly out of the country, turned his back on the burial of the late national hero Stanley Urayayi Sakupwanya.

Mugabe easily delegated the task of leading mourners to Sakupwanya’s burial to his vice, Joice Mujuru, something he is yet to do if it were for foreign assignments.

Even after he snubbed Mutharika’s inauguration a month earlier, Mugabe did not resist the latest temptation to visit.

The veteran leader is under fire for failure to invent solutions to the country’s sagging economy, something that has seen public servants having to wait for monies scrounged through taxes to receive their salaries.

Critics, among them his opponents, have chided the veteran leader for his costly foreign travels financed through Treasury.

Political analyst Charles Mangongerea said Mugabe, by continuously absenting himself from his troubled country, has virtually turned himself into a ceremonial President.

“I don’t think he is running this country anymore, that’s why he finds time to do such things,” said Mangongera.

“He jumps on to every other little occasion that happens; he is always the first one to get there.

“I don’t think he is still typical CEO of a country who will be inundated with the day to day running of the economy and the state affairs.

“I think he is more comfortable out there, away from the problems of the country.”

MDC-T politician, Job Sikhala recently said the Zimbabwean leader risked a coup through his endless foreign jaunts.

Mugabe’s foreign travels have brought good fortune to him as a family though, it would seem.

His only daughter and first born child, Bona, according to Grace Mugabe, was snatched by a pilot husband, right in the sky, during one of the first family’s foreign excursions.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 8
  • comment-avatar
    Panda moyo 10 years ago

    Should be comfortable there ,after all according to rumour thats where his ancestors lie.wil probably hav a quick ritual b4 returning and all is well who cares about the economy anyway

  • comment-avatar
    Jimbo 10 years ago

    Please stay in Malawi, Bob, we will not miss you!!!

  • comment-avatar
    biggus dickus 10 years ago

    Comrade Robert Mugabe is of course half Malawian. His father was a carpenter who came from Malawi and married Robert’s mother. Mugabe does not like this to be talked about as he likes everybody to think he is 100 per cent Shona.

    • comment-avatar
      Clive Sutherland 10 years ago

      Hitler had the same problem, was a Austrian not a true German!

  • comment-avatar
    Mlimo 10 years ago

    As Mugabe has the equivalent status as tea boy at international events he is allowed and then of course has to sleep after tea is served.

  • comment-avatar
    Rwendo 10 years ago

    Probably hostile to the option of sending Mujuru to make (first) contact with an newly elected neighboring president. Plus to dispel stories of his collapse. All about cementing his image outside Zimbabwe as a leader that is durable for another 5 years.

  • comment-avatar
    Mlimo 10 years ago

    No they wanted a tea boy with a suit and tie to serve them and couldn’t find one locally so invited mugabe

  • comment-avatar
    munzwa 10 years ago

    hope he denounced his Malawian citizenship….