BEITBRIDGE – President Robert Mugabe dismissed his two challengers in next month’s Zimbabwean elections as a lightweight and a Western puppet on Saturday.
At a rally to mark his 84th birthday and launch his campaign for another five-year term, Mugabe said his ruling Zanu-PF party would win the March 29 votes resoundingly. Former Finance Minister Simba Makoni, who says he has the support of a number of Zanu-PF officials, is standing against Mugabe in the presidential contest.”He is like a frog trying to inflate itself up to the size of an ox.It will burst,” Mugabe told thousands of party activists in a dusty sports field at Beitbridge on the South African border.Mugabe also lashed out at Morgan Tsvangirai, the leader of the largest faction of Zimbabwe’s main opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), describing him as a “puppet” of former colonial power Britain and the United States.Mugabe’s government has accused the two Western nations and their allies of using sanctions to undermine and sabotage Zimbabwe’s economy, which is in crisis with inflation of more than 100 000 per cent, unemployment at more than 80 per cent, and chronic food and fuel shortages.”It is the sanctions that they have imposed which have caused a great deal of harm on the economy,” Mugabe said.Tsvangirai, a former union leader who has come closest to ousting Mugabe in previous elections, told thousands of supporters at a rally that Zimbabweans were ready to end the Mugabe era and hand the MDC power.”We remain the legitimate voice of democratic change in this country,” Tsvangirai said in a stadium in Mutare, some 265 km east of the capital Harare.The MDC has been weakened in the past year by a government crackdown on anti-Mugabe activists, divisions within its ranks and Makoni’s emergence.Tsvangirai and Makoni could divide the anti-Mugabe vote and hand victory to the veteran leader, who has been in power since independence from Britain in 1980.The MDC leader, who accuses Mugabe of rigging past elections, has refused to run a joint campaign with Makoni and a splinter MDC group has thrown its weight behind “Robert Mugabe is one of the greatest tyrants of the 21st century, when we bring him down, they will be there to help us, I can assure you of this,” he said.- Nampa-ReutersFormer Finance Minister Simba Makoni, who says he has the support of a number of Zanu-PF officials, is standing against Mugabe in the presidential contest.”He is like a frog trying to inflate itself up to the size of an ox.It will burst,” Mugabe told thousands of party activists in a dusty sports field at Beitbridge on the South African border.Mugabe also lashed out at Morgan Tsvangirai, the leader of the largest faction of Zimbabwe’s main opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), describing him as a “puppet” of former colonial power Britain and the United States.Mugabe’s government has accused the two Western nations and their allies of using sanctions to undermine and sabotage Zimbabwe’s economy, which is in crisis with inflation of more than 100 000 per cent, unemployment at more than 80 per cent, and chronic food and fuel shortages.”It is the sanctions that they have imposed which have caused a great deal of harm on the economy,” Mugabe said.Tsvangirai, a former union leader who has come closest to ousting Mugabe in previous elections, told thousands of supporters at a rally that Zimbabweans were ready to end the Mugabe era and hand the MDC power.”We remain the legitimate voice of democratic change in this country,” Tsvangirai said in a stadium in Mutare, some 265 km east of the capital Harare.The MDC has been weakened in the past year by a government crackdown on anti-Mugabe activists, divisions within its ranks and Makoni’s emergence.Tsvangirai and Makoni could divide the anti-Mugabe vote and hand victory to the veteran leader, who has been in power since independence from Britain in 1980.The MDC leader, who accuses Mugabe of rigging past elections, has refused to run a joint campaign with Makoni and a splinter MDC group has thrown its weight behind “Robert Mugabe is one of the greatest tyrants of the 21st century, when we bring him down, they will be there to help us, I can assure you of this,” he said. – Nampa-Reuters
Stay informed with The Namibian – your source for credible journalism. Get in-depth reporting and opinions for
only N$85 a month. Invest in journalism, invest in democracy –
Subscribe Now!