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| Mugabe ruled Zimbabwe for decades until he was ousted in 2017 by military generals who turned against him |
Robert Mugabe, the former guerrilla hero turned despot who ruled Zimbabwe for 37 years until the military forced him out, has died aged 95.
First
heralded as a liberator who rid the former British colony Rhodesia of white minority
rule, Mugabe used repression and fear to govern until he was finally ousted by
his previously loyal generals in November 2017.
President
Emmerson Mnangagwa said his predecessor had been declared a "national
hero" and that Zimbabwe would mourn him until the burial.
"The
late departed icon will be eternally remembered and honoured for the bold and
historic land reform programme which he undertook," said Mnangagwa during
a national address broadcast on television.
Mugabe
passed away at 0240 GMT in Singapore, where he had been hospitalised in April,
a Zimbabwean diplomat in South Africa told AFP, speaking on condition of
anonymity.
He had been
battling ill health, and after a humiliating fall from office, his stamina
seeped away rapidly.
Adam Molai,
Mugabe's nephew, said the former president died of old age "surrounded by
family".
"We
are pained by his loss. But we also celebrate the life of a legend. He was a
living legend. He was a pan-Africanist. He brought the country of Zimbabwe from
colonialism to the freedom that we had," Molai told reporters outside the
funeral parlour in Singapore.
He said the
president was likely to announce when the body would move "sometime next
week", adding that he could give no further details on the "state
funeral".
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Mugabe's
popularity faded as he cracked down on opponents
|
In Zvimba,
Mugabe's rural homestead, another nephew Leo Mugabe told reporters the family
had "not yet deliberated on where he is going to be buried".
'Revolutionary'
South
African President Cyril Ramaphosa remembered Mugabe as a "liberation
fighter" and a "champion of Africa's cause against colonialism".
Kenyan
leader Uhuru Kenyatta hailed Mugabe as an "elder statesman, a freedom
fighter and a Pan-Africanist who played a major role in shaping the interests
of the African continent".
China
lauded him as an "outstanding national liberation movement leader"
while Russian President Vladimir Putin noted Mugabe's "great personal
contribution" to Zimbabwe's independence.
But Britain
said there were "mixed emotions" after his death.
"Zimbabweans
suffered for too long as a result of Mugabe's autocratic role," the
foreign ministry said in a statement.
The Mugabe
years are widely remembered for his crushing of political dissent and policies
that ruined the economy.
The former
political prisoner turned guerrilla leader swept to power in 1980 elections
after a growing insurgency and economic sanctions forced the Rhodesian
government to the negotiating table.
In office,
he initially won international plaudits for his declared policy of racial
reconciliation and for extending improved education and health services to the
black majority.
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Timeline of events in Zimbabwe 1980-2017
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Human
rights violations
But that
faded rapidly as Mugabe cracked down on his opponents. During the 1980s, he led
an infamous campaign known as Gukurahundi during which an estimated 20,000
dissidents were killed.
The violent
seizure of white-owned farms turned him into an international pariah -- though
his status as a liberation hero still resonates strongly across Africa.
Aimed
largely at angry war veterans who threatened to destabilise his rule, the land
reform policy wrecked the crucial agricultural sector, caused foreign investors
to flee and plunged the country into economic misery.
All along,
the Mugabe regime was widely accused of human rights violations and of rigging
elections.
The topic
of his succession was virtually taboo until he reached his 90s and became
visibly frail.
As his
health weakened, the military finally intervened to quash his second wife
Grace's presidential ambitions in favour of their preferred candidate,
Mnangagwa, Mugabe's vice president at the time.
Mnangagwa
took over in November 2017 and was elected in July last year.
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Mugabe died
in Singapore where he was hospitalised in April
|
Mixed
legacy
In
Zimbabwe's capital Harare, residents woke to the news and went about their
daily business, with acting president Kembo Mohadi leading a planned street
clean-up campaign.
Mnangagwa,
who was attending the World Economic Forum in Cape Town, arrived in Harare on
Friday afternoon after cutting short his South Africa visit.
Many in
Zimbabwe remembered Mugabe as a tyrant who oversaw the decline of one of
Africa's most prosperous nations.
"Mugabe
was educated but he used his education for evil. He manipulated everyone around
him and fooled the world. Only Zimbabweans can testify to this as we lived in
hell under his leadership," said Baster Magwizi, an independence war
veteran in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second city.
"As a
leader the only thing he did wrong was to stay in power for a long time,"
Harare resident Joshua Tsenzete told AFP.
But Harare
schoolteacher Tatenda Musoni was forgiving.
"To be
honest I thought I would celebrate when he died but... I'm actually sad because
he was an embodiment of what a true African should be.
"He
had his flaws but he did a lot of positive things for us which I doubt we will
ever see again in this country."
Ibbo
Mandaza, head of a southern African think-tank, said Mugabe would be remembered
as one of Africa's "founding fathers".
Mandaza
pointed to the example of Tanzania's founding leader Julius Nyrere and South
African liberation icon Nelson Mandela.
"Unlike
Nyerere and Mandela he (Mugabe) stayed on. He would have had a much more
favourable obituary if he had left earlier."




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