Relatives fly to Singapore to bring Mugabe home

Ex-Zimbabwe leader Robert Mugabe. Photo: Press Service of the President of Russia/Wikimedia Commons
Ex-Zimbabwe leader Robert Mugabe. Photo: Press Service of the President of Russia/Wikimedia Commons

Close relatives and government officials flew out of Zimbabwe today to collect the body of ex-president Robert Mugabe from Singapore where he died last week, his nephew said.

Mugabe, a guerrilla leader who swept to power after Zimbabwe’s independence from Britain and went on to rule for 37 years until he was ousted in 2017, died on Friday, aged 95.

A charter flight left Harare at 3pm (Singapore time) and was expected to return home on Wednesday at 9pm, Leo Mugabe told AFP.

On arrival, the body will be taken straight to his rural village in Zvimba, about 90 kilometers west of the capital Harare, for an overnight wake.

On Thursday and Friday the body will lie in state at Rufaro Stadium in Mbare township in Harare for the public to pay their final respects, he said.

The 35,000-seater stadium is where Mugabe took his oath of office at a colorful ceremony when colonial Rhodesian prime minister Ian Smith handed over the country to Mugabe.

There Mugabe hoisted the new Zimbabwe flag and lit the independence flame on April 18, 1980 – bringing hope for a new era after a long guerrilla war.

The body will be kept at his Harare house known as the Blue Roof overnight Thursday and Friday.

The official funeral will be on Saturday at the giant 60,000-seater National Sports Stadium in Harare.

“Then the (traditional) chiefs will bury him on Sunday, where I don’t know,” said Leo Mugabe.

The location of the burial remains unclear, with Mugabe’s family and President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government apparently at odds over whether it would be at his homestead northwest of Harare or at a shrine for liberation heroes in the capital.

His nephew said that in line with native Shona customs, traditional chiefs from Zvimba will have a final say on where the former leader will be buried.

As a national president, he did not exercise the role of a traditional ruler, but Mugabe held the respected title of the traditional chief of Zvimba rural district.

Mugabe’s health deteriorated after he was toppled by the military in November 2017, ending his increasingly tyrannical rule.

He had been traveling to Singapore for treatment since April.

Related stories:

Why did Mugabe spend his last days in Singapore?

Robert Mugabe, liberation hero turned despot, dies in Singapore at 95



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