Posted on 10/27/2003 6:11:00 PM PST by blam
Mugabe 'flown to South Africa after collapse'
By Tim Butcher in Johannesburg
(Filed: 28/10/2003)
President Robert Mugabe collapsed yesterday and was flown to South Africa for emergency medical treatment, sources in Zimbabwe said last night.
President Mugabe
Supporters of Mr Mugabe, 79, were setting up barricades in the capital, Harare, manned by well-armed riot police.
It was reported that senior members of the "Green Bombers", the notorious youth brigades created by Mr Mugabe and responsible for rape, murder and political thuggery, were being flown to the city.
Any transition of power in Zimbabwe would probably be violent as Mr Mugabe's successors in the ruling Zanu-PF party would clash with the opposition Movement for Democratic Change.
Sources in Zimbabwe said Mr Mugabe was taken ill late on Sunday and vomited throughout the night, then collapsed yesterday.
He was flown by military aircraft to the Waterkloof air base, a South African military airport near Pretoria, and driven to a clinic for treatment, they said.
If he been treated in Zimbabwe, news would have leaked out quickly, prompting popular unrest. By moving him to South Africa the situation can be better managed by his supporters until the extent of his health problems can be assessed.
Mr Mugabe's illness is expected to intensify jockeying in the Zanu-PF for the succession. The death last month of Vice-President, Simon Muzenda, 81, a staunch Mugabe supporter, has already sparked attempts by various factions in the party to secure the vice-presidency.
Supporters of the regime sought to play down the seriousness of Mr Mugabe's medical problems, saying he would be in Harare today for photographs with the state-run media.
Rumours of ill-health, strokes and death have been part of Mugabe's regime in recent years. After 23 years in power, he has appeared increasingly frail in recent months, although he has also shown remarkable stamina.
The presidential election last year was so flawed that the United States describes the regime as "democratically illegitimate" and Zimbabwe has been suspended from the Commonwealth. Targeted sanctions have been imposed on Mr Mugabe and his inner circle by the European Union and America.
Zimbabwe police yesterday charged the publisher and three other directors of the Daily News, an independent newspaper critical of Mugabe's government, with publishing without a licence, said its legal adviser. The Daily News returned to the newsstands at the weekend, six weeks after it was shut down by the authorities, after a court order for it to be given a licence by the end of next month. But police later closed the paper's offices, briefly detained 18 staff and on Sunday arrested Washington Sansole, a director.
I have taken the liberty of posting today's similar story as a separate thread.
NoI am not talking about devils & pitchforks, I am interested in the future path of the country. Changing the name from Rhodesia to Zimbabwe struck me as a giant step backwards, and everything has gone to he11 since then.
Is there any hope for a return to a semblance of democracy, or is this just another typical African adventure?
I suspect war and strife followed by another dictator, with the US footing most of the bill.
And the line coming out of the UN will be that "the people" shouldn't be blamed for the problems caused by Mugbe, since he is now dead. We should just forget about the racist murders, rapes & property theft.
My own feeling is to let them stew in their own juices for a decade or two. The folks who carried out the racist murders, rapes and thefts are still going to be alive and I bet will still be in power. Until those guys are brought to justice, no aid from any civilized country.
what about his wife? can she not govern from paris?
http://english.pravda.ru/world/20/91/367/11172_mugaberob.html
russian or Portuguese?
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