President
Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe on Saturday said he was not stepping down nor dying
and that there was no one with his political stature who could immediately take
over from him.
The 93-year-old leader has been in
charge in the former British colony since independence in 1980.
His health is closely watched by
Zimbabweans, who fear the country could face chaos if he dies without anointing
a successor.
Mr. Mugabe told tens of thousands
of supporters at a rally in the town of Chinhoyi, in his home province, that
doctors were recently surprised by his “strong bone system.”
He has traveled to Singapore three
times this year for what officials say is routine medical treatment.
“There is the issue that the
president is going. I am not going,” Mugabe told supporters on the grounds of a
local university, 100 km west of the capital Harare.
“The president is dying. I am not
dying. I will have an ailment here and there but bodywise, all my internal
organs … very firm, very strong,” Mr. Mugabe said as he leant on the lectern.
Mr. Mugabe had walked onto the
stage slowly but without assistance.
The issue
of who will succeed Mr. Mugabe has deeply divided the ruling party, with two
factions supporting Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa and Mr. Mugabe’s wife
Grace.
On Thursday, Grace challenged Mr.
Mugabe to name his preferred successor, to end divisions over the future
leadership of ZANU-PF.
She repeated the call on Saturday,
adding that Mr. Mugabe would lead the process to choose his eventual successor.
Mr. Mugabe said although some
party officials wanted to succeed him, he saw no one among his subordinates
with his political clout to keep the party united and fend off a challenge from
the main opposition Movement for Democratic Change.
“A new man will not have the same
stature and the same acceptance as I have managed to secure for the party over
the years,” she aid.
(Reuters/NAN)
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