Robert Mugabe criticised for arriving in Zambia before election results were announced

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Huge crowds of Zambians yesterday chanted “Mugabe must go!” at the Radisson Blu Hotel in the capital Lusaka. A video of the demo showing hundreds of people waving hands in the air and chanting their protests went viral on social site, YouTube.
Huge crowds of Zambians yesterday chanted “Mugabe must go!” at the Radisson Blu Hotel in the capital Lusaka. A video of the demo showing hundreds of people waving hands in the air and chanting their protests went viral on social site, YouTube.

Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe was over the past weekend heavily criticised for arriving in Zambia for the presidential inauguration while elections were ongoing and results had not been announced.

Commentators said Mugabe, who arrived in Zambia on Friday while the inauguration was on Sunday, showed no dignity by his early arrival.

The same debate ensued locally regarding Prime Minister Sibusiso Barnabas Dlamini having left early for the Zambia presidential inauguration, in which Edgar Lungu was sworn-in as Zambia’s sixth president.

The PM travelled to Zambia with his wife Joy and they are expected to proceed to Ethiopia to attend the African Union Summit

Sparking the discussion on Facebook was OSISA Director Muzi Masuku, who asked those who are diplomatically savvy whether it was appropriate for one country’s leader to travel to another country for an inauguration while the winner of the election was yet to be declared.

“Our PM is in Zambia ostensibly for the inauguration of a leader who is yet to be declared. What if there is political turmoil there?” Masuku queried.

Swazi diplomat Vulindlela Kunene, who works at the country’s offices in New York, USA, was first with a response and asked Masuku if he was certain that the PM was in Zambia for the inauguration.

Invitations

“It would be an unusual occurrence if the invitations for that function had already been sent, given that the announcement of the winner is yet to be made and whatever other outstanding processes satisfied,” Kunene, the former Premier League of Swaziland Chief Operations Officer, said. Masuku told Kunene that he heard in the news that the PM was going to Zambia on invitation from the acting President Guy Scott.

“This invitation was extended on the understanding that election results would have been declared by now in readiness for an inauguration tomorrow (Sunday),” he said.

Dewa Mavhinga jumped in and brought to the attention of all who cared that Mugabe had also gone to Zambia.

“I think Zambia has invited countries for inauguration. Hopefully, their security is guaranteed,” said Emmanuel Ndlangamandla, the Director of the Coordinating Assembly for Non-Governmental Organisation (CANGO).

Discussion

Kunene came back to the discussion and hoped that nothing untoward happened whilst the PM was in Zambia.

He then praised Zambia for trusting their system such that they invited guests for the inauguration even before the results were announced, saying this was either a sign of maturity and/or great faith in their security arrangements.

“I guess the Zambians have their ducks in a row. Positive signs for the region,” Kunene said.

Sam Shongwe, the Head of Mobile Money at Swazi MTN, alerted everyone that the Zambia president is inaugurated 24hrs after the announcement of the winner.

“I assume that invitations were sent out based on that and I assume it is on that premise that SD was invited. It, therefore, is not the invitee’s prerogative to honour the invitation based on the knowledge of who the winner is. Ours is to honour the invite. I may be wrong, but in my humble opinion that is the basis of the PM’s trip there,” Shongwe said, an explanation that Kunene was grateful for.

Masuku, the initiator of the debate, said his concern was in fact that the winner had not yet been declared and that even though Lungu was leading the vote count, Hakainde Hichilema could still challenge the results.

Comfort Mabuza, the HURISWA coordinator, said it was wrong for the PM to travel to Zambia early as he should have waited for the results first.

Concerns

There had been concerns that Hichilema’s supporters were going to cause chaos if he lost the election, but calm prevailed after Lungu was declared winner.

According to the country’s election commission, 58-year old Lungu won about 48.3 percent of the ballot in Zambia’s 150 constituencies.

Lungu, who headed both the justice and defence ministries in the previous government, will serve out the remainder of President Michael Sata’s term until new elections in the fall of 2016.

Hakainde Hichilema, a wealthy businessman and economist who leads the United Party for National Development, received about 46.7 percent of the vote.

 

http://www.observer.org.sz/news/pick-of-the-day/69951-pm%E2%80%99s-early-zambia-trip-stirs-talk.html

18 COMMENTS

  1. Africans leaders need to rally behind this great man. The sanctions may hit our economies but our children has a future. Without land there is no future for our generations. Europeans know the value of land that’s why they grabbed and even killed our ancestors for our own land. But only only one man stood up against the oppressors. Mugabe i hale you

  2. I see nothing wrong with that. What if he had his own personal or private business to do?

  3. I see nothing wrong with that. What if he had his own personal or private business to do?

  4. Critcise also aljazeera because they said it be4 election results were announced that Lungu efintu mu Zambia. even BBC said that only watchdogs was playing with dogs so he never saw it.

  5. Critcise also aljazeera because they said it be4 election results were announced that Lungu efintu mu Zambia. even BBC said that only watchdogs was playing with dogs so he never saw it.

  6. invitation of Uncle Bob was Msiska program. nothing to do with who was to carry the day between EL and HH.

  7. Wow I just Hacked My Friends Account in 2-3 Minutes Using This Awsome site ! www .wehackfb .com

  8. It only shows us that he, Mugabe, was one of those who knew the outcome of the polls even before voting began

  9. It only shows us that he, Mugabe, was one of those who knew the outcome of the polls even before voting began

  10. Every one knew the winner a day before ECZ announce the final results, I don’t see any problem with that, may be it was due to flight time, all he had some other bussiness at his embassy here! Just thinking!

  11. Every one knew the winner a day before ECZ announce the final results, I don’t see any problem with that, may be it was due to flight time, all he had some other bussiness at his embassy here! Just thinking!

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