MUGABE TOO OLD TO RULE!!
Is Mugabe too old to rule us
for another five years?
A ploy to rule forever
“Zimbabwe urgently needs a new
competent government with national and international goodwill under a new
leader, not a reshuffled cabinet led by a failed and discredited sunset
president who wants to cling onto power through mendacious means when he should
be leaving office.” (October 29, 2006)
“The time
has come for Zimbabweans in crucial national positions in government and
related state institutions and within Zanu (PF) itself to realise and
acknowledge without fear or favour that the problem is manifestly Mugabe.”
(October 29, 2006)
“He simply
does not want to become a living former president with weakened immunity liable
to prosecution by his successor or anybody else in or outside Zimbabwe with a
human rights bone to chew with him.” (October 29, 2006)
“A backdoor
re-entry into power without the democratic mandate of the people through the
polls is by definition not dignified.” (October 29, 2006)
“It is
imperative that Zimbabweans from across the political divide do everything they
can to reject Mugabe’s triple strategy of seeking to remain president for life
outside the electoral process for personal reasons of protecting his immunity
to the detriment of the national interest. (October 29, 2006)
“The end of
executive rule has finally come for Robert Mugabe who has had his better days
after a quarter of a century in power. That Mugabe must now go is no longer a
dismissible opposition slogan but a strategic necessity that desperately needs
urgent legal and constitutional action by Mugabe himself well ahead of the
presidential election scheduled for March 2008 in order to safeguard Zimbabwe’s
national interest, security and sovereignty.” (October 29, 2006)
Mugabe should go
“After 25 years of controversial
rule and with the economy melting down as a direct result of that rule,
Mugabe’s continued stay in office has become such an excessive burden to the
welfare of the state and such a fatal danger to the public interest of
Zimbabweans at home and in the diaspora that each day that goes by with him in
office leaves the nation’s survival at great risk while seriously compromising
national sovereignty.” (October 29, 2006)
“Mugabe has
publicly demonstrated his leadership incapacity to make way for an able and
dynamic successor by succumbing to manipulative tribal pressure.” (October 29,
2006)
“Mugabe now
lacks the vision, stature and energy to effectively run the country, let alone
his party. He is without compassion, maybe because he is now too old, too tired
and not in the best of health.
His failure
to visit stranded families left homeless and suffering from the irrational acts
of his own government speaks volumes of his cold and cruel leadership style.”
(October 29, 2006)
“Mugabe has
lost influence and is now viewed with suspicion or cynicism or both by his
peers in the Sadc, African Union and across the developing world where he used
to enjoy considerable authority. Of course, Mugabe is still respected as an old
man and he still makes very interesting bombastic speeches that are applauded
for their entertainment value and which are full of sound and fury but
signifying precious little at the level of policy and action.” (October 29,
2006)
Too tired
“President Mugabe is now too old
despite his photogenic makeup, has become very tired, visionless and
beleaguered. Mugabe remains in office not because he is in charge of the
goings-on in the wider society but largely if not only because of
considerations of his personal and family security in a world that is
increasingly becoming hostile to former heads of state with unresolved human
rights and corruption issues during their rule.” (August 17, 2007)
“Mugabe
simply does not have the leadership vision and capacity to pull Zimbabwe from
the woods. He is just not that kind of leader.” (August 17, 2007)
Irresponsible endorsement
“If President Robert Mugabe truly
and honestly believes that he is a serious presidential candidate in the
general election scheduled for March 2008 and that he can best govern this
battered country until 2013 should he win, then he miserably failed to
demonstrate that at the controversial Zanu (PF) extraordinary congress.”
(December 24, 2007)
“Nobody in
Zanu (PF) actually supports Mugabe’s candidacy. Everyone understands that it is
wrong and the most telling statement in that regard is the holding of a sham
special congress when a national people’s conference was in order.” (December
24, 2007)
Stomaching defeat
“If there is one sobering thing that
can be unequivocally said about why the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) has
scandalously delayed the announcement of the March 29 presidential election, it
is simply that President Robert Mugabe did not win the election and is now
desperately trying to steal the result through an unjustified recount because
he does not have any prospect of winning a run-off or a re-run.” (April 13,
2008)
“The
dissolution of the cabinet in March did not affect the embattled Mugabe who
appointed it and who, even if defeated on March 29, is nevertheless empowered
by Section 29 of the Constitution to unhappily continue in office until the
person elected as President on March 29 takes over the reins of governance.”
(April 13, 2008)
“The voters
rejected Mugabe on March 29 and officialdom must unconditionally and graciously
accept that electoral verdict in the national interest.” (April 13, 2008)
“Mugabe
simply cannot win any election; not even one which is neither free nor fair in
his favour. Mugabe’s days of electoral victories
are irretrievably gone.” (April 13, 2008)
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