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{{Short description|President of Zimbabwe from 1987 to 2017}}
{{pp-move-indef}}
{{about||his son|Robert Mugabe Jr.|the Ugandan military officer|Robert Freeman Mugabe}}
{{redirect|Mugabe}}
{{Redirect|Mugabe}}
{{Infobox President
{{Good article}}
|name = Robert Gabriel Mugabe
{{Pp-move}}
|image = Mugabecloseup2008.jpg
{{Pp|small=yes}}
|imagesize = 200px
{{Use British English|date=August 2024}}
|caption = Mugabe at the ] summit in ], ] on 31 January 2008.
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2023}}
|office = ]
{{Infobox officeholder
|primeminister = ]
| image = <!-- Do not change this image without first presenting your preferred replacement on the talk page. -->Mugabe 1979 a.jpg
|vicepresident = ]<br>]
| alt = Photograph of Robert Mugabe
|term_start = 31 December 1987
|term_end = | caption = Mugabe in 1979
| order = 2nd
|predecessor = ]
|office2 = ] | office = President of Zimbabwe
| primeminister = ] {{nowrap|(2009–2013)}}
|president2 = ]
| vicepresident = {{Collapsible list|title=''See list''|1={{plain list|
|term_start2 = 18 April 1980
* '''First Vice Presidents'''
|term_end2 = 31 December 1987
* ]<br />(1987–2003)
|predecessor2 = ] <small>(])</small>
* ''Vacant''<br />(2003–2004)
|successor2 = ]
* ]<br />(2004–2014)
|office3 = ]
* Emmerson Mnangagwa<br />(2014–2017)
|term_start3 = 6 September 1986
* '''Second Vice Presidents'''
|term_end3 = 7 September 1989
* ]<br />(1990–1999)
|predecessor3 = ]
* ]<br />(1999–2009)
|successor3 = ]
* ]<br />(2009–2013)
|birth_date = {{birth date and age|1924|02|21|df=y}}
* ''Vacant''<br />(2013–2014)
|birth_place = ], ], ]
* ]<br />(2014–2017)
|spouse = ] (deceased)<br>]
}}
|party = ] <small>(1987 – present)</small><br>] <small>(1975 – 1987)</small><br>] <small>(1961 – 1975)</small>
}}
|religion = ]
| term_start = 31 December 1987
|alma_mater = ]<br>]<br>]
| term_end = 21 November 2017
|signature = Signature of Robert Mugabe clear.svg
| predecessor = ]
| successor = ]
| order1 = 1st
| office1 = Prime Minister of Zimbabwe
| president1 = Canaan Banana
| deputy1 = Simon Muzenda
| term_start1 = 18 April 1980
| term_end1 = 31 December 1987
| predecessor1 = ] (])
| successor1 = Morgan Tsvangirai (2009)
| office2 = Leader and First Secretary of ]<br />{{nobold |] (1975–1987)}}
| 1blankname2 = Chairman
| 1namedata2 = {{plainlist|
* Joseph Msika
* John Nkomo
* ]
* ]
}}
| 2blankname2 = Second Secretary
| 2namedata2 = {{plainlist|
* Joseph Msika
* John Nkomo
* Joice Mujuru
* Emmerson Mnangagwa
}}
| term_start2 = 18 March 1975
| term_end2 = 19 November 2017
| predecessor2 = ]
| successor2 = Emmerson Mnangagwa
| order3 = 13th
| office3 = Chairperson of the African Union
| leader3 = ]
| term_start3 = 30 January 2015
| term_end3 = 30 January 2016
| predecessor3 = ]
| successor3 = ]
| order4 = 10th
| office4 = Secretary-General of the Non-Aligned Movement{{!}}Secretary-General of the {{nowrap|Non-Aligned Movement}}
| term_start4 = 6 September 1986
| term_end4 = 7 September 1989
| predecessor4 = ]
| successor4 = ]
| birth_name = Robert Gabriel Mugabe
| birth_date = {{birth date|1924|2|21|df=yes}}
| birth_place = ], ] (now Zimbabwe)
| death_date = {{Death date and age|2019|9|6|1924|2|21|df=yes}}
| death_place = ], Singapore
| resting_place = Kutama, Zimbabwe
| party = {{plainlist|
* ] (1949–1952)
* ] (1960–1961)
* ] (1961–1963)
* ] (1963–1987)
* ] (1987–2017)
}}
| spouse = {{plainlist|
* {{marriage|]|1961|1992|end=died}}
* {{marriage|]|1996}}
}}
| children = 4, including ] and ]
| alma_mater = {{plainlist|
* ]
* ]
* {{longitem|]}}
}}
| signature = Signature of Robert Mugabe clear.svg
}} }}
''' Robert Gabriel Mugabe''' (born 21 February 1924) is the ] of ]. He has held power as the ] since 1980, as ] from 1980 to 1987, and as the first executive ] since 1987.<ref name="chan2003">{{cite book
|first=Stephen|last=Chan
|title=Robert Mugabe: A Life of Power and Violence
|year=2003
|pages=123}}</ref>
Mugabe rose to prominence in the 1960s as a ] (ZANU) leader in ] against white-minority rule in ] in the ] (1964–1979). Emerging from this conflict, Mugabe was hailed by Africans as a hero.<ref name="KK1" /><ref name="biles2007">{{cite news
|first=Peter|last=Biles
|title=Mugabe's hold on Africans
|work=BBC News
|date=2007-08-25
|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/6960506.stm}}</ref>


'''Robert Gabriel Mugabe''' ({{IPAc-en|m|ʊ|ˈ|ɡ|ɑː|b|i}};<ref>{{cite Merriam-Webster|Mugabe}}</ref> {{IPA|sn|muɡaɓe|lang}}; 21 February 1924 – 6 September 2019) was a Zimbabwean revolutionary and politician who served as ] from 1980 to 1987 and then as ] from 1987 to 2017. He served as Leader of the ] (ZANU) from 1975 to 1980 and led its successor political party, the ] (ZANU–PF), from 1980 to 2017. Ideologically an ], during the 1970s and 1980s he identified as a ], and as a ] during the 1990s and the remainder of his career.
Since 1998 Mugabe's policies have increasingly elicited a domestic and international media campaign. Mugabe's government gave support to SADC's intervention in the ], redistributed thousands of ] farms,<ref>http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/world/international-zimbabwe-election-tsvangirai.html?hp</ref> and in response to wide ranging financial sanctions outlined in the Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act of 2001 or ] printed hundreds of trillions of ]s triggering ],<ref>http://www.zimbabwesituation.com/jan4b_2008.html#Z11 and dozens more references at ]</ref>
and harassed and intimidated political opponents like members of the ].<ref>http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/06/world/africa/06zimbabwe.html</ref>
Zimbabwe's economy spiraled downward,<ref name="manfist" />
with food and oil shortages,<ref>http://www.alertnet.org/db/blogs/50717/2008/03/15-091541-1.htm</ref> and with massive internal displacement<ref></ref> and ].<ref>http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/1564285/One-million-fleeing-Zimbabwe-for-South-Africa.html</ref><ref>Guest, Robert. ''The Shackled Continent: Africa's Past, Present and Future''. Pan Books, 2005.</ref>
In July, 2008, the ] released a collective statement saying that they "do not accept the legitimacy of a government that does not reflect the will of the Zimbabwean people".<ref name="bbc001">{{cite news
|title=G8 to move against Mugabe allies
|date=2008-07-08
|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/7495807.stm
|work=BBC News}}</ref>
{{TOClimit|limit=3}}


<!--Early life and revolutionary activity-->
==Overview==
Mugabe was born to a poor ] family in ], ]. Educated at ] and the ] in South Africa, he then worked as a schoolteacher in Southern Rhodesia, ], and Ghana. Angered by ] rule of his homeland within the ], Mugabe embraced ] and joined ] nationalists calling for an independent state controlled by the black majority. After making antigovernmental comments, he was convicted of ] and imprisoned between 1964 and 1974. On release, he fled to Mozambique, established his leadership of ZANU, and oversaw its role in the ], fighting ]'s predominantly white government. He reluctantly participated in peace talks in the United Kingdom that resulted in the ], putting an end to the war. In the ], Mugabe led ZANU-PF to victory, becoming Prime Minister when the country, now renamed Zimbabwe, gained internationally recognized independence later that year. Mugabe's administration expanded healthcare and ] and—despite his professed desire for a ]—adhered largely to ] economic policies.
Mugabe rose to prominence in the 1960s as the ] of the ] (ZANU). For many years in the '60s and '70s Mugabe was a political prisoner in ]. His goal was to replace white minority-rule with a one-party ] regime.<ref>]. ''Mugabe: Power, Plunder, and the Struggle for Zimbabwe's Future''. 2007. PublicAffairs. p.243</ref> He left Rhodesia in 1976 to join the Zimbabwe Liberation Struggle (]) from bases in ]. At the end of the war in 1979, Mugabe emerged as a hero in the minds of many Africans.<ref name="KK1"/><ref name="biles2007">{{cite news
|first=Peter|last=Biles
|title=Mugabe's hold on Africans
|work=BBC News
|date=2007-08-25
|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/6960506.stm}}</ref> He won the general elections of 1980, the second in which the majority Black Africans participated in large numbers (though the electoral system in Rhodesia had allowed Black participation based on qualified franchise), amid reports of violent intimidation by the militants he now controlled. Mugabe then became the first ] after calling for reconciliation between formerly warring parties, including the white people as well as rival parties.


<!--Premiership and presidency-->
The years following Zimbabwe's independence saw a split between the two key belligerents who had fought alongside each other during the 1970s against the government of Rhodesia. An armed conflict between Mugabe's Maoist-oriented Government and dissident followers of Joshua Nkomo's pro-Marxist ZAPU erupted. Following the deaths of thousands, neither warring faction able to defeat the other, the heads of the opposing movements reached a landmark agreement, whence was created a new ruling party, ZANU PF, as a merger between the two former rivals.<ref name ="CCJP"> </ref>
Mugabe's calls for racial reconciliation failed to stem growing white emigration, while relations with ]'s ] (ZAPU) also deteriorated. In the ] of 1982–1987, Mugabe's ] crushed ZAPU-linked opposition in ] in a campaign that killed at least 20,000 people, mostly ] civilians. Internationally, he sent troops into the ] and chaired the ] (1986–1989), the ] (1997–1998), and the ] (2015–2016). Pursuing ], Mugabe emphasized the ] controlled by white ] to landless blacks, initially on a "willing seller–willing buyer" basis. Frustrated at the slow rate of redistribution, from 2000 he encouraged black Zimbabweans to violently seize white-owned farms. Food production was severely impacted, leading to famine, economic decline, and foreign sanctions. Opposition to Mugabe grew, but he was re-elected in ], ], and ] through campaigns dominated by violence, ], and nationalistic appeals to his rural Shona voter base. In 2017, members of his party ], replacing him with former vice president ].


<!--Reception and legacy-->
Since 1998 Mugabe's policies, especially land reform and the break with the IMF, have increasingly elicited domestic and international denunciation. His government pursued support for SADC's intervention in the ], redistributed thousands of ] farms, and in response to wide ranging financial sanctions outlined in the Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act of 2001 or ], printed hundreds of trillions of ]s resulting in ],<ref>{{citeweb|url=http://www.zimbabwesituation.com/jan4b_2008.html#Z11|title=Cash crisis: No end in sight|publisher=The Zimbabwe Situation|accessdate=2008-06-28}} and dozens more references at ]</ref> and has been accused of harassing and intimidating political opponents, particularly members of the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/06/world/africa/06zimbabwe.html|title=Zimbabwe Tells All Aid Groups to Halt Efforts|accessdate=2008-06-28|publisher=New York Times}}</ref>
Having dominated Zimbabwe's politics for nearly four decades, Mugabe was a controversial figure. He was praised as a revolutionary hero of the African liberation struggle who helped free Zimbabwe from British ], ], and white minority rule. Critics accused Mugabe of being a dictator responsible for ] and widespread ] and ], including ], ], and genocide.
Zimbabwe's economy spiraled downward,<ref name="manfist">{{cite journal
|author=Staff|title=Robert Mugabe: The man behind the fist|journal=The Economist|date=2007-03-29
|url=http://www.economist.com/world/displaystory.cfm?story_id=8922493}}</ref> with food and oil shortages,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.alertnet.org/db/blogs/50717/2008/03/15-091541-1.htm|title=Zimbabwe's hunger deepens as election crisis bites|accessdate=2008-06-28|publisher=Reuters}}</ref> and with massive internal displacement<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.internal-displacement.org/8025708F004BE3B1/(httpInfoFiles)/BD8316FAB5984142C125742E0033180B/$file/IDMC_Internal_Displacement_Global_Overview_2007.pdf|title=IDMC_Internal_Displacement_Global_Overview_2007 pdf|format=PDF}}</ref> and ].<ref>{{cite web|title=The Daily Telegraph|url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/1564285/One-million-fleeing-Zimbabwe-for-South-Africa.html}} See also: {{citebook|author=Guest, Robert|title=The Shackled Continent: Africa's Past, Present and Future|publisher=Pan Books|year=2005}}</ref> During this period Mugabe's policies have been denounced in the West and at home as racist against ].<ref name="ukanger">{{cite news
|title=UK anger over Zimbabwe violence
|work=BBC News
|date=2000-04-01
|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/698175.stm}}</ref><ref name="mcgreal2007">{{cite news|first=Peter|last=McGreal|title=Corrupt, greedy and violent: Mugabe attacked by Catholic bishops after years of silence|work=The Guardian|date=2007-04-02|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/zimbabwe/article/0,,2048032,00.html}}</ref><ref name="bentley2007">{{cite news|first=Daniel|last=Bentley|title=Sentamu urges Mugabe Action|work=The Independent|date=2007-09-17|url=http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/article2970781.ece}}</ref>
Mugabe has described his critics as "born again colonialists",<ref>{{cite news
|title=Mugabe: US must disarm
|work=BBC News
|date=2007-02-25
|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/2796883.stm}}</ref><ref name="egbuna">{{cite journal
|first=Obi|last=Egbuna
|title=Zimbabwe: Who else but Mugabe?
|journal=The Black Commentator
|issue=51|date=2003-07-31
|url=http://www.blackcommentator.com/51/51_zim_egbuna.html}}</ref>
and both he and his supporters claim Zimbabwe's problems are the legacy of imperialism,<ref>{{cite news
|title=Colonial history tugs at EU-Africa ties
|work=People's Daily
|date=2007-12-05
|url=http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/90001/90777/90855/6315084.html}}</ref>
aggravated by Western economic meddling.


==Early life==
Mugabe lost the first round of the 2008 election to prime minister ], 43% to 48%, though neither candidate secured the 50% necessary to avoid a runoff election. The ] claimed that the official results had been altered to force a run-off vote, since their returns suggested that Tsvangirai had received 50.3% of the vote.<ref>{{citeweb|url=http://zimbabwemetro.com/2008/05/02/zec-announces-corrected-results/ZEC|title=Announces “Corrected” results|publisher=]|accessdate=2008-06-28}}</ref>
===Childhood: 1924–1945===
Robert Gabriel Mugabe was born on 21 February 1924 at the ] village in Southern Rhodesia's ].{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=17|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=19}} His father, Gabriel Matibiri, was a carpenter while his mother Bona was a Christian ] for the village children.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=11|2a1=Blair|2y=2002|2p=17|3a1=Meredith|3y=2002|3pp=19, 21|4a1=Norman|4y=2008|4p=15}} They had been trained in their professions by the ]s, the ] religious order which had established the mission.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=19}} Bona and Gabriel had six children: Miteri (Michael), Raphael, Robert, Dhonandhe (Donald), ], and Bridgette.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=11|2a1=Blair|2y=2002|2p=17}} They belonged to the Zezuru clan, one of the smallest branches of the ].{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=26}} Mugabe's paternal grandfather was ] Constantine Karigamombe, alias "Matibiri", a powerful figure who served King ] in the 19th century.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://bulawayo24.com/index-id-news-sc-national-byo-118372.html|title=Mugabe's grandfather served King Lobengula|publisher=Bulawayo|date=23 September 2017|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171107223825/http://bulawayo24.com/index-id-news-sc-national-byo-118372.html|archive-date=7 November 2017}}</ref> Through his father, he claimed membership of the ] family that has provided the hereditary rulers of Zvimba for generations.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.sundaymail.co.zw/president-at-91-how-president-mugabe-became-my-father|title=President At 91: How President Mugabe Became My Father|date=25 January 2015 |institution=The Sunday Mail|access-date=18 February 2020}}</ref>


The Jesuits were strict disciplinarians and under their influence Mugabe developed an intense self-discipline,{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=19}} while also becoming a devout Catholic.{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=3}} Mugabe excelled at school,{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=18}} where he was a secretive and solitary child,{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=18|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=20}} preferring to read, rather than playing sports or socialising with other children.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=18|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2pp=20–21}} He was taunted by many of the other children, who regarded him as a coward and a ].{{sfn|Holland|2008|pp=6–7}}
== Early life ==
Robert Gabriel Karigamombe Mugabe was born in Matibiri village near Kutama Mission in the Zvimba District north east of ] in ]. He had two older brothers, and one of them, Michael, was very popular in the village. Both his older brothers died, leaving Robert and his younger brother, Donato.<ref>{{cite news
|author=Staff reporter
|title=Mugabe mourns reclusive brother
|work=newzimbabwe.com
|date=2007-05-21
|url=http://www.newzimbabwe.com/pages/mugabe.16447.html|accessdate=2008-04-03}}</ref>
His father, Gabriel Mugabe Matibiri, a ],<ref name="manfist">{{cite journal
|author=Staff
|title=Robert Mugabe: The man behind the fist
|journal=The Economist
|date=2007-03-29
|url=http://www.economist.com/world/displaystory.cfm?story_id=8922493}}</ref>
abandoned the Mugabe family in 1934 after Michael died, in search of work in ].<ref name="Nyarota2006">{{cite book
|first=Geoffrey|last=Nyarota
|title=Against the Grain
|year=2006
|page=100}}</ref>
Mugabe was raised as a ], studying in ] and ] schools, including the exclusive ], headed by an Irish priest, Father Jerome O'Hea, who took him under his wing. Through his youth, Mugabe was never socially popular nor physically active and spent most of his time with the priests or his mother when he was not reading in the school's libraries. He was described as never playing with other children but enjoying his own company.<ref name="manfist" /> He qualified as a teacher, but left to study at ] in ] graduating in 1951 while meeting contemporaries such as ], ], ] and ]. He then studied at the ] in 1952, Salisbury (1953), ] (1954), and ] (1955–1957). Originally graduating with a ] degree from the ] in 1951, Mugabe subsequently earned six further degrees through ] including a ] and ] from the ] and a ], ], ], and ], all from the ].<ref name="zimbgov">{{cite web|url=http://www.gta.gov.zw/president%20bio/president_bio_contents.htm|accessdate=2008-04-04|title=President bio contents|work=Zimbabwean government website|publisher=Government of Zimbabwe}}</ref> The two Law degrees were earned while he was in prison, the Master of Science degree earned during his premiership of Zimbabwe.<ref>Christine Kenyon Jones, ''The People's University: 150 years of the University of London and its External students'' (], 2008) pages 148–149 ISBN 0955768918</ref> After graduating, Mugabe lectured at Chalimbana Teacher Training College, in ] from 1955–1958, thereafter he taught at Apowa Secondary School at ], in the ] of ] after completing his local certification at Achimota School (1958 – 1960), where he met ], who later became his first wife. During his stay in Ghana, he was influenced and inspired by Ghana's then-Prime Minister, ]. In addition, Mugabe and some of his ] party cadres received instruction at the ], then at ] in southern Ghana.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/NewsArchive/artikel.php?ID=126516|title=I am still a disciple of Nkrumah{{ndash}} Mugabe|accessdate=2007-07-03|work=General News of Monday, 2 July 2007|publisher=Ghana Home Page}}</ref><ref></ref>


In about 1930 Gabriel had an argument with one of the Jesuits, and as a result the Mugabe family was expelled from the mission village by its French leader, Father Jean-Baptiste Loubière.{{sfn|Blair|2002|pp=17–18}} The family settled in a village about {{convert|7|mi|km|0|abbr=off|order=flip}} away; the children were permitted to remain at the mission primary school, living with relatives in Kutama during term-time and returning to their parental home on weekends.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=18}} Around the same time, Robert's older brother Raphael died, likely of ].{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=18}} In early 1934, Robert's other older brother, Michael, also died, after consuming poisoned maize.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=11|2a1=Blair|2y=2002|2p=18|3a1=Holland|3y=2008|3p=224}} Later that year, Gabriel left his family in search of employment in ].{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=18|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=21|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=15}} He subsequently abandoned Bona and their six children and established a relationship with another woman, with whom he had three further offspring.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=21}}
== Early political career ==
{{Main|History of Zimbabwe}}
Mugabe returned to Southern Rhodesia and joined the National Democratic Party (NDP) in 1960.<ref name="ndp">{{cite book|last=Olson|first=James Stuart|coauthors=Robert Shadle|year=|title=Historical Dictionary of the British Empire|pages=764}}</ref> The administration of Prime Minister ] banned the NDP when it later became ]'s ] (ZAPU). Mugabe left ZAPU in 1963 to join the rival ] (ZANU) which had been formed in 1963 by the Reverend ], ], ], ] and lawyer ]. ZANU was influenced by the Africanist ideas of the ] in South Africa<ref name="panfluence">{{cite book|last=Glaude Jr.|first=Eddie|year=2002|title=Is It Nation Time?: Contemporary Essays on Black Power and Black Nationalism|pages=105}}</ref> and influenced by ] while ZAPU was an ally of the ] and was a supporter of a more orthodox pro-] line on ]. Similar divisions can also be seen in the liberation movement in ] between the ] and ]. It would have been easy for the party to split along tribal lines between the ] and Mugabe's own ] tribe, but cross-tribal representation was maintained by his partners. ZANU leader Sithole nominated Robert Mugabe as his Secretary General.


Loubière died shortly after and was replaced by an Irishman, Father Jerome O'Hea, who welcomed the return of the Mugabe family to Kutama.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=18}} In contrast to the racism that permeated Southern Rhodesian society, under O'Hea's leadership the Kutama Mission preached an ethos of racial equality.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=15|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=16}} O'Hea nurtured the young Mugabe; shortly before his death in 1970 he described the latter as having "an exceptional mind and an exceptional heart".{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=12|2a1=Blair|2y=2002|2p=18|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=16}} As well as helping provide Mugabe with a Christian education, O'Hea taught him about the ], in which Irish revolutionaries had overthrown the British imperial regime.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=21|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=16}} After completing six years of elementary education, in 1941 Mugabe was offered a place on a teacher training course at ]. Mugabe's mother could not afford the tuition fees, which were paid in part by his grandfather and in part by O'Hea.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=14|2a1=Blair|2y=2002|2p=18|3a1=Meredith|3y=2002|3p=21|4a1=Norman|4y=2008|4p=16}} As part of this education, Mugabe began teaching at his old school, earning £2 per month, which he used to support his family.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=18|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=16}} In 1944, Gabriel returned to Kutama with his three new children, but died shortly after, leaving Robert to take financial responsibility for both his three siblings and three half-siblings.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=18|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=16}} Having attained a teaching diploma, Mugabe left Kutama in 1945.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=22}}
In 1964 Mugabe was arrested for “subversive speech” and spent the next 11 years in Salisbury prison. During that period he earned three degrees, including a law degree from London and a bachelor of administration from the University of South Africa by correspondence courses. Smith did not allow Mugabe out of prison to attend the funeral of Mugabe's four-year-old son.<ref name="manfist"/> In 1974, while still in prison, Mugabe was elected—with the powerful influence of ]—to take over the reins of ZANU after a no-confidence vote was passed on ]<ref name=lrb>{{citeweb|url=http://www.lrb.co.uk/v23/n04/john01_.html|title=How Mugabe came to power|accessdate=2008-06-28|publisher=London Review of Books}}</ref> - Mugabe himself abstained from voting. His time in prison burnished his reputation and helped his cause.<ref name="manfist"/>


=== University education and teaching career: 1945–1960===
Mugabe unilaterally assumed control of ZANU from Mozambique after the death of Herbert Chitepo on March 18, 1975. Later that year, after squabbling with ], Mugabe formed a militant ZANU faction, leaving Sithole to lead the moderate ] party. Many opposition leaders mysteriously died during this time, including one who allegedly died in a car crash although the aforementioned car is rumored to have been riddled with bullet holes at the scene of the supposed accident.<ref name="manfist"/> Additionally, an opposing newspaper's ] was bombed and its journalists tortured.<ref name="manfist"/>
During the following years, Mugabe taught at various schools around Southern Rhodesia,{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=16|2a1=Blair|2y=2002|2p=19|3a1=Meredith|3y=2002|3p=22}} among them the Dadaya Mission school in ].{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=16|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2pp=16–17}} There is no evidence that Mugabe was involved in political activity at the time, and he did not participate in the country's ].{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=19}} In 1949 he won a scholarship to study at the ] in South Africa's ].{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=16|2a1=Blair|2y=2002|2p=19|3a1=Meredith|3y=2002|3p=22|4a1=Norman|4y=2008|4p=17}} There he joined the ] youth league (ANCYL){{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=17|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=17}} and attended ] meetings, where he met a number of Jewish South African ] who introduced him to ] ideas.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=16|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=22}} He later related that despite this exposure to Marxism, his biggest influence at the time were the actions of ] during the ].{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=17|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2pp=22–23}} In 1952, he left the university with a Bachelor of Arts degree in history and English literature.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=19|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=17}} In later years he described his time at Fort Hare as the "turning point" in his life.{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|p=17}}


].]]
== Lancaster House Agreement ==
Mugabe returned to Southern Rhodesia in 1952,{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=19|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=23}} by which time—he later related— he was "completely hostile to the system".{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=23}} Here, his first job was as a teacher at the Driefontein Roman Catholic Mission School near ].{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=17|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=17}} In 1953 he relocated to the Highfield Government School in ]'s ] and in 1954 to the Mambo Township Government School in ].{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=17}} Meanwhile, he gained a ] degree by correspondence from the ],{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=23|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=17}} and ordered a number of Marxist tracts—among them ]'s '']'' and ]' '']''—from a London mail-order company.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=18|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=23}} Despite his growing interest in politics, he was not active in any political movement.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=23}} He joined a number of inter-racial groups, such as the ], through which he mixed with both black and white Rhodesians.{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|pp=18–19}} ], who knew Mugabe through this group, later noted that he was "an extraordinary young man" who could be "a bit of a cold fish at times" but "could talk about ] or ] as easily as politics".{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=19|2a1=Blair|2y=2002|2pp=18–19}}
{{Main|Lancaster House Agreement}}
Persuasion from ], himself under pressure from ], forced ], the sitting prime minister at the time, to accept in principle that white minority rule could not continue indefinitely. On 3 March 1978 Bishop ], ] and other moderate leaders signed an agreement at the Governor's Lodge in Salisbury, which paved the way for an interim power-sharing government, in preparation for elections. The ] were won by the ] under Bishop ], but international recognition did not follow and sanctions were not lifted. The two 'Patriotic Front' groups under Mugabe and ] refused to participate and continued the war.


From 1955 to 1958, Mugabe lived in neighbouring ], where he worked at Chalimbana Teacher Training College in ].{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=23|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=17}} There he continued his education by working on a second degree by correspondence, this time a Bachelor of Administration from the ] through distance and learning. {{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=23|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=17}} In Northern Rhodesia, he was taken in for a time by the family of ], whom Mugabe inspired to join the liberation movement and who would later go on to be ].<ref name=":8">{{Cite news|url=http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2017/11/emmerson-mnangagwa-zimbabwe-crocodile-171124062910487.html|title=Who is Emmerson Mnangagwa, Zimbabwe's 'Crocodile'?|last=Marima|first=Tendai|date=24 November 2017|publisher=]|access-date=25 November 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171125015900/http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2017/11/emmerson-mnangagwa-zimbabwe-crocodile-171124062910487.html|archive-date=25 November 2017|url-status=live}}</ref> In 1958, Mugabe moved to Ghana to work at St Mary's Teacher Training College in ].{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=21|2a1=Blair|2y=2002|2p=19|3a1=Meredith|3y=2002|3p=23}} He taught at Apowa Secondary School, also at Takoradi, after obtaining his local certification at ] (1958–1960), where he met his first wife, ].<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.globalblackhistory.com/2012/02/robert-mugabe-early-years.html|title=Robert Mugabe: The Early Years – Global Black History|date=17 February 2012|work=Global Black History|access-date=24 June 2018|language=en-US|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171209104945/http://www.globalblackhistory.com/2012/02/robert-mugabe-early-years.html|archive-date=9 December 2017}}</ref> According to Mugabe, "I went as an adventurist. I wanted to see what it would be like in an independent African state".{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|p=22}} Ghana had been the first African state to gain independence from European colonial powers and under the leadership of ] underwent a range of African nationalist reforms; Mugabe reveled in this environment.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=21|2a1=Blair|2y=2002|2p=19|3a1=Meredith|3y=2002|3pp=23–24}} In tandem with his teaching, Mugabe attended the ] in ].{{sfnm|1a1=Norman|1y=2008|1p=18|2a1=Ndlovu-Gatsheni|2y=2009|2p=1142}} Mugabe later claimed that it was in Ghana that he finally embraced Marxism.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=22|2a1=Blair|2y=2002|2p=19|3a1=Meredith|3y=2002|3p=24|4a1=Norman|4y=2008|4p=18}} He also began a relationship there with Hayfron who worked at the college and shared his political interests.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=22|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=24|3a1=Holland|3y=2008|3pp=11–12|4a1=Norman|4y=2008|4p=17}}
The incoming government did accept an invitation to talks at ] in September 1979. A ceasefire was negotiated for the talks, which were attended by Smith, Mugabe, Nkomo, Zvobgo and others. Eventually the parties to the talks agreed on a new constitution for a new Republic of Zimbabwe with elections in February 1980. The Lancaster Agreement saw Mugabe make two important and contentious concessions. First, he allowed 20 seats to be reserved for whites in the new Parliament, and second, he agreed to a ten year moratorium on constitutional amendments. His return to Zimbabwe in December 1979, following the completion of the Lancaster House Agreement, was greeted with enormous supportive crowds.


==Revolutionary activity==
== Prime Minister and President ==
===Early political career: 1960–1963===
]
While Mugabe was teaching abroad, an anti-colonialist African nationalist movement was established in Southern Rhodesia. It was first led by ]'s ], founded in September 1957 and then banned by the colonial government in February 1959.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1pp=33–34|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2pp=24–25}} SRANC was replaced by the more radically oriented ] (NDP), founded in January 1960.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=35|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=26}} In May 1960, Mugabe returned to Southern Rhodesia, bringing Hayfron with him.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=24|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=26}} The pair had planned for their visit to be short, however Mugabe's friend, the African nationalist ], urged them to stay.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=26}}
After a campaign marked by intimidation from all sides, mistrust from security forces and reports of full ballot boxes found on the road, the ] majority was decisive in electing Mugabe to head the first government as prime minister on 4 March 1980. ZANU won 57 out of 80 Common Roll seats in the new parliament, with the 20 white seats all going to the ].


] became one of the leading figures of resistance to white minority rule in Southern Rhodesia.]]
Mugabe, whose political support came from his ] homeland in the north, attempted to build Zimbabwe on a basis of an uneasy coalition with his ] (ZAPU) rivals, whose support came from the ]-speaking south, and with the white minority. Mugabe sought to incorporate ZAPU into his ] (ZANU) led government and ZAPU's military wing into the army. ZAPU's leader, ], was given a series of cabinet positions in Mugabe's government. However, Mugabe was torn between this objective and pressures to meet the expectations of his own ZANU followers for a faster pace of social change.


In July 1960, Takawira and two other NDP officials were arrested; in protest, Mugabe joined a demonstration of 7,000 people who planned to march from ] to the Prime Minister's office in Salisbury. The demonstration was stopped by riot police outside Stoddart Hall in Harare township.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1pp=25–26|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=26|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=43}} By midday the next day, the crowd had grown to 40,000 and a makeshift platform had been erected for speakers. Having become a much-respected figure through his profession, his possession of three degrees, and his travels abroad, Mugabe was among those invited to speak to the crowd.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=27|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=26|3a1=Holland|3y=2008|3p=13}} Following this event, Mugabe decided to devote himself full-time to activism, resigning his teaching post in Ghana (after having served two years of the four-year teaching contract).{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=27}} He chaired the first NDP congress, held in October 1960, assisted by ] on the procedural aspects. Mugabe was elected the party's publicity secretary.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=37|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=27|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=44}} Mugabe consciously injected emotionalism into the NDP's African nationalism, hoping to broaden its support among the wider population by appealing to traditional cultural values.{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|p=37}} He helped to form the NDP Youth Wing and encouraged the incorporation of ancestral prayers, traditional costume, and female ] into its meetings.{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|pp=37–38}} In February 1961 he married Hayfron in a Roman Catholic ceremony conducted in Salisbury; she had converted to Catholicism to make this possible.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=38|2a1=Blair|2y=2002|2p=20|3a1=Meredith|3y=2002|3p=27|4a1=Holland|4y=2008|4p=13|5a1=Norman|5y=2008|5p=44}}
In 1983, Mugabe fired Nkomo from his cabinet, triggering bitter fighting between ZAPU supporters in the ]-speaking region of the country and the ruling ZANU. Mugabe accused the ] tribe of plotting to overthrow him after sacking Nkomo. Between 1982 and 1985, the military ] from ] groups in the provinces of ] and the ], leaving Mugabe's rule secure. Mugabe has been accused by the ]'s ''Panorama'' programme of committing mass murder during this period of his rule.<ref name="silence">, ''BBC'', 10 March 2002</ref> A peace accord was negotiated in 1987.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.zimbabwejournalists.com/story.php?art_id=1601&cat=5|title=Zimbabwejournalists.com: Calls for justice 20 years after massacre<!-- Bot generated title -->}}</ref> ZAPU merged into the ] (ZANU-PF) on 22 December 1988.<ref name="merger">{{cite book|last=Golenpaul|first=Ann|coauthors=Dan Golenpaul|year=|title=Information Please Almanac, Atlas and Yearbook|pages=290}}</ref> Mugabe brought Nkomo into the government once again as a vice-president.


The British government held a Salisbury conference in 1961 to determine Southern Rhodesia's future. Nkomo led an NDP delegation, which hoped that the British would support the creation of an independent state governed by the black majority. Representatives of the country's white minority—who then controlled Southern Rhodesia's government—were opposed to this, promoting continued white minority rule.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|pp=27–28}} Following negotiations, Nkomo agreed to a proposal which would allow the black population representation through 15 of the 65 seats in the country's parliament. Mugabe and others in the NDP were furious at Nkomo's compromise.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1pp=39–40|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=28}} Following the conference, Southern Rhodesia's African nationalist movement fell into disarray.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=28}} Mugabe spoke at a number of NDP rallies before the party was banned by the government in December 1961.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=42|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=29|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=44}} Many of its members re-grouped as the ] (ZAPU) several days later,{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=43|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=29|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=44}} with Mugabe appointed as ZAPU's publicity secretary and general secretary.{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=44}}
In 1987, the position of Prime Minister was abolished and Mugabe assumed the new office of executive President of Zimbabwe gaining additional powers in the process. He was re-elected in 1990 and 1996, and in 2002 amid claims of widespread vote-rigging and intimidation. Mugabe's term of office expired at the end of March 2008.


Racial violence was growing in the country, with aggrieved black Africans targeting the white community.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=29}} Mugabe deemed such conflict a necessary tactic in the overthrow of British colonial dominance and white minority rule. This contrasted with Nkomo's view that African nationalists should focus on international diplomacy to encourage the British government to grant their demands.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=29}} Nine months after it had been founded, ZAPU was also banned by the government,{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=43|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=29|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=44}} and in September 1962 Mugabe and other senior party officials were arrested and restricted to their home districts for three months.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=43|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=29|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=44}} Both Mugabe and his wife were in trouble with the law; he had been charged with making subversive statements in a public speech and awarded bail before his trial.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=45|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=31}} Hayfron had been sentenced to two years imprisonment—suspended for 15 months—for a speech in which she declared that the British Queen ] "can go to hell".{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1pp=45–46|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=31}}
Mugabe has been the ] of the ] since Parliament passed the University of Zimbabwe Amendment Bill in November 1990.<ref name="chancellor">{{cite book|last=Human Rights Watch|first=|year=2000|title=Abdication of Responsibility: The Commonwealth and Human Rights|pages=343}}</ref>


{{Quote box|width=25em|align=right|quote=Europeans must realise that unless the legitimate demands of African nationalism are recognised, then racial conflict is inevitable. | salign=right |source=— Mugabe, early 1960s{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=42|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=44}} }}
===''Gukurahundi''===
{{main|Gukurahundi}}


The rise of African nationalism generated a white backlash in Southern Rhodesia, with the right-wing ] winning the ]. The new government sought to preserve white minority rule by tightening security and establishing full independence from the United Kingdom.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=45|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=30}} Mugabe met with colleagues at his house in Salisbury's Highbury district, where he argued that as political demonstrations were simply being banned, it was time to move towards armed resistance.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=30}} Both he and others rejected Nkomo's proposal that they establish a government-in-exile in ].{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1pp=44–45|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2pp=30–31}} He and Hayfron skipped bail to attend a ZAPU meeting in the ]n city.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1pp=46–47|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=31}} There, the party leadership met Tanganyika's president, ], who also dismissed the idea of a government-in-exile and urged ZAPU to organise their resistance to white minority rule within Southern Rhodesia itself.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=47|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=31}}
There were major outbreaks of violence between ZIPRA and ZANLA awaiting integration into the National Army. ZAPU was believed to have been planning an armed revolt to make up for ZAPU's poor showing in the 1980 elections.<ref name ="CCJP"> </ref>


In August, Hayfron gave birth to Mugabe's son, whom they named Nhamodzenyika, a Shona term meaning "suffering country".{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=48|2a1=Blair|2y=2002|2p=20|3a1=Meredith|3y=2002|3p=32|4a1=Holland|4y=2008|4p=14|5a1=Norman|5y=2008|5p=45}} Mugabe insisted that she take their son back to Ghana, while he decided to return to Southern Rhodesia.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=49|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=32}} There, African nationalists opposed to Nkomo's leadership had established a new party, the ] (ZANU), in August; ] became the group's president, while appointing Mugabe to be the group's secretary-general ''in absentia''.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=49|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=32|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=46}} Nkomo responded by forming his own group, the People's Caretaker Council, which was widely referred to as "ZAPU" after its predecessor.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=32}} ZAPU and ZANU violently opposed one another and soon gang warfare broke out between their rival memberships.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=33}}<ref name="struggleforzimbabwe7071">{{cite book|title=The Struggle for Zimbabwe|last1=Martin|first1=David|last2=Johnson|first2=Phyllis|date=July 1981|edition=First |publisher=]|isbn=978-0-571-11066-7|pages=70–71}}</ref>
Major arms caches were discovered in early 1982, and this caused a final rift between ZANU and ZAPU. Some believe that this was engineered by South African agents. South Africa's policy of destabilizing Zimbabwe by military means, while blaming ZAPU for the actions of South African agents, helped to escalate the breakdown between ZAPU and ZANU in the early 1980s. This in turn led Zimbabwe to retain a state of emergency throughout the 1980s.<ref name ="CCJP"/>


===Imprisonment: 1963–1975===
Zimbabwe's 5 Brigade killed about 20 000 people. .<ref name ="CCJP"/>
Mugabe was arrested on his return to Southern Rhodesia in December 1963.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=49|2a1=Blair|2y=2002|2p=21|3a1=Meredith|3y=2002|3p=33|4a1=Norman|4y=2008|4p=49}} His trial lasted from January to March 1964, during which he refused to retract the subversive statements that he had publicly made.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=49|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=33}} In March 1964 he was sentenced to 21 months' imprisonment.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=33}} Mugabe was first imprisoned at Salisbury Maximum Security Prison, before being moved to the ] detention centre and then the Sikombela detention centre in ].{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=51|2a1=Blair|2y=2002|2p=21|3a1=Meredith|3y=2002|3pp=33–34|4a1=Norman|4y=2008|4p=50}} At the latter, he organised study classes for the inmates, teaching them basic literacy, maths, and English.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=54|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=34|3a1=Holland|3y=2008|3p=27|4a1=Norman|4y=2008|4p=51}} Sympathetic black warders smuggled messages from Mugabe and other members of the ZANU executive committee to activists outside the prison.{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|p=55}} At the executive's bidding, ZANU activist ] had organised a small guerrilla force in ]. In April 1966 the group carried out a failed attempt to destroy power pylons at ], and shortly after attacked a white-owned farm near ], killing its inhabitants.{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|pp=55–56}} The government responded by returning the members of the ZANU executive, including Mugabe, to Salisbury Prison in 1966.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=55|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=34}} There, forty prisoners were divided among four communal cells, with many sleeping on the concrete floor due to overcrowding;{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|p=56}} Mugabe shared his cell with Sithole, ], and ].{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=34}} He remained there for eight years, devoting his time to reading and studying.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=34}} During this period, he gained several further degrees from the University of London: a masters in economics, a bachelor of administration, and two law degrees.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=22|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=34}}
] became leader of Rhodesia.]]
While imprisoned, Mugabe learned that his son had died of ] at the age of three. Mugabe was grief-stricken and requested a leave of absence to visit his wife in Ghana. He never forgave the prison authorities for refusing this request.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1pp=57–58|2a1=Blair|2y=2002|2pp=21–22|3a1=Meredith|3y=2002|3pp=34–35|4a1=Holland|4y=2008|4pp=27–28}} Claims have also circulated among those who knew him at the time that Mugabe was subjected to both physical and mental torture during his imprisonment.{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=158}} According to Father Emmanuel Ribeiro, who was Mugabe's priest during his imprisonment, Mugabe got through the experience "partly through the strength of his spirituality" but also because his "real strength was study and helping others to learn".{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=152}}


While Mugabe was imprisoned, in August 1964, the Rhodesian Front government—now under the leadership of ]—banned ZANU and ZAPU and arrested all remaining leaders of the country's African nationalist movement.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=33|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=51}} Smith's government made a ] in November 1965, renaming Southern Rhodesia as Rhodesia; the UK refused to recognize the legitimacy of this and imposed economic sanctions on the country.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=55|2a1=Blair|2y=2002|2p=21|3a1=Meredith|3y=2002|3pp=35–36|4a1=Norman|4y=2008|4p=54}}
o.<ref></ref>


In 1972, the African nationalists launched a guerrilla war against Smith's government.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=23|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2pp=36–37}} Among the revolutionaries, it was known as the "Second Chimurenga".{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=23|2a1=Alao|2y=2012|2p=21}} Paramilitary groups based themselves in neighboring Tanzania and Zambia; many of their fighters were inadequately armed and trained.{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|p=61}} ZANU's military wing, the ] (ZANLA), consisted largely of Shona. It was based in neighboring ] and gained funds from the People's Republic of China. ZAPU's military wing, the ] (ZIPRA), was instead funded by the ], was based in Zambia, and consisted largely of ].{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=23|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2pp=36–37|3a1=Alao|3y=2012|3p=20}}
=== Social programs ===
According to a 1995 ] report, after independence, "Zimbabwe gave priority to human resource investments and support for smallholder agriculture," and as a result, "smallholder agriculture expanded rapidly during the first half of the 1980s and social indicators improved quickly." From 1980 to 1990 ] decreased from 86 to 49 per 1000 live births, under five mortality was reduced from 128 to 58 per 1000 live births, and immunisation increased from 25% to 80% of the population. Also, "child ] fell from 22% to 12% and life expectancy increased from 56 to 64. By 1990, Zimbabwe had a lower infant mortality rate, higher adult literacy and higher school enrollment rate than average for developing countries".<ref name="worldbank">{{cite web|url=http://www-wds.worldbank.org/servlet/WDSContentServer/WDSP/IB/1995/04/21/000009265_3961019095856/Rendered/PDF/multi0page.pdf|title=Zimbabwe Achieving Shared Growth|accessdate=2008-06-28|publisher=]|format=PDF}}</ref>


Mugabe and other senior ZANU members had growing doubts about Sithole's leadership, deeming him increasingly irritable and irrational.{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|p=66}} In October 1968 Sithole had tried to smuggle a message out of the prison commanding ZANU activists to assassinate Smith. His plan was discovered, and he was put on trial in January 1969; desperate to avoid a death sentence, he declared that he renounced violence and his previous ideological commitments.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1pp=66–68|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=55}} Mugabe denounced Sithole's "treachery" in rejecting ZANU's cause, and the executive removed him as ZANU President in a ], selecting Mugabe as his successor.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=68|2a1=Blair|2y=2002|2p=22|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=56}} In November 1974, the ZANU executive voted to suspend Sithole's membership of the organization.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=72|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=57}}
In 1991, the government of Zimbabwe, short on hard currency and under international pressure, embarked on an ] program. The World Bank's 1995 report explained that such reforms were required because Zimbabwe was unable to absorb into its labour market the many graduates from its impressive education system and that it needed to attract additional foreign investments. The reforms, however, undermined the livelihoods of Zimbabwe's poor majority; the report noted "large segments of the population, including most smallholder farmers and small scale enterprises, find themselves in a vulnerable position with limited capacity to respond to evolving market opportunities. This is due to their limited access to natural, technical and financial resources, to the contraction of many public services for smallholder agriculture, and to their still nascent links with larger scale enterprises."


Fearing that the guerrilla war would spread south, the South African government pressured Rhodesia to advance the process of détente with the politically moderate black governments of Zambia and Tanzania. As part of these negotiations, Smith's government agreed to release a number of black revolutionaries who had been indefinitely detained.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=22|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=57}} After almost eleven years of imprisonment, Mugabe was released in November 1974.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=22|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=37|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=59}} He moved in with his sister Sabina at her home in Highfield township.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=22}} He was intent on joining the ZANU forces and taking part in the guerrilla war,{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=37}} recognizing that to secure dominance of ZANU he would have to take command of ZANLA.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=23}} This was complicated by internal violence within the paramilitary group, predominately between members of the ] and ] groups of Shona.{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|pp=76–78}}
Moreover, these people were forced to live on marginal lands as Zimbabwe's best lands were reserved for mainly white landlords growing cash crops for export, a sector of the economy favoured by the IMF's plan. For the poor on the communal lands, "existing levels of production in these areas are now threatened by the environmental fragility of the natural resource base and the unsustainability of existing farming practices".<ref name="worldbank"/> The ] later suspended aid, saying reforms were "not on track."


===Guerrilla war: 1975–1979===
According to the ] (]), life expectancy at birth for Zimbabwean men has since become 37 years and is 34 years for women, the lowest such figures for any nation.<ref name="EXPECTANCY">{{citeweb|url=http://www.afro.who.int/home/countries/fact_sheets/zimbabwe.pdf|title=Country Health System Fact Sheet 2006 Zimbabwe|publisher=World Health Organisation|accessdate=2008-06-28|format=PDF}}</ref> The World Bank's 1995 report predicted this decline in life expectancy from its 1990 height of 64 years when, commenting on health care system cuts mandated by the IMF structural adjustment programme, it stated that "The decline in resources is creating strains and threatening the sustainability of health sector achievements".<ref name="worldbank"/>
] (ZANU)]]
In March 1975, Mugabe resolved to leave Rhodesia for Mozambique, ambitious to take control of ZANU's guerrilla campaign.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=4}} After his friend ] was arrested, he feared the same fate but was hidden from the authorities by Ribeiro. Ribeiro and a sympathetic nun then assisted him and ] in smuggling themselves into Mozambique.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=23|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2pp=4–5}} Mugabe remained in exile there for two years.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=5}} Mozambique's Marxist President ] was sceptical of Mugabe's leadership abilities and was unsure whether to recognise him as ZANU's legitimate leader. Machel gave him a house in ] and kept him under partial ], with Mugabe requiring permission to travel.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1pp=80–81|2a1=Blair|2y=2002|2p=23}} It would be almost a year before Machel accepted Mugabe's leadership of ZANU.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=23}}


Mugabe travelled to various ZANLA camps in Mozambique to build support among its officers.{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|p=81}} By mid-1976, he had secured the allegiance of ZANLA's military commanders and established himself as the most prominent guerrilla leader battling Smith's regime.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=23}} In August 1977, he was officially declared ZANU President at a meeting of the party's central committee held in ].{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=101|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=62}} During the war, Mugabe remained suspicious of many of ZANLA's commanders and had a number of them imprisoned.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=24}} In 1977 he imprisoned his former second-in-command, ], for suspected disloyalty.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=24}} After ] was killed in a car accident in 1979, there were suggestions made that Mugabe may have had some involvement in it; these rumours were never substantiated.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=24|2a1=Holland|2y=2008|2pp=55–56}}
The Zimbabwe dollar suffers from the highest ] rate of any currency in the world. Zimbabwe official statistics reveal that the annualised inflation rate for September 2006 was 1000%. The International Monetary Fund (]), in its ''World Economic Outlook'' database, reported inflation in 2006 at 1216%.<ref name="forecast">{{citeweb|url=http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2006/02/pdf/weo0906.pdf|title=World Economic Outlook: World Economic and Financial Surveys|month=September|year=2006|pages=p.65|publisher=International Monetary Fund|accessdate=2008-06-28|format=PDF}}</ref> Inflation reached 9,000% on 21 June 2007,<ref>CCN News retrieved 4 July 2007</ref> and 11,000% on 22 June 2007.<ref>{{Citenews|publisher=BBC News|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/6229284.stm|title=US says Zimbabwe change is afoot|accessdate=2007-07-04}}</ref> It continues to climb rapidly, and was reported to exceed 100,000% as of April 2008.<ref>{{citenews|publisher=Reuters Africa|url=http://africa.reuters.com/wire/news/usnL03586886.html|title=Zimbabwe faces hard road to prosperity post-Mugabe|accessdate=2008-06-28}}</ref> Official statistics indicate that this had risen to 11,250,000% by June 2008.<ref>{{citenews|publisher=BBC|title=Zimbabwea inflation rockets higher|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7569894.stm|accessdate=2008-08-20}}</ref>


Mugabe remained aloof from the day-to-day military operations of ZANLA, which he entrusted to Tongogara.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=23}} In January 1976, ZANLA launched its first major infiltration from Mozambique, with nearly 1000 guerrillas crossing the border to attack white-owned farms and stores.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=83|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=60}} In response, Smith's government enlisted all men under the age of 35, expanding the Rhodesian army by 50%.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=83|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=60}} ZANLA's attacks forced large numbers of white landowners to abandon their farms; their now-unemployed black workers joined ZANLA by the thousands.{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|p=100}} By 1979, ZANLA were in a position to attack a number of Rhodesian cities.{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|pp=115–116}} Over the course of the war, at least 30,000 people were killed.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=10}} As a proportion of their wider population, the whites had higher number of fatalities,{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=10}} and by the latter part of the decade the guerrillas were winning.{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|p=109}}
While Zimbabwe has suffered in many other measures under Mugabe, as a former schoolteacher he has been well-known for his commitment to education.<ref name="manfist"/> However, Catholic Archbishop of Zimbabwe ] decried the educational situation in the country, saying, among other scathing indictments of Mugabe, "We had the best education in Africa and now our schools are closing".<ref>{{citeweb|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article2010591.ece|title=Zimbabwe’s top cleric urges Britain to invade|publisher=]|date=1 July 2007|accessdate=2008-06-28}}</ref>


] in 1976]]
=== Racism ===
Mugabe focused on the propaganda war, making regular speeches and radio broadcasts.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=23}} In these, he presented himself as a ], speaking warmly of Marxist-Leninist revolutionaries like ], ], and ].{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=24}} Despite his Marxist views, Mugabe's meetings with Soviet representatives were unproductive, for they insisted on Nkomo's leadership of the revolutionary struggle.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=88|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=61}} His relationship with the People's Republic of China was far warmer, as the Chinese Maoist government supplied ZANLA with armaments without any conditions.{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|p=88}} He also sought support from Western nations, visiting Western embassies in Mozambique,{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|p=89}} and travelled to both Western states like Italy and Switzerland and Marxist-governed states like the Soviet Union, China, North Korea, Vietnam, and Cuba.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1pp=99, 109, 114|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2pp=61, 63–64}}
A number of people have accused Mugabe of having a racist attitude towards white people. ], a ]-born ] in the ], calls Mugabe "the worst kind of racist dictator," for having "targeted the whites for their apparent riches".<ref>Sentamu, John, , ''Observer'' 16 September 2007, Accessed 24 June 2008</ref> Almost thirty years after ending white-minority rule in Zimbabwe, Mugabe accuses the ] of promoting white imperialism and regularly accuses opposition figures to his government of being allies of white imperialism.<ref>http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/fiery-mugabe-vows-to-end-white-imperialism-715947.html</ref><ref>http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2007/mar/30/comment.zimbabwe</ref>


Mugabe called for the overthrow of Rhodesia's predominately white government, the execution of Smith and his "criminal gang", the expropriation of white-owned land, and the transformation of Rhodesia into a ].{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=7}} He repeatedly called for violence against the country's white minority,{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=11}} referring to white Rhodesians as "blood-sucking exploiters", "sadistic killers", and "hard-core racists".{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=24}} In one typical example, taken from a 1978 radio address, Mugabe declared: "Let us hammer to defeat. Let us blow up his citadel. Let us give him no time to rest. Let us chase him in every corner. Let us rid our home of this settler vermin".{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=11}} For Mugabe, armed struggle was an essential part of the establishment of a new state.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=2}} In contrast to other black nationalist leaders like Nkomo, Mugabe opposed a negotiated settlement with Smith's government.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=2}} In October 1976 ZANU nevertheless established a joint platform with ZAPU known as the Patriotic Front.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1pp=92–94|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=61}}
When the ] once condemned Mugabe's authoritarian policies and alleged racist attitudes as being comparable to those of German Nazi dictator ], Mugabe responded with an extremely controversial remark, mocking the UK's claims by saying about himself and his policies that "This Hitler had only one objective: justice for his people, sovereignty for his people, recognition of the independence of his people and their rights over their resources...If that is Hitler, then let me be a Hitler tenfold."<ref>http://codrinarsene.com/2008/07/mugabe-power-plunder-and-the-struggle-for-zimbabwes-future-book-review/</ref>
In September 1978 Mugabe met with Nkomo in Lusaka. He was angry with the latter's secret attempts to negotiate with Smith.{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|p=112}}


=== Views on homosexuality === === Lancaster House Agreement: 1979 ===
The beginning of the end for Smith came when South African Prime Minister ] concluded that white minority rule was unsustainable in a country where blacks outnumbered whites 22:1.<ref name="impression">{{cite web|url=http://www.aliciapatterson.org/APF001975/Wright/Wright12/Wright12.html |title=APF newsletter, "Appraisal of Rhodesia in 1975" |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090531063909/http://www.aliciapatterson.org/APF001975/Wright/Wright12/Wright12.html |archive-date=31 May 2009 }}</ref> Under pressure from Vorster, Smith accepted in principle that white minority rule could not be maintained forever. He oversaw the ] which resulted in ], a politically moderate black bishop, being elected Prime Minister of the reconstituted ]. Both ZANU and ZAPU had boycotted the election, which did not receive international recognition.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=117|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=63}} At the ], held in Lusaka, the British Prime Minister ] surprised delegates by announcing that the UK would officially recognize the country's independence if it transitioned to democratic majority rule.{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|pp=118–120}}
Mugabe has waged a violent ], arguing that before colonisation Zimbabweans did not engage in homosexual acts.<ref name="HOMO"> ''Encyclopedia of Sex and Gender: Men and Women in the World's Cultures''</ref> His first major public condemnation of homosexuality<!-- Perhaps mention a couple of the subsequent ones to cite "the first"? --> came in 1995 during the Zimbabwe International Book Fair in August 1995.<ref name="ZIB"> ''Hungochani: The History of a Dissident Sexuality in Southern Africa''</ref> He told the audience that homosexuality:
<blockquote>
"...Degrades human dignity. It's unnatural and there is no question ever of allowing these people to behave worse than dogs and pigs. If dogs and pigs do not do it, why must human beings? We have our own culture, and we must re-dedicate ourselves to our traditional values that make us human beings... What we are being persuaded to accept is sub-animal behaviour and we will never allow it here. If you see people parading themselves as lesbians and gays, arrest them and hand them over to the police!"<ref name="GAYRANT"> Kaiwright.com</ref>
</blockquote>


]
In September 1995, Zimbabwe's parliament introduced legislation banning homosexual acts.<ref name="ZIB"/> In 1997, a court found ], Mugabe's predecessor and the first President of Zimbabwe, guilty of 11 counts of sodomy and indecent assault.<ref name="BANANAtrial"> ''Body, Sexuality, and Gender v. 1''</ref> Banana's trial proved embarrassing for Mugabe, when Banana's accusers alleged that Mugabe knew about Banana's conduct and had done nothing to stop it.<ref name="bananadeath"> ''The Guardian''</ref>
The negotiations took place at ] in London and were led by the ] politician ].{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=58}} Mugabe refused to attend these London peace talks,{{sfn|Meredith|2002|pp=6–7}} opposing the idea of a negotiated rather than military solution to the Rhodesian War.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=122|2a1=Holland|2y=2008|2p=60}} Machel insisted that he must, threatening to end Mozambican support for the ZANU-PF if he did not.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=7|2a1=Holland|2y=2008|2p=60|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=69|4a1=Tendi|4y=2011|4p=310}} Mugabe arrived in London in September 1979.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=122|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=7}} There, he and Nkomo presented themselves as part of the "Patriotic Front" but established separate headquarters in the city.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=38|2a1=Holland|2y=2008|2p=58}} At the conference the pair were divided in their attitude; Nkomo wanted to present himself as a moderate while Mugabe played up to his image as a Marxist revolutionary, with Carrington exploiting this division.{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=61}} Throughout the negotiations, Mugabe did not trust the British and believed that they were manipulating events to their own advantage.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1pp=122–123|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2pp=7–8}}


The ensuing ] called for all participants in the Rhodesian Bush War to agree to a ceasefire, with a British governor, ], arriving in Rhodesia to oversee an election in which the various factions could compete as political parties.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=8|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=67}} It outlined a plan for a transition to formal independence as a sovereign republic under black-majority rule, also maintaining that Rhodesia would be renamed Zimbabwe, a name adopted from the Iron Age archaeological site of ].{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=11|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=69}} The agreement also ensured that the country's white minority retained many of its economic and political privileges,{{sfn|Tendi|2011|p=313}} with 20 seats to be reserved for whites in the new Parliament.{{sfnm|1a1=Smith|1a2=Simpson|1y=1981|1p=127|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=67|3a1=Tendi|3y=2011|3p=311}} By insisting on the need for a democratic black majority government, Carington was able to convince Mugabe to compromise on the other main issue of the conference, that of land ownership.{{sfn|Holland|2008|pp=62–63}} Mugabe agreed to the protection of the white community's privately owned property on the condition that the UK and U.S. governments provide financial assistance allowing the Zimbabwean government to purchase much land for redistribution among blacks.{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=63}} Mugabe was opposed to the idea of a ceasefire, but under pressure from Machel he agreed to it.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=8}} Mugabe signed the agreement, but felt cheated,{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=8}} remaining disappointed that he had never achieved a military victory over the Rhodesian forces.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=235|2a1=Tendi|2y=2011|2p=313}}
=== Second Congo War ===
Mugabe was blamed for Zimbabwe's participation in the ] in the ]. At a time when the ] was struggling, Zimbabwe responded to a call by the ] to help the struggling regime in ]. The Democratic Republic of the Congo had been invaded by ] and ], both of which claimed that their civilians, and regional stability, were under constant threat of attack by Rwandan Hutu militiamen based in the Congo.<ref name="ICG Nov98">, ], 17 November 1998</ref> However, the Congolese government, as well as international commentators, charged that the motive for the invasion was to grab the rich mineral resources of eastern Congo.<ref>Lasker, John, ''Toward Freedom'', 18 April 2008</ref><ref>, BBC, Dec. 3, 2004</ref> The war raised accusations of corruption, with officials alleged to be plundering the Congo's ] reserves. Mugabe's defence minister ] said, "Instead of our army in the DRC burdening the treasury for more resources, which are not available, it embarks on viable projects for the sake of generating the necessary revenue".<ref> ''BBC''</ref>


=== Land reform === ===Electoral campaign: 1980===
Returning to Salisbury in January 1980, Mugabe was greeted by a supportive crowd.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=9|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=70}} He settled into a house in ], a wealthy, white-dominated suburb.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=13|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=71}} Machel had cautioned Mugabe not to alienate Rhodesia's white minority, warning him that any white flight after the election would cause economic damage as it had in Mozambique.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=9|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=101|3a1=Tendi|3y=2011|3p=313}} Accordingly, during his electoral campaign, Mugabe avoided the use of Marxist and revolutionary rhetoric.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=9}} Mugabe insisted that in the election, ZANU would stand as a separate party to ZAPU, and refused Nkomo's request for a meeting.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=38|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=70}} He formed ZANU into a political party, known as ] (ZANU–PF).{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=70}} Predictions were made that ZANU–PF would win the election on the basis of the country's ethnic divisions; Mugabe was Shona, a community that made up around 70% of the country's population, while Nkomo was Ndebele, a tribal group who made up only around 20%.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=12}} For many in the white community and in the British government, this outcome was a terrifying prospect due to Mugabe's avowed Marxist beliefs and the inflammatory comments that he had made about whites during the guerrilla war.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=11}}
{{Main|Land reform in Zimbabwe}}
When Zimbabwe gained independence, 46.5% of the country's ] was owned by around 6,000 commercial farmers.<ref>{{cite book|last=Chigara|first=Ben|year=2002|title=Land Reform Policy|publisher=Ashgate Publishing|page=52|ISBN=0754622932}}</ref> Mugabe accepted a "willing buyer, willing seller" plan as part of the Lancaster House Agreement of 1979, among other concessions to the white minority.<ref name="WILLING"> ''Big Men, Little People: The Leaders Who Defined Africa''</ref> As part of this agreement, land redistribution was blocked for a period of 10 years.<ref name="YEARS"> ''The Fate of Africa: A History of Fifty Years of Independence''</ref>


During the campaign, Mugabe survived two assassination attempts.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=11|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=71}} In the first, which took place on 6 February, a grenade was thrown at his Mount Pleasant home, where it exploded against a garden wall.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=11|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=71}} In the second, on 10 February, a roadside bomb exploded near his motorcade as he left a ] rally. Mugabe himself was unharmed.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=11|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=71}} Mugabe accused the Rhodesian security forces of being responsible for these attacks.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=11}} In an attempt to quell the possibility that Rhodesia's security forces would launch a coup to prevent the election, Mugabe met with ], the commander of Rhodesia's armed forces, and asked him to remain in his position in the event of a ZANU–PF victory. At the time Walls refused.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=12}}
In 1997, the new British government led by ] unilaterally stopped funding the "willing buyer, willing seller" land reform programme on the basis that the initial ]44 million allocated under the ] government was used to purchase land for members of the ruling elite rather than landless peasants. Furthermore, Britain's ruling Labour Party felt no obligation to continue paying white farmers compensation, or in minister ]'s words, "I should make it clear that we do not accept that Britain has a special responsibility to meet the costs of land purchase in Zimbabwe. We are a new Government from diverse backgrounds without links to former colonial interests. My own origins are Irish and as you know we were colonised not colonisers".<ref>, by Baffour Ankomah, 31 March 2003</ref>


The electoral campaign was marred by widespread ], perpetrated by Nkomo's ZAPU, ]'s ] (UANC), and Mugabe's ZANU–PF.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=10|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=73}} Commenting on ZANU–PF's activities in eastern Rhodesia, Nkomo complained that "the word ''intimidation'' is mild. People are being terrorized. It is ''terror''."{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=10}} Reacting to ZANU–PF's acts of voter intimidation, Mugabe was called before Soames at Government House. Mugabe regarded the meeting as a British attempt to thwart his electoral campaign.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|pp=10–11}} Under the terms of the negotiation, Soames had the power to disqualify any political party guilty of voter intimidation.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=11}} Rhodesia's security services, Nkomo, Muzorewa, and some of his own advisers all called on Soames to disqualify ZANU–PF. After deliberation, Soames disagreed, believing that ZANU–PF were sure to win the election and that disqualifying them would wreck any chance of an ].{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=11}}
Some commentators, such as Matthew Sweet in '']'', hold ] ultimately responsible:
<blockquote>... It was Cecil Rhodes who originated the racist 'land grabs' to which Zimbabwe's current miseries can ultimately be traced. It was Rhodes who in 1887 told the House Of Assembly in Capetown, South Africa that 'the native is to be treated as a child and denied the franchise. We must adopt a system on despotism in our relations with the barbarians of Southern Africa'.<ref>Sweet, Matthew, '']'', 16 March 2002</ref></blockquote>
According to Sweet, "In less oratorical moments, he put it even more bluntly: 'I prefer land to niggers.'"


In ], ZANU–PF secured 63% of the national vote, gaining 57 of the 80 parliamentary seats allocated for black parties and providing them with an ].{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=12|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=13|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=73}} ZAPU had gained 20 seats, and UANC had three.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=12}} Mugabe was elected MP for the Salisbury constituency of ].{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=156}} Attempting to calm panic and prevent white flight, Mugabe appeared on television and called for national unity, stability, and law and order, insisting that the pensions of white civil servants would be guaranteed and that private property would be protected.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=13|2a1=Holland|2y=2008|2p=xiii|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=74}}
From 12 to 13 February 2000, ] was held on ]al amendments. The proposed amendments would have limited future presidents to two terms, but as it was not retroactive, Mugabe could have stood for another two terms. It also would have made his government and military officials immune from prosecution for any illegal acts committed while in office. In addition, it allowed the government to confiscate white-owned land for redistribution to black farmers without compensation. The motion failed with 55% of participants against the referendum.<ref name="CONSTREF"> ''Africa Review 2003/2004''</ref> The referendum had a 20% turnout fuelled by an effective ] campaign. Mugabe declared that he would "abide by the will of the people". The vote was a surprise to ], and an embarrassment before parliamentary elections due in mid-April. Almost immediately, self-styled "war veterans", led by ], began invading white-owned farms. Those who did not leave voluntarily were often tortured and sometimes killed. One was forced to drink diesel fuel as a form of torture.<ref>]'', 7 January 2008</ref> On 6 April 2000, Parliament pushed through an amendment, taken word for word from the draft constitution that was rejected by voters, allowing the seizure of white-owned farmlands without due reimbursement or payment.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.kubatana.net/docs/legisl/constitution_zim_000420.pdf|title=Constitution of Zimbabwe, Chapter III, Section 16, p. 10.|format=PDF}}</ref>


== Prime Minister of Zimbabwe: 1980–1987 ==
Since these actions, agricultural production has plummeted and the economy is crippled. Once the "bread basket" of southern Africa and a major agricultural exporter, Zimbabwe now depends on food programs and support from outside to feed its population.<ref name="telegraphban"/> A third of the population depends on food supplies from the ] to avoid starvation.<ref name="telegraphban"/>
]


Southern Rhodesia gained internationally recognized independence on 18 April 1980. Mugabe took the ] as the newly minted country's first Prime Minister shortly after midnight.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=9}}<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1980/04/18/zimbabwe-gains-independence/185c3573-e9e4-4d3a-9dce-5fe89bf04605/|title=Zimbabwe Gains Independence|date=18 April 1980|last=Ross|first=Jay|newspaper=]|access-date=15 April 2020}}</ref> He gave a speech at Salisbury's ] announcing that Rhodesia would be renamed "Zimbabwe" and pledged racial reconciliation.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|pp=14–15}} Soames aided Mugabe in bringing about an ]; for this Mugabe remained grateful, describing Soames as a good friend.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=14}} Mugabe unsuccessfully urged Soames to remain in Zimbabwe for several more years,{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=14|2a1=Holland|2y=2008|2p=72}} and also failed to convince the UK to assume a two-year "guiding role" for his government because most ZANU–PF members lacked experience in governing.{{sfn|Tendi|2011|p=311}} ZANU–PF's absolute parliamentary majority allowed them to rule alone, but Mugabe created a government of national unity by inviting members of rival parties to join his cabinet.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=14}} Mugabe moved into the ] in Salisbury, which he left furnished in the same style as Smith had left it.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=41}}
On 8 December 2003, in protest against a further 18 months of suspension from the ] (thereby cutting foreign aid to Zimbabwe), Mugabe withdrew his country from the Commonwealth. Mugabe informed the leaders of ], ] and ] of his decision when they telephoned him to discuss the situation. Zimbabwe's government said the President did not accept the Commonwealth's position, and was leaving the group.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.abc.net.au/pm/content/2003/s1005877.htm|title=PM{{ndash}} Zimbabwe leaves the Commonwealth<!-- Bot generated title -->}}</ref>


] in 1983]]
The ] provoked anger when its Food and Agriculture Organisation invited Mugabe to speak at a celebration of its 60th anniversary in ]. Critics of the move argued that since Mugabe could not feed his own people without the UN's support, he was an inappropriate speaker for the group, which has a mission statement of "helping to build a world without hunger".<ref name="telegraphban"/>


Across the country, statues of ] were removed and squares and roads named after prominent colonial figures were renamed after black nationalists.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=48}} In 1982 Salisbury was ] Harare.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=48|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=78}} Mugabe employed North Korean architects to design ], a monument and complex in western Harare to commemorate the struggle against minority rule.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=77}} Zimbabwe also received much aid from Western countries, whose governments hoped that a stable and prosperous Zimbabwe would aid the transition of South Africa away from apartheid and minority rule.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=47}} The United States provided Zimbabwe with a $25&nbsp;million three-year aid package.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=47}} The UK financed a land reform program,{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=46}} and provided military advisers to aid the integration of the guerrilla armies and old Rhodesian security forces into a ].{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=46|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=75}} Members of both ZANLA and ZIPRA were integrated into the army; though, there remained a strong rivalry between the two groups.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=30|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=59}} As Prime Minister, Mugabe retained Walls as the head of the armed forces.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=14|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=74}}
In 2005, Mugabe ordered a raid conducted on what the government termed "illegal shelters" in Harare, resulting in 10,000 urban poor being left homeless from "] (English: Operation Drive Out the Rubbish)." The authorities themselves had moved the poor inhabitants to the area in 1992, telling them not to build permanent homes and that their new homes were temporary, leading the inhabitants to build their own temporary shelters out of cardboard and wood.<ref name="telegraphtatters">{{cite web|url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/06/03/wzim03.xml|title=Mugabe's raids leave townships in tatters|date=2005-03-06|Publisher=''Telegraph''}}</ref> Since the inhabitants of the shantytowns overwhelmingly supported the ] opposition party in the previous election, many alleged that the mass bulldozing was politically motivated.<ref name="telegraphtatters"/> The UK's ''Daily Telegraph'' noted that Mugabe's "latest palace," in the style of a ], was located a mile from the destroyed shelters.<ref name="telegraphtatters"/> The UN released a report stating that the actions of Mugabe resulted in the loss of home or livelihood for more than 700,000 Zimbabweans and negatively affected 2.4 million more.<ref name="telegraphban">{{cite web|url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/10/17/wzim17.xml&sSheet=/news/2005/10/17/ixnewstop.html|title=Mugabe to speak at hunger debate as he defies EU travel ban again|accessdate=2007-07-08|publisher=''Telegraph''}}</ref>


Mugabe's government continued to make regular pronouncements about converting Zimbabwe into a socialist society.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=78}} In contrast to Mugabe's talk of socialism, his government's budgetary policies were conservative, operating within a capitalist framework and emphasizing the need for foreign investment.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=48}} In office, Mugabe sought a gradual transformation away from capitalism and tried to build upon existing state institutions.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=14}} From 1980 to 1990, the country's economy grew by an average of 2.7% a year, but this was outstripped by population growth and ] declined.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=37}} The unemployment rate rose, reaching 26% in 1990.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=37}} The government ran a budget deficit year-on-year that averaged at 10% of the country's gross domestic product.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=37}} Under Mugabe's leadership, there was a massive expansion in education and health spending.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=37}} In 1980, Zimbabwe had just 177 secondary schools, by 2000 this number had risen to 1,548.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=37}} During that period, the adult literacy rate rose from 62% to 82%, one of the highest levels in Africa.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=37}} Levels of child immunization were raised from 25% of the population to 92%.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=37}}
As of September 2006, Mugabe's family owns three farms: ''Highfield Estate'' in Norton, 45&nbsp;km west of ], ''Iron Mask Estate'' in Mazowe, about 40&nbsp;km from Harare, and ''Foyle Farm'' in ], formerly owned by Ian Webster and adjacent to Iron Mask Farm, renamed to ''Gushungo Farm'' after Mugabe's own clan name.<ref>, ''IOL'', 10 September 2006</ref> These farms were seized forcibly from their previous owners.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=338520&apc_state=henh|title=Harare Losing Key Allies<!-- Bot generated title -->}}</ref>


A new leadership elite were formed, who often expressed their newfound status through purchasing large houses and expensive cars, sending their children to private schools, and obtaining farms and businesses.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=81}} To contain their excesses, in 1984 Mugabe drew up a "leadership code" which prohibited any senior figures from obtaining more than one salary or owning over 50-acres of agricultural land.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=81}} There were exceptions, with Mugabe giving permission to General ] to expand his business empire, resulting in his becoming one of the Zimbabwe's wealthiest people.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=82}} Growing corruption among the socio-economic elite generated resentment among the wider population, much of which was living in poverty.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=83}}
Mugabe blames the food shortages on ].<ref name="telegraphban"/> Zimbabwe's state-owned press accused former British Prime Minister Tony Blair of using ] to incite droughts and famines in Africa.<ref name="telegraphban"/>


] after a state visit to the United States in 1983]]
=== Elections ===
ZANU–PF also began establishing its own business empire, founding the M&S Syndicate in 1980 and the Zidoo Holdings in 1981.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=82}} By 1992, the party had fixed assets and businesses worth an estimated Z$500&nbsp;million (US$75&nbsp;million).{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=82}} In 1980, ZANU–PF used Nigerian funds to set up the ], through which they bought out a South African company that owned most of Zimbabwe's newspapers.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1pp=80–81|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=75}} The white editors of these newspapers were sacked and replaced by government appointees.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=81|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=75}} These media outlets subsequently became a source of the party's propaganda.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=81|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=75}}
{{Refimprovesect|date=May 2008}}
{{POV|date=May 2008}}
In April 1979, 64% of the black citizens of Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) lined up at the polls to vote in the first democratic election in the history of that southern African nation. Two-thirds of them supported Abel Muzorewa, a bishop in the United Methodist Church. He was the first black prime minister of a country only 4% white. Muzorewa's victory put an end to the 14-year political odyssey of outgoing prime minister Ian Smith, who had infamously announced in 1976, "I do not believe in black majority rule—not in a thousand years."


At independence, 39% of Zimbabwe's land was under the ownership of around 6000 white large-scale commercial farmers, while 4% was owned by black small-scale commercial farmers, and 41% was 'communal land' where 4&nbsp;million people lived, often in overcrowded conditions.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=120}} The Lancaster House agreement ensured that until 1990, the sale of land could only take place on a "willing seller-willing buyer" basis. The only permitted exceptions were if the land was "underutilized" or needed for a public purpose, in which case the government could compulsorily purchase it while fully compensating the owner.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=119}} This meant that Mugabe's government was largely restricted to purchasing land which was of poor quality.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=119}} Its target was to resettle 18,000 black families on 2.5&nbsp;million acres of white-owned land over three years. This would cost £30&nbsp;million (US$60&nbsp;million), half of which was to be provided by the UK government as per the Lancaster House Agreement.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=120}}
Less than a year after Muzorewa's victory, however, in February 1980, another election was held in Zimbabwe. This time, Robert Mugabe, the Marxist who had fought a seven-year guerilla war against Rhodesia's white-led government, won 64% of the vote, after a campaign marked by widespread intimidation, outright violence, and Mugabe's threat to continue the civil war if he lost. Mugabe became prime minister and was toasted by the international community and media as a new sort of African leader.


In 1986, Mugabe became chair of the ] (NAM), a position that he retained until 1989.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=85}} As the leader of one of the ], the countries bordering apartheid South Africa, he gained credibility within the anti-apartheid movement.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=85}}
Mugabe has continued to win elections, although frequently these have been criticised by outsiders for violating various electoral procedures.


===Race relations===
Mugabe faced ] of the ] (MDC) in presidential elections in March 2002.<ref name="pressure"> CNN</ref> Mugabe defeated Tsvangirai by 56.2% to 41.9% amid violence and the prevention of large numbers of citizens in urban areas from voting. The conduct of the elections was widely viewed internationally as having been manipulated.<ref name="elecresults"> Christian Science Monitor</ref><ref name="elecurban"> Association of Concerned Africa Scholars On the Edge Commentary</ref> Many groups, such as the ], the ], the ], and ]'s ] (MDC), assert that the result was rigged.<ref name="pressure"/>
{{Quote box|width=25em|align=right|quote=The wrongs of the past must now stand forgiven and forgotten. If ever we look to the past, let us do so for the lesson the past has taught us, namely that ] and racism are inequalities that must never find scope in our political and social system. It could never be a correct justification that just because the whites oppressed us yesterday when they had power, the blacks must oppress them today because they have power. An evil remains an evil whether practised by white against black or black against white.|salign=right |source=— Mugabe's speech after his 1980 victory{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=15}} }}


Mugabe initially emphasized racial reconciliation and he was keen to build a good relationship with white Zimbabweans.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=14|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=41}} He hoped to avoid a white ] and tried to allay fears that he would nationalize white-owned property.{{sfn|Tendi|2011|pp=313–314}} He appointed two white ministers—] and ]—to his government,{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1pp=14–15|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2pp=42, 44|3a1=Holland|3y=2008|3p=107|4a1=Norman|4y=2008|4p=74}} met with white leaders in agriculture, industry, mining, and commerce,{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=15|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=45}} and impressed senior figures in the outgoing administration like Smith and ] with his apparent sincerity.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1pp=13, 15|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=42}} With the end of the war, petrol rationing, and economic sanctions, life for white Zimbabweans improved during the early years of Mugabe's rule.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=45}} In the economic boom that followed, the white minority—which controlled considerable property and dominated commerce, industry, and banking—were the country's main beneficiaries.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=46}}
On 3 July 2004, a report adopted by the ] executive council, which comprises foreign ministers of the 53 member states, criticized the government for the arrest and torture of opposition members of parliament and ] lawyers, the arrest of journalists, the stifling of freedom of expression and clampdowns on other civil liberties. It was compiled by the AU's ], which sent a mission to Zimbabwe from 24 June to 28 2002, shortly after the presidential elections. The report was apparently not submitted to the AU's 2003 summit because it had not been translated into ]. It was adopted at the next AU summit in 2005.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.opendemocracy.net/democracy-africa_democracy/african_union_3221.jsp|title=The African Union: what's in a name? | openDemocracy<!-- Bot generated title -->}}</ref>


Nevertheless, many white Zimbabweans complained that they were the victims of ].{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=50}} Many whites remained uneasy about living under the government of a black Marxist and they also feared that their children would be unable to secure jobs.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=46}} There was a growing exodus to South Africa, and in 1980, 17,000 whites—approximately a tenth of the white Zimbabwean population—emigrated.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=46|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=75}} Mugabe's government had pledged support for the ] and other ] forces within South Africa but did not allow them to use Zimbabwe as a base for their military operations.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=47}} To protest apartheid and white minority rule in South Africa, Mugabe's government banned Zimbabwe from engaging South Africa in any sporting competitions.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=47}} In turn, South Africa tried to destabilise Zimbabwe by blocking trade routes into the country and supporting anti-Mugabe militants among the country's white minority.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=51|2a1=Holland|2y=2008|2pp=36–37|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|2p=76}}
Mugabe's ZANU-PF party won the ] with an increased majority. The elections were said by (again) South African observers to "reflect the free will of the people of Zimbabwe", despite accusations of widespread fraud from the MDC.<ref name="reflectwill"> Peter Kagwanja and Alba Lamberti. ''European Voice'' via International Crisis Group</ref>


]
On 6 February 2007, Mugabe orchestrated a cabinet reshuffle, ousting ministers including five-year veteran finance minister ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.zimbabwesituation.com/feb8_2007.html|title=The Zimbabwe Situation<!-- Bot generated title -->}}</ref>
In December 1981, a bomb struck ZANU–PF headquarters, killing seven and injuring 124.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=52|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=77}} Mugabe blamed South African-backed white militants.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=52}} He criticised "reactionary and counter-revolutionary elements" in the white community, stating that despite the fact that they had faced no punishment for their past actions, they rejected racial reconciliation and "are acting in collusion with South Africa to harm our racial relations, to destroy our unity, to sabotage our economy, and to overthrow the popularly elected government I lead".{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=52}} Increasingly he criticised not only the militants but the entire white community for holding a monopoly on "Zimbabwe's economic power".{{sfn|Meredith|2002|pp=52–53}} This was a view echoed by many government ministers and the government-controlled media.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=50}} One of these ministers, Tekere, was involved in an incident in which he and seven armed men stormed a white-owned farmhouse, killing an elderly farmer; they alleged that in doing so they were foiling a coup attempt. Tekere was acquitted of murder; however, Mugabe dropped him from his cabinet.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=49}}


Racial mistrust and suspicion continued to grow.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=53}} In December 1981, the elderly white MP ] was accused of being a South African agent, arrested, and tortured, generating anger among whites.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=53|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=77}} In July 1982, South African-backed white militants destroyed 13 aircraft at ]. A number of white military officers were accused of complicity, arrested, and tortured. They were put on trial but cleared by judges, after which they were immediately re-arrested.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=54|2a1=Holland|2y=2008|2p=37|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=78}} Their case generated an international outcry, which Mugabe criticized, stating that the case only gained such attention because the accused were white.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=54|2a1=Holland|2y=2008|2p=37}} His defence of torture and contempt for legal procedures damaged his international standing.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=55|2a1=Holland|2y=2008|2p=38}} White flight continued to grow, and within three years of Mugabe's premiership half of all white Zimbabweans had emigrated.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=55}} In the 1985 election, Smith's ] won 15 of the 20 seats allocated for white Zimbabweans.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=56}} Mugabe was outraged by this result,{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=56|2a1=Holland|2y=2008|2p=115}} lambasting white Zimbabweans for not repenting "in any way" by continuing to support Smith and other white politicians who had committed "horrors against the people of Zimbabwe".{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=56}}
On 11 March 2007, opposition leader ] was arrested and beaten following a prayer meeting in the Harare suburb of Highfields. Another member of the ] was killed while other protesters were injured.<ref> , ''Bloomberg'', 14 March 2007</ref> Mugabe claimed that "Tsvangirai deserved his beating-up by police because he was not allowed to attend a banned rally" on 30 March 2007.<ref>, ''Mirror'', 31 March 2007</ref>


===Relations with ZAPU and the Gukurahundi ===
==== General elections 2008 ====
{{Main|Gukurahundi}}
{{main|Zimbabwean presidential election, 2008}}
]
Mugabe launched his election campaign on his birthday in ], a small town on the border with ] on 23 February 2008 by denouncing both the opposition ] and ]'s candidacy. He was quoted in the ] as saying: "Dr ] lacked majority support while Mr ] was in the presidential race simply to please his Western backers in exchange for money".<ref>{{citenews|title=President writes off opposition|url=http://www.sundaymail.co.zw/inside.aspx?sectid=1099&cat=12|accessdate=2008-02-25}}</ref> These are the charges he has used in the past to describe the leader of the opposition.{{Fact|date=June 2008}}
Under the new constitution, Zimbabwe's presidency was a ceremonial role with no governmental power; the first President was ].{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=74}} Mugabe had previously offered the position to Nkomo, who had turned it down in favour of becoming Minister of Home Affairs.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=39|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=74}} While working together, there remained an aura of resentment and suspicion between Mugabe and Nkomo.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=39}} Mugabe gave ZAPU four cabinet seats, but Nkomo demanded more.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|pp=59–60}} In contrast, some ZANU–PF figures argued that ZAPU should not have any seats in government, suggesting that Zimbabwe be converted into a one-party state.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=60}} Tekere and ] were particularly adamant that there should be a crackdown on ZAPU.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=60}} After Nkala called for ZAPU to be violently crushed during a rally in ], street clashes between the two parties broke out in the city.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=30|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=61|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=76}}


In January 1981, Mugabe demoted Nkomo in a cabinet reshuffle; the latter warned that this would anger ZAPU supporters.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=30|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=61}} In February, violence between ZAPU and ZANU–PF supporters broke out among the battalion stationed at ], soon spreading to other army bases, resulting in 300 deaths.{{Sfn|Meredith|2002|pp=61–62}} An arms cache featuring land mines and anti-aircraft missiles were then discovered at Ascot Farm, which was part-owned by Nkomo. Mugabe cited this as evidence that ZAPU were plotting a coup, an allegation that Nkomo denied.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=30|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2pp=62, 64|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=77}} Likening Nkomo to "a cobra in the house", Mugabe sacked him from the government, and ZAPU-owned businesses, farms, and properties were seized.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=30|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=63|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=78}}
In the week ] launched his campaign for the presidency, he accused ] of buying votes from the electorate. This was a few hours after ] had come out and endorsed ]'s candidature.<ref>{{citeweb|title=Makoni accuses Mugabe of vote buying|url=http://www.talkzimbabwe.com/news/117/ARTICLE/1766/2008-03-02.html|accessdate=2008-03-02|publisher=The Zimbabwe Guardian}}</ref>


Members of both ZANLA and ZIPRA had deserted their positions and engaged in ].{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=60}} In ], ZIPRA deserters who came to be known as "dissenters" engaged in robbery, holding up buses, and attacking farmhouses, creating an environment of growing lawlessness.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=30|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=64}} These dissidents received support from South Africa through its ], by which it hoped to further destabilize Zimbabwe.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=64}} The government often conflated ZIPRA with the dissenters,{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=66}} although Nkomo denounced the dissidents and their South African supporters.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=65}} Mugabe authorized the police and army to crack down on the Matabeleland dissenters, declaring that state officers would be granted legal immunity for any "extra-legal" actions they may perform while doing so.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=65}} During 1982 he had established the ], an elite armed force trained by the North Koreans; membership was drawn largely from Shona-speaking ZANLA soldiers and were answerable directly to Mugabe.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=30|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=65|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=77}} In January 1983, the Fifth Brigade were deployed in the region, overseeing a campaign of beatings, arson, public executions, and massacres of those accused of being sympathetic to the dissidents.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=30|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=67}} The scale of the violence was greater than that witnessed in the Rhodesian War.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=67}} Interrogation centres were established where people were tortured.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=70}} Mugabe acknowledged that civilians would be persecuted in the violence, claiming that "we can't tell who is a dissident and who is not."{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=33}} The ensuing events became known as the "Gukurahundi", a Shona word meaning "wind that sweeps away the chaff before the rains".{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=31}}
=====First-round defeat and the campaign of violence=====
The presidential elections were conducted on 29 March 2008, together with the parliamentary elections. On 2 April 2008, the Zimbabwe Election Commission confirmed that Mugabe and his party, known as ZANU-PF, had lost control of Parliament to the main opposition party, the ]. This was confirmed when the results were released.<ref>{{citenews|url=http://zimbabwemetro.com/2008/04/02/final-house-of-assembly-results/|title=Final House of Assembly Results|publisher=]|accessdate=2008-06-28}}</ref> Both the opposition and his party challenged the results in some constituencies.<ref>"", '']''</ref>
According to unofficial polling, Zanu-PF took 94 seats, and the main opposition party MDC took 96 seats.<ref> BBC News 3 April 2008 </ref> On 3 April 2008 Zimbabwean government forces began cracking down on the main opposition party and arrested at least two foreign journalists, who were covering the disputed presidential election, including a correspondent for the ].<ref> CNN 3 April 2008</ref><ref> New York Times 3 April 2008</ref>


]
On 30 March 2008, Mugabe convened a meeting with his top security officials to discuss his defeat in the elections. According to the ], he was prepared to concede, but was advised by Zimbabwe's military chief Gen. Constantine Chiwenga to remain in the race, with the senior military officers "supervising a military-style campaign against the opposition".<ref name="crackdown"> Washington Post 5 July 2008</ref> The first phase of the plan started a week later, involving the building of 2,000 party compounds across Zimbabwe, to serve as bases for the party militias.<ref name="crackdown" /> On an 8 April 2008 meeting, the military plan was given the ] of "CIBD", which stood for: "Coercion. Intimidation. Beating. Displacement."<ref name="crackdown" />
In 1984 the Gukurahundi spread to ], an area then in its third year of drought. The Fifth Brigade closed all stores, halted all deliveries, and imposed a curfew, exacerbating starvation for a period of two months.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=32|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=69}} The ] accused Mugabe of overseeing a project of systematic starvation.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=70}} When a Roman Catholic delegation provided Mugabe with a dossier listing atrocities committed by the Fifth Brigade, Mugabe refuted all its allegations and accused the clergy of being disloyal to Zimbabwe.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|pp=67–68}} He had the ] suppressed.{{sfn|Holland|2008|pp=148–149}} In 1985, an ] report on the Gukurahundi was dismissed by Mugabe as "a heap of lies".{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=73|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=79}} Over the course of four years, approximately 10,000 civilians had been killed, and many others had been beaten and tortured.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=75|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=109}} ] later estimated that approximately 20,000 had been killed{{sfn|Tendi|2011|p=308}} and classified the events as genocide.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Smith|first=David|date=6 September 2019|title=Zimbabwe's intellectual despot: how Mugabe became Africa's fallen angel|language=en-GB|work=]|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/sep/06/zimbabwes-intellectual-despot-how-mugabe-became-africas-fallen-angel|access-date=10 October 2020|issn=0261-3077}}</ref>


]'s UK government was aware of the killings but remained silent on the matter, cautious not to anger Mugabe and threaten the safety of white Zimbabweans.{{sfnm|1a1=Holland|1y=2008|1p=66|2a1=Tendi|2y=2011|2pp=308–309}} The United States also did not raise strong objections, with President ] welcoming Mugabe to the ] in September 1983.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=34}} In October 1983, Mugabe attended the ] in New Delhi, where no participating states mentioned the Gukurahundi.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=34}} In 2000, Mugabe acknowledged that the mass killings had happened, stating that it was "an act of madness&nbsp;... it was wrong and both sides were to blame".{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=74}} His biographer ] argued that Mugabe and his ZANU–PF were solely to blame for the massacres.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=74}} Various Mugabe biographers have seen the Gukurahundi as a deliberate attempt to eliminate ZAPU and its support base to advance his desire for a ZANU–PF one-party state.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=32|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=74}}
The official results for the presidential elections would be delayed for five weeks. When British Prime Minister ] attempted to intervene into the election controversy, Mugabe dismissed him as "a little tiny dot on this planet".<ref> ''Times Online'' 13 April 2008</ref>


There was further violence in the build-up to the 1985 election, with ZAPU supporters facing harassment from ] brigades.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=71}} Despite this intimidation, ZAPU won all 15 of the parliamentary seats in Matabeleland.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=71}} Mugabe then appointed ] as the new police minister. Nkala subsequently detained over 100 ZAPU officials, including five of its MPs and the Mayor of Bulawayo, banned the party from holding rallies or meetings, closed all of their offices, and dissolved all of the district councils that they controlled.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|pp=71–73}} To avoid further violence, in December 1987 Nkomo signed a Unity Accord in which ZAPU was officially disbanded and its leadership merged into ZANU–PF.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=34|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=73|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=79}} The merger between the two parties left ZANU–PF with 99 of the 100 seats in parliament,{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=36|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=79}} and established Zimbabwe as a ''de facto'' one-party state.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=34}}
When the official results for the presidential elections were finally published by the Zimbabwe election commission on 2 May 2008, they showed that Mr. Mugabe had lost in the first round, getting 1,079,730 votes (43.2%) against 1,195,562 (47.9%) collected by Mr. ]. Therefore no candidate secured the final win in the first round, and a presidential run-off will be needed. The opposition called the results "scandalous daylight robbery", claiming an outright victory in the first round with 50.3% of the votes.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7380445.stm|title=BBC: Zimbabwe announces poll results}}</ref>


==President of Zimbabwe==
Mugabe's run-off campaign was managed by Emerson Mnangagwa, a former security chief of the conflict of ].<ref name="crackdown" /> The ''Washington Post'' asserts that the campaign of violence was bringing results to the ruling party, by crushing the opposition party ] and coercion of its supporters.
===Constitutional and economic reform: 1987–1995===
By 20 June 2008, the Zimbabwe Association of Doctors for Human Rights had "recorded 85 deaths in political violence since the first round of voting".<ref></ref>
In late 1987, Zimbabwe's parliament amended the constitution.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=36}} On 30 December it declared Mugabe to be executive president, a new position that combined the roles of head of state, head of government, and commander-in-chief of the armed forces.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=79|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=80}} This position gave him the power to dissolve parliament, declare ], and run for an unlimited number of terms.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=79}} According to Meredith, Mugabe now had "a virtual stranglehold on government machinery and unlimited opportunities to exercise patronage".{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=79}} The constitutional amendments also abolished the twenty parliamentary seats reserved for white representatives,{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=36|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=80}} and left parliament less relevant and independent.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=80}}
News organizations report that, by the date of the second-round election, more than 80 opposition supporters had been killed, hundreds more were missing, in addition to thousands injured, and hundreds of thousands driven from their homes.<ref name="crackdown" />


In the build-up to the 1990 election, parliamentary reforms increased the number of seats to 120; of these, twenty were to be appointed by the President and ten by the Council of Chiefs.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=36|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=89}} This measure made it more difficult for any opposition to Mugabe to gain a parliamentary majority.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=89}} The main opposition party in that election was the ] (ZUM), launched in April 1989 by Tekere;{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=36|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=87|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=80}} although a longstanding friend of Mugabe, Tekere accused him of betraying the revolution and establishing a dictatorship.{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=80}} ZANU–PF propaganda made threats against those considering voting ZUM in the election; one television advert featured images of a car crash with the statement "This is one way to die. Another is to vote ZUM. Don't commit suicide, vote ZANU-PF and live."{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=91}} In the election, Mugabe was re-elected President with nearly 80% of the vote, while ZANU–PF secured 116 of the 119 available parliamentary seats.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=36|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=93}}
Zimbabwean officials alleged that activists of the MDC, disguised as ZANU-PF members, had perpetrated violence against the population, mimicking the tactics of the ] during the liberation struggle. They alleged that there was a "predominance" of Selous Scouts in the MDC.<ref name=UNBlocks>, ''The Herald'' (allAfrica), 25 June 2008.</ref> The ''Sunday Mail'' published an article which claimed that former Selous Scouts were training MDC youth activists in violent tactics, at locations near ] (Pretoria) and ] in ].<ref>Mutema, Ralph, , ''The Zimbabwe Guardian'', 2 June 2008</ref>


Mugabe had long hoped to convert Zimbabwe into a one-party state, but in 1990 he officially "postponed" these plans as both Mozambique and many ] states transitioned from one-party states to multi-party republics.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=97}} Following the collapse of the Marxist-Leninist regimes in the Soviet Union and the Eastern Bloc, in 1991 ZANU–PF removed references to "Marxism-Leninism" and "]" in its material; Mugabe maintained that "socialism remains our sworn ideology".{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=97|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=81}} That year, Mugabe pledged himself to free market economics and accepted a ] provided by the ] (IMF).{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=37|2a1=Holland|2y=2008|2p=136}} This economic reform package called for Zimbabwe to privatise state assets and reduce import tariffs;{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=37}} Mugabe's government implemented some but not all of its recommendations.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=37|2a1=Holland|2y=2008|2p=136}} The reforms encouraged employers to cut their wages, generating growing opposition from the ].{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=38}}
In addition, at least 100 officials and polling officers of the ] were arrested after the first round election.<ref> Bloomberg 2 May 2008</ref><ref> AFP Jun 18 2008</ref>


By 1990, 52,000 black families had been settled on 6.5&nbsp;million acres. This was insufficient to deal with the country's overcrowding problem, which was being exacerbated by the growth in the black population.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=121}} That year, Zimbabwe's parliament passed an amendment allowing the government to expropriate land at a fixed price while denying land-owners the right of appeal to the courts.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=122}} The government hoped that by doing so it could settle 110,000 black families on 13&nbsp;million acres, which would require the expropriation of approximately half of all white-owned land.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=122}} Zimbabwe's ] argued that the proposed measures would wreck the country's economy, urging the government to instead settle landless blacks on the half-a-million acres of land that was either unproductive or state-owned.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|pp=122–123}}
] initially agreed to a presidential run-off with Robert Mugabe,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5i4kT7pJlnuzY_vpKdTACcQYIPcvQD90RV1IO0|title=Afp.google.com, Opposition leader returns to Zimbabwe}}</ref> but later withdrew (on 22 June 2008), citing violence targeted at his campaign. He complained that the elections were pointless, as the outcome would be determined by Mugabe himself.<ref> BBC 22 June 2008</ref>


Concerns about the proposed measure—particularly its denial of the right to appeal—were voiced by the UK, US, and Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=122}} The US, UK, ], and ] threatened that if Zimbabwe implemented the law, it would forfeit foreign aid packages.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=123}} Responding to the criticisms, the government removed the ban on court appeals from the bill, which was then passed as law.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|pp=123–124}} Over the following few years, hundreds of thousands of acres of largely white-owned land were expropriated.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=124}} In April 1994, a newspaper investigation found that not all of this was redistributed to landless blacks; much of the expropriated land was being leased to ministers and senior officials such as ], who was leased a 3000-acre farm in ].{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1pp=126–127|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2pp=127–128}} Responding to this scandal, in 1994 the UK government—which had supplied £44&nbsp;million for land redistribution—halted its payments.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=127|2a1=Holland|2y=2008|2p=98}}
=====The outcome of the run-off election=====
The run-off election was held on 27 June 2008, and Zimbabwe’s Electoral Commission released the results two days later. The official results showed that Mugabe had managed to double his votes since the first round, to 2,150,269 votes (85.5%), while his opponent Tsvangirai obtained only 233,000 (9.3%).<ref> - accessed 2008-07-01.</ref> However Tsvangirai had pulled out previously because of widespread violence from the Zanu Pf's forces. The violence includes beating, rape and others. Many voted because if they didn't they could face violence against them. Although witnesses and election monitors had reported a low turnout in many areas of the country,<ref> - accessed 2008-07-01.</ref> the official tally showed that the total vote had increased, from 2,497,265 votes in the first round<ref> - accessed 2008-07-01.</ref> to 2,514,750 votes in the second round.<ref> - accessed 2008-07-01.</ref>


In January 1992, Mugabe's wife died.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=96|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=81}} In April 1995, ''Horizon'' magazine revealed that Mugabe had secretly been having an affair with his secretary ] since 1987 and that she had borne him a son and a daughter.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=107|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=80}} His secret revealed, Mugabe decided to hold a much-publicized wedding. 12,000 people were invited to the August 1996 ceremony, which took place in Kutama and was orchestrated by the head of the Roman Catholic ], ].{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=108|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=82}} The ceremony was controversial among the Catholic community because of the adulterous nature of Mugabe and Marufu's relationship.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=108|2a1=Holland|2y=2008|2p=148}} To house his family, Mugabe then built a new mansion at ].{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=109}} In the ]—which saw a low turnout of 31.7%—ZANU–PF gained 147 out of 150 seats.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=38}} Following the election, Mugabe expanded his cabinet from 29 to 42 ministers while the government adopted a 133% pay rise for MPs.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=127}}
Two legal opinions commissioned by the Southern African Litigation Centre (SALC)<ref> - accessed 2008-06-23</ref> declared the run-off election illegal because it occurred outside the 21 day period within which it had to take place under Zimbabwean law. Under item 3(1)(b) of the Second Schedule of the Electoral Act, if no second election is held within 21 days of the first election, the candidate with the highest number of votes in the first election has been duly elected as President and must be declared as such. According to the figures released by Zimbabwe’s Electoral Commission, that would mean that Morgan Tsvangirai is the de jure President.


===Economic decline: 1995–2000===
Mugabe's inauguration to his sixth presidential term of office was a hastily arranged ceremony, convened barely an hour after the electoral commission declared his victory on 29 June 2008.<ref></ref> None of his fellow African heads of state were present at his inauguration; there were only family members, ministers, and security chiefs in the guests' tent.<ref> - accessed 2008-07-01.</ref>
{{Quote box
| width = 25em
| align = right
| quote = By the mid-1990s Mugabe had become an irascible and petulant dictator, brooking no opposition, contemptuous of the law and human rights, surrounded by sycophantic ministers and indifferent to the incompetence and corruption around him. His record of economic management was lamentable. He had failed to satisfy popular expectations in education, health, land reform, and employment. And he had alienated the entire white community. Yet all the while Mugabe continued to believe in his own greatness. Isolated and remote from ordinary reality, possessing no close friends and showing clear signs of paranoia, he listened only to an inner circle of conspiratorial aides and colleagues. Whatever difficulties occurred he attributed to old enemies—Britain, the West, the old Rhodesian network—all bent, he believed, on destroying his "revolution".
| salign = right
| source = — Mugabe biographer ]{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=131}}
}}


Over the course of the 1990s, Zimbabwe's economy steadily deteriorated.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=39}} By 2000, living standards had declined from 1980; life expectancy was reduced, average wages were lower, and unemployment had trebled.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=17}} By 1998, unemployment was almost at 50%.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=39}} As of 2009, three to four million Zimbabweans—the greater part of the nation's skilled workforce—had left the country.{{sfn|Onslow|Redding|2009|p=71}} In 1997 there were growing demands for pensions from those who had fought for the guerrilla armies in the revolutionary war, and in August 1997 Mugabe put together a pension package that would cost the county Z$4.2&nbsp;billion.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=39|2a1=Holland|2y=2008|2p=123}} To finance this pension scheme, Mugabe's government proposed new taxes, but a general strike was called in protest in December 1997; amid protest from ZANU–PF itself, Mugabe's government abandoned the taxes.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=39|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=83}} In January 1998, riots about lack of access to food broke out in Harare; the army was deployed to restore order, with at least ten killed and hundreds injured.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=39|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=110}}
The Zimbabwean military, and not President Robert Mugabe, is now running the troubled country, in the opinion of a South Africa-based ] called the Zimbabwe Solidarity Forum (ZSF) - 10 Jul 2008.<ref>Zimbabwe Solidarity Forum (ZSF)</ref>


Mugabe increasingly blamed the country's economic problems on Western nations and the white Zimbabwean minority, who still controlled most of its commercial agriculture, mines, and manufacturing industry.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=42|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2pp=17, 128}} He called on supporters "to strike fear in the hearts of the white man, our real enemy",{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=17}} and accused his black opponents of being dupes of the whites.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=18}} Amid growing internal opposition to his government, he remained determined to stay in power.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=17}} He revived the regular use of revolutionary rhetoric and sought to re-assert his credentials as an important revolutionary leader.{{sfn|Onslow|Redding|2009|p=68}}
The ] announced a policy of seizing foreign assets belonging to Mugabe. Mugabe replied that he has no foreign assets to seize. ] proceeded to seize the bank account of Sam Mugabe, a 23-year old British subject of Zimbabwean origin, no relation to Robert Mugabe. The HSBC bank which carried out the seizure of her account subsequently apologized.<ref>, ''The Herald'', 16 July 2008</ref><ref> Fox News, 15 July 2008</ref><ref>, ''The Sun'', 18 July 2008</ref>


Mugabe also developed a growing preoccupation with homosexuality, lambasting it as an "un-African" import from Europe.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=129}} He described gay people as being "guilty of sub-human behavior", and of being "worse than dogs and pigs".{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=131|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=115}} This attitude may have stemmed in part from his strong conservative values, but it was strengthened by the fact that several ministers in the British government were gay. Mugabe began to believe that there was a "gay mafia" and that all of his critics were homosexuals.<ref name="bbc_perspective_2009">{{cite news |title=Meeting Zimbabwe's 'Uncle Bob' |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7899057.stm |work=BBC African Perspective |date=21 February 2009}}</ref> Critics also accused Mugabe of using ] to distract attention from the country's problems.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=129}} In August 1995, he was due to open a human rights-themed ] in Harare but refused to do so until a stall run by the group Gays and Lesbians of Zimbabwe was evicted.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|pp=129–130}}
On ], despite increased animadversion and pressure to resign, Mugabe averred during ZANU-PF's tenth annual conference in ], some eighty kilometres north of ], that he would brook no such thing.<ref>SAPA-DPA 2008.</ref>


In 1996, Mugabe was appointed chair of the defense arm of the ] (SADC).{{sfn|Meredith|2002|pp=147–148}} Without consulting parliament, in August 1998 he ordered Zimbabwean troops into the Democratic Republic of the Congo to side with President ] in the ].{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=148}} He initially committed 3000 troops to the operation; this gradually rose to 11,000.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=148}} He also persuaded Angola and Namibia to commit troops to the conflict.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=148}} Involvement in the war cost Zimbabwe an approximate US$1&nbsp;million a day, contributing to its economic problems.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=148}} Opinion polls demonstrated that it was unpopular among Zimbabwe's population.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=41|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=148}} However, several Zimbabwean businesses profited, having been given mining and timber concessions and preferential trade terms in minerals from Kabila's government.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=148}}
=== Criticism and opposition ===
] (Summer 2006).]]


In January 1999, 23 military officers were arrested for plotting a coup against Mugabe. The government sought to hide this, but it was reported by journalists from '']''. The military subsequently illegally arrested the journalists and tortured them.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=41|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2pp=149–150}} This brought international condemnation, with the EU and seven donor nations issuing protest notes.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=151}} Lawyers and human rights activists protested outside parliament until they were dispersed by riot police,{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=151}} and the country's ] judges issued a letter condemning the military's actions.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|pp=151–152}} In response, Mugabe publicly defended the use of extra-legal arrest and torture.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=153}}
Since 1998 Mugabe's policies have increasingly elicited domestic and international denunciation. They have been denounced as racist against ]<ref name="ukanger">{{cite news
], with whom Mugabe had a particularly antagonistic relationship]]
|title=UK anger over Zimbabwe violence
In 1997, ] was elected Prime Minister of the UK after 18 years of Conservative rule. His ] government expressed reticence toward restarting the land resettlement payments promised by the Lancaster House Agreement, with minister ] rejecting the idea that the UK had any moral obligation to fund land redistribution.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=133|2a1=Holland|2y=2008|2pp=95, 97}} This attitude fuelled anti-imperialist sentiment across Africa.{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=102}} In October 1999, Mugabe visited Britain and in London, the human rights activist ] attempted to place him under ].{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=134|2a1=Holland|2y=2008|2p=95}} Mugabe believed that the British government had deliberately engineered the incident to embarrass him.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=135}} It further damaged Anglo-Zimbabwean relations,{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=135}} with Mugabe expressing scorn for what he called "Blair and company".{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=136}} In May 2000, the UK froze all development aid to Zimbabwe.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=138}} In December 1999, the IMF terminated financial support for Zimbabwe, citing economic mismanagement and widespread corruption as impediments to reform.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=49|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=119}}
|work=BBC News
|date=2000-04-01
|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/698175.stm}}</ref><ref name="mcgreal2007">{{cite news
|first=Peter|last=McGreal
|title=Corrupt, greedy and violent: Mugabe attacked by Catholic bishops after years of silence
|work=The Guardian
|date=2007-04-02
|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/zimbabwe/article/0,,2048032,00.html}}</ref><ref name="bentley2007">{{cite news
|first=Daniel|last=Bentley|title=Sentamu urges Mugabe Action|work=The Independent|date=2007-09-17
|url=http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/article2970781.ece}}</ref>
Mugabe has described his critics as "born again colonialists",<ref>{{cite news
|title=Mugabe: US must disarm|work=BBC News|date=2007-02-25|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/2796883.stm}}</ref><ref name="egbuna">{{cite journal|first=Obi|last=Egbuna|title=Zimbabwe: Who else but Mugabe?|journal=The Black Commentator
|issue=51|date=2003-07-31
|url=http://www.blackcommentator.com/51/51_zim_egbuna.html}}</ref>
and both he and his supporters claim that Zimbabwe's problems are the legacy of imperialism,<ref>{{cite news
|title=Colonial history tugs at EU-Africa ties
|work=People's Daily
|date=2007-12-05
|url=http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/90001/90777/90855/6315084.html}}</ref>
aggravated by Western economic meddling. According to ''The Herald'', a Zimbabwean newspaper owned by the government, the U.K. is pursuing a policy of ].<ref>, ''The Herald'', 16 July 2008</ref>


To meet growing demand for constitutional reform, in April 1999 Mugabe's government appointed a 400-member Constitutional Commission to draft a new constitution which could be put to a referendum.{{sfnm|1a1=Sithole|1y=2001|1p=163|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=163}} The ]—a pro-reform pressure group established in 1997—expressed concern that this commission was not independent of the government, noting that Mugabe had the power to amend or reject the draft.{{sfn|Sithole|2001|p=163}} The NCA called for the draft constitution to be rejected, and in a ] it was, with 53% against to 44% in favor; turnout was under 25%.{{sfnm|1a1=Sithole|1y=2001|1p=164|2a1=Blair|2y=2002|2p=58|3a1=Meredith|3y=2002|3p=165}} It was ZANU–PF's first major electoral defeat in twenty years.{{sfn|Sithole|2001|p=165}} Mugabe was furious, and blamed the white minority for orchestrating his defeat, referring to them as "enemies of Zimbabwe".{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=138}}
Mugabe's critics accuse him of conducting a "reign of terror"<ref name="telegraphtatters"/><ref>The Spectator retrieved from FindArticles.com on 7 July 2007</ref> and being an "extremely poor role model" for the continent, whose "transgressions are unpardonable".<ref>Tribune India retrieved 7 July 2007</ref> In solidarity with the April 2007 general strike called by the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU), British ] General Secretary ] said of Mugabe's regime: 'Zimbabwe's people are suffering from Mugabe's appalling economic mismanagement, corruption and brutal repression. They are standing up for their rights, and we must stand with them." Lela Kogbara, Chair of ACTSA (Action for Southern Africa) similarly has said: "As with every oppressive regime women and workers are left bearing the brunt. Please join us as we stand in solidarity with the people of Zimbabwe in their struggle for peace, justice and freedom".<ref>National Union of Mineworkers retrieved 7 July 2007</ref>


===Land seizures and growing condemnation: 2000–2008===
], the Africa editor for '']'' for seven years, argues that Mugabe is to blame for Zimbabwe's economic freefall. "In 1980, the average annual income in Zimbabwe was US$950, and a Zimbabwean dollar was worth more than an American one. By 2003, the average income was less than US$400, and the Zimbabwean economy was in freefall.<ref>Guest, Robert. ''The Shackled Continent: Africa's Past, Present and Future''. Pan Books, 2005</ref> "Mugabe has ruled Zimbabwe for nearly three decades and has led it, in that time, from impressive success to the most dramatic peacetime collapse of any country since ]".<ref name="manfist"/>
{{Main|Land reform in Zimbabwe}}
] led the MDC to growing success in opposing Mugabe's regime in the 2000 parliamentary election.]]
The ] were Zimbabwe's most important since 1980.{{sfn|Sithole|2001|p=160}} Sixteen parties took part, and the ] (MDC)—led by trade unionist ]—was particularly successful.{{sfn|Sithole|2001|p=160}} During the election campaign, MDC activists were regularly harassed and in some cases killed.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|pp=178–179}} The ] documented 27 murders, 27 rapes, 2466 assaults, and 617 abductions, with 10,000 people displaced by violence; the majority, but not all, of these actions were carried out by ZANU–PF supporters.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=158}} Observers from the ] (EU) ruled that the election was neither free nor fair.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1pp=165–166|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=86}} The vote produced 48% and 62 parliamentary seats for ZANU-PF and 47% and 57 parliamentary seats for the MDC.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=164|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=188|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=86}} For the first time, ZANU–PF were denied the two-thirds parliamentary majority required to push through constitutional change.{{sfn|Sithole|2001|p=160}} ZANU–PF had relied heavily on their support base in rural Shona-speaking areas, and retained only one urban constituency.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=188}}


In February 2000, land invasions began as armed gangs attacked and occupied white-owned farms.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=167}} The government referred to the attackers as "war veterans" but the majority were unemployed youth too young to have fought in the Rhodesian War.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=167}} Mugabe claimed that the attacks were a spontaneous uprising against white land owners, although the government had paid Z$20&nbsp;million to ]'s ] to lead the land invasion campaign and ZANU–PF officials, police, and military figures were all involved in facilitating it.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=73|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=169}} Some of Mugabe's colleagues described the invasions as retribution for the white community's alleged involvement in securing the success of the 'no' vote in the recent referendum.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=169}} Mugabe justified the seizures by the fact that this land had been seized by white settlers from the indigenous African population in the 1890s.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=180}} He portrayed the invasions as a struggle against colonialism and alleged that the UK was trying to overthrow his government.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=171}} In May 2000, he issued a decree under the Presidential Powers (Temporary Measures) Act which empowered the government to seize farms without providing compensation, insisting that it was the British government that should make these payments.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=184}}
In the '']'' of London, Mugabe was criticised for comparing himself to ]. Mugabe was quoted as saying "This Hitler has only one objective: justice for his people, sovereignty for his people, recognition of the independence of his people and their rights over their resources. If that is Hitler, then let me be a Hitler tenfold".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2003/03/26/wzim26.xml&sSheet=/news/2003/03/26/ixworld.html|title='Hitler' Mugabe launches revenge terror attacks{{ndash}} Telegraph<!-- Bot generated title -->}}</ref>


In March 2000, Zimbabwe's ] ruled that the land invasions were illegal; they nevertheless continued,{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=76|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=170}} and Mugabe began vilifying Zimbabwe's judiciary.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=200|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2pp=17–8}} After the ] also backed this decision, the government called on its judges to resign, successfully pressuring Chief Justice ] to do so.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1pp=198–199, 214–219|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2pp=204–205|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=105}} ZANU–PF member ] was appointed to replace him, while the number of Supreme Court judges was expanded from five to eight; the three additional seats went to pro-Mugabe figures. The first act of the new Supreme Court was to reverse the previous declaration that the land seizures were illegal.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1pp=218, 238|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=207}} In November 2001, Mugabe issued a presidential decree permitting the expropriation of virtually all white-owned farms in Zimbabwe without compensation.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=223}} The farm seizures were often violent; by 2006 a reported sixty white farmers had been killed, with many of their employees experiencing intimidation and torture.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=899}} A large number of the seized farms remained empty, while many of those redistributed to black peasant-farmers were unable to engage in production for the market because of their lack of access to fertiliser.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=900}}
In recent years, Western governments have condemned Mugabe's government. On 9 March 2003, ] ] approved measures for ] to be leveled against Mugabe and other high-ranking Zimbabwe politicians, freezing their assets and barring Americans from engaging in any transactions or dealings with them. Justifying the move, Bush's spokesman stated that the President and Congress believe that "the situation in Zimbabwe endangers the southern African region and threatens to undermine efforts to foster good governance and respect for the rule of law throughout the continent." The bill was known as the ].<ref> 21 December 2001</ref>


{{Quote box|width=25em|align=left|quote=The courts can do whatever they want, but no judicial decision will stand in our way&nbsp;... My own position is that we should not even be defending our position in the courts. This country is our country and this land is our land&nbsp;... They think because they are white they have a divine right to our resources. Not here. The white man is not indigenous to Africa. Africa is for Africans, Zimbabwe is for Zimbabweans.|salign=right |source=— Mugabe on the land seizures{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=203}} }}
In reaction to human rights violations in Zimbabwe, students at universities from which Mugabe has honorary doctorates have sought to get the degrees revoked. So far, the ] and ] have stripped Mugabe of his honorary degree<ref>{{citenews|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/edinburgh_and_east/6724271.stm|title=Mugabe stripped of degree honour|publisher=BBC|date=6 June 2007}} See also: {{citeweb|url=http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/06/13/mugabe-loses-honorary-degree-from-umass/?hp |title=Mugabe loses Honorary Degree from UMass|publisher=The New York Times|accessdate=2008-06-28}}</ref> after two years of campaigning from ]. In addition, the student body at ] (]) unanimously passed a resolution calling for this. The issue is now being considered by the university.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2007/04/06/umass_students_aim_to_revoke_honorary_degree_for_mugabe/|title=UMass students aim to revoke honorary degree for Mugabe{{ndash}} The Boston Globe<!-- Bot generated title -->}}</ref>


The farm invasions severely impacted agricultural development.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=236|2a1=Howard-Hassmann|2y=2010|2p=899}} Zimbabwe had produced over two million tons of maize in 2000; by 2008 this had declined to approximately 450,000.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=899}} By October 2003, ] reported that half of the country's population were ], lacking enough food to meet basic needs.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=901}} By 2009, 75% of Zimbabwe's population were relying on food aid, the highest proportion of any country at that time.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=901}} Zimbabwe faced continuing economic decline. In 2000, the country's GDP was US$7.4&nbsp;billion; by 2005 this had declined to US$3.4&nbsp;billion.{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=122}} ] resulted in economic crisis.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=900}} By 2007, Zimbabwe had the highest inflation rate in the world, at 7600%.{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=122}} By 2008, inflation exceeded 100,000% and a loaf of bread cost a third of the average daily wage.{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=135}} Increasing numbers of Zimbabweans relied on remittances from relatives abroad.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=901}}
Mugabe's office forbade the screening of the 2005 movie '']'', claiming that it was propaganda by the ] and fearing that it could incite hostility towards him.<ref>, ''ZimDaily'', 23 September 2005</ref> In 2007, ''Parade'' magazine ranked Mugabe the 7th worst dictator in the world.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.parade.com/articles/editions/2007/edition_02-11-2007/Dictators|title=The World's Worst Dictators{{ndash}} 2007}}</ref>


Other sectors of society were negatively affected too. By 2005, an estimated 80% of Zimbabwe's population were unemployed,{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=903}} and by 2008 only 20% of children were in schooling.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=903}} The breakdown of water supplies and sewage systems resulted in a ] outbreak in late 2008, with over 98,000 cholera cases in Zimbabwe between August 2008 and mid-July 2009.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=904}} The ruined economy also impacted the ] epidemic in the country; by 2008 the HIV/AIDS rate for individuals aged between 15 and 49 was 15.3%.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=907}} In 2007, the ] declared the average life expectancy in Zimbabwe to be 34 for women and 36 for men, down from 63 and 54 respectively in 1997.{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=122}} The country's lucrative tourist industry was decimated,{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=121}} and there was a rise in ], including of ].{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=121}} Mugabe directly exacerbated this problem when he ordered the killing of 100 elephants to provide meat for an April 2007 feast.{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=121}}
An official from ] suggested that Mugabe was unlikely to leave Zimbabwe, but that if he were to leave, he might go to ], where some believe that he has "stashed much of his wealth".<ref> ''Daily Telegraph'', 4.4.2008</ref>


In October 2000, the MDC's MPs attempted to ] Mugabe, but were thwarted by the ], Mugabe loyalist ].{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=196|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=86}} ZANU–PF increasingly equated itself with Zimbabwean patriotism,{{sfnm|1a1=Ndlovu-Gatsheni|1y=2009|1p=1140|2a1=Onslow|2a2=Redding|2y=2009|2p=68}} with MDC supporters being portrayed as traitors and enemies of Zimbabwe.{{sfn|Ndlovu-Gatsheni|2009|p=1140}} The party presented itself as being on the progressive side of history, with the MDC representing a counter-revolutionary force that seeks to undermine the achievements of the ZANU–PF revolution and of decolonization itself.{{sfn|Onslow|Redding|2009|p=69}} Mugabe claimed that the build-up to the 2002 presidential election represented "the third Chimurenga" and that it would set Zimbabwe free from its colonial heritage.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=191}} In the build-up to the election, the government changed the electoral rules and regulations to improve Mugabe's chances of victory.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=226}} New security legislation was introduced making it illegal to criticize the president.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=226}} The defense force commander, ], stated that the military would not recognize any election result other than a Mugabe victory.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=227}} The EU withdrew its observers from the country, stating that the vote was neither free nor fair.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=227}} The election resulted in Mugabe securing 56% of the vote to Tsvangirai's 42%.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|pp=228–229}} In the aftermath of the election Mugabe declared that the state-owned Grain Marketing Board had the sole right to import and distribute grain, with the state distributors giving food to ZANU–PF supporters while withholding it from those suspected of backing the MDC.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=231|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2pp=88–89}} In 2005, Mugabe instituted ] ("Operation Drive Out the Rubbish"), a project of forced slum clearance; a UN report estimated that 700,000 were left homeless. Since the inhabitants of the shantytowns overwhelmingly voted MDC, many alleged that the bulldozing was politically motivated.<ref name="telegraphtatters">{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/06/03/wzim03.xml|title=Mugabe's raids leave townships in tatters|date=6 March 2005|work=The Daily Telegraph|location=London|access-date=22 May 2010|first=Charles|last=Moore|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080408002545/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=%2Fnews%2F2005%2F06%2F03%2Fwzim03.xml|archive-date=8 April 2008}}</ref>
In response to Mugabe's critics, former ]n leader ] was quoted blaming not Mugabe for Zimbabwe's troubles, but successive British governments.<ref> ''BBC News'' website, 25 August 2007. Retrieved 27 August 2007.</ref> He wrote in June 2007 that "leaders in the West say Robert Mugabe is a demon, that he has destroyed Zimbabwe and he must be got rid of{{ndash}} but this demonising is made by people who may not understand what Robert Gabriel Mugabe and his fellow freedom fighters went through".<ref name="KK1"> BBC 12 June 2007</ref> Similarly, ]ese President ], responded to his critics by saying that Zimbabwe's problems are the legacy of ].<ref>"," '']''</ref>


]
Mugabe's supporters characterize him as a true Pan-Africanist and a dedicated anti-imperialist who stands strong against forces of imperialism in Africa. According to Mugabe's supporters, the Western media are not objectively reporting on Zimbabwe, but are peddling falsehoods. Mugabe's supporters accuse certain western governments of trying to eradicate ] in order to deny real independence to African countries by imposing client regimes.<ref>, 19 March 2008</ref>
Mugabe's actions brought strong criticism. The ] accused him of plunging the country into "a de facto state of warfare" to stay in power.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|pp=221–222}} Several Southern African states remonstrated with him at a summit in Harare in September 2001.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=222}} In 2002, the ] expelled Zimbabwe from among its ranks; Mugabe blamed this on anti-black racism,{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=912}} a view echoed by South Africa's President ].{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=911}} Mbeki favoured a policy of "quiet diplomacy" in dealing with Mugabe,{{sfn|Onslow|Redding|2009|p=70}} and prevented the ] (AU) from introducing sanctions against him.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=910}} The ], scheduled to take place in ] in April 2003, was deferred repeatedly because African leaders refused to attend while Mugabe was banned; it eventually took place in 2007 with Mugabe in attendance.{{sfnm|1a1=Norman|1y=2008|1p=131|2a1=Tendi|2y=2011|2p=316}} In response to the torture of MDC MP ], Zimbabwean Test Cricketers ] and ] staged a protest during the ] co-hosted by Zimbabwe, wearing ] to "mourn the death of democracy in Zimbabwe". Both men would go into exile, with Olonga charged with treason.<ref name="Cricket County">{{cite web|url= http://www.cricketcountry.com/articles/icc-world-cup-2003-andy-flower-and-henry-olonga-don-black-armbands-246948|title= ICC World Cup 2003: Andy Flower and Henry Olonga don black armbands|publisher= Cricket County|date= 9 February 2015|access-date= 7 January 2025|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20150325204354/http://www.cricketcountry.com/articles/icc-world-cup-2003-andy-flower-and-henry-olonga-don-black-armbands-246948|archive-date= 25 March 2015|url-status= live}}</ref> In 2004, the EU imposed a travel ban and asset freeze on Mugabe.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=912}} It extended these sanctions in 2008,{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=912}} with the US government introducing further sanctions this same year.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=913}} The US and UK introduced a resolution at the ] calling for an arms embargo of Zimbabwe alongside an asset freeze and travel ban of Mugabe and other government figures; it was vetoed by Russia and China.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=913}} In 2009, the SADC demanded that Western states lift their targeted sanctions against Mugabe and his government.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=911}} ZANU–PF presented the sanctions as a form of Western ] and blamed the West for Zimbabwe's economic problems.{{sfn|Tendi|2011|pp=316–317}} According to Carren Pindiriri of the University of Zimbabwe, sanctions did not negatively affect employment and poverty in the country.<ref>{{cite web|title=Zimbabwe sanctions: Who is being targeted?|website=BBC News|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-50169598.amp|date=25 October 2019|access-date=12 September 2021}}</ref>


British prime minister Tony Blair allegedly planned ] in Zimbabwe in the early 2000s as pressure intensified for Mugabe to step down.<ref name="guardian2013-zimbabwe">{{cite news|last1=Smith|first1=David|title=Tony Blair plotted military intervention in Zimbabwe, claims Thabo Mbeki|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/nov/27/tony-blair-military-intervention-zimbabwe-claim|work=The Guardian|date=27 November 2013|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171201044629/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/nov/27/tony-blair-military-intervention-zimbabwe-claim|archive-date=1 December 2017}}</ref> British General ], the ], revealed in 2007 that he and Blair had discussed the invasion of Zimbabwe.<ref name="independent2007-guthrie">{{cite news|title=Lord Guthrie: 'Tony's General' turns defence into an attack|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/lord-guthrie-tonys-general-turns-defence-into-an-attack-399865.html|work=The Independent|date=11 November 2007|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121107122534/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/lord-guthrie-tonys-general-turns-defence-into-an-attack-399865.html|archive-date=7 November 2012}}</ref> However, Guthrie advised against military action: "Hold hard, you'll make it worse."<ref name="independent2007-guthrie"/> In 2013, South African President Thabo Mbeki said that Blair had also pressured South Africa to join in a "regime change scheme, even to the point of using military force" in Zimbabwe.<ref name="guardian2013-zimbabwe"/> Mbeki refused because he felt that "Mugabe is part of the solution to this problem."<ref name="guardian2013-zimbabwe"/> However, a spokesman for Blair said that "he never asked anyone to plan or take part in any such military intervention."<ref name="guardian2013-zimbabwe"/>
'']'' of London charged that on 12 June 2008, Mugabe's Militia murdered Dadirai Chipiro, the wife of Mugabe's political opponent, Patson Chipiro, by burning her alive with a petrol bomb after severing her hands and feet.<ref>{{citeweb|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article4116638.ece|publisher=]|accessdate=2008-06-28|title=Robert Mugabe's militia burn opponent’s wife alive}}</ref>


===Power-sharing with the opposition MDC: 2008–2013===
=== Bans on travel===
{{Main|2008 Zimbabwean presidential election}}
] in 2008, while in Rome for a UN Food Conference-a permitted exeption from his travel ban.]]
After observers from the ] were barred from examining Zimbabwe's 2002 elections, the EU imposed a ban on Mugabe and 94 members of his government. The United States instituted a similar ban. The EU's ban has a few loopholes, resulting in Mugabe taking a few trips into Europe despite the ban. Mugabe is allowed to travel to UN events within European and American borders.<ref name="popefuneral">{{cite web|url=http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7357164/page/5/|title=•MUGABE DEFIES EU, FLIES TO ROME|accessdate=2007-07-08|publisher= MSNBC}}</ref>


In March 2008, the parliamentary and presidential elections were held. In the former, ZANU–PF secured 97 seats to the MDC's 99 and the rival ]'s 9.{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=143}}<ref>{{cite news|url=http://zimbabwemetro.com/2008/04/02/final-house-of-assembly-results/|archive-url=https://archive.today/20080616052813/http://zimbabwemetro.com/2008/04/02/final-house-of-assembly-results/|url-status=dead|archive-date=16 June 2008|title=Final House of Assembly Results|work=]|access-date=28 June 2008}}</ref> In May, the ] announced the presidential vote results, confirming that Tsvangirai secured 47.9%, to Mugabe's 43.2%. As neither candidate secured 50%, a run-off vote was scheduled.{{sfnm|1a1=Norman|1y=2008|1p=157}} Mugabe saw his defeat as an unacceptable personal humiliation.{{sfn|Tendi|2013|p=963}} He deemed it a victory for his Western, and in particular British, detractors, whom he believed were working with Tsvangirai to end his political career.{{sfn|Tendi|2013|p=963}} ZANU–PF claimed that the MDC had rigged the election.{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=144}}
On 8 April 2005, Mugabe attended the ], a move which could be seen as defiance of a European Union travel ban that does not, however, apply to ]. He was granted a transit visa by the ] authorities, as they are obliged to under the ]. However, the Catholic hierarchy in Zimbabwe have been very vocal against his rule and the senior Catholic cleric, ] ] is a major critic, even calling for Western governments to help in his overthrow.<ref> ] retrieved 4 July 2007</ref><ref name="popefuneral">{{cite web|url=http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7357164/page/5/|title= MUGABE DEFIES EU, FLIES TO ROME|accessdate= 2007-07-08|publisher=MSNBC}}</ref> Mugabe surprised ] by shaking his hand during the service. Afterwards, the Prince's office released a statement saying, "The Prince of Wales was caught by surprise and not in a position to avoid shaking Mr. Mugabe’s hand. The Prince finds the current Zimbabwean regime abhorrent. He has supported the Zimbabwe Defence and Aid Fund which works with those being oppressed by the regime. The Prince also recently met ], the Archbishop of Bulawayo, an outspoken critic of the government".<ref name="charlesshake">{{cite web|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/article378880.ece|title=Charles shakes hands with Mugabe at Pope's funeral|accessdate=2007-07-08|publisher=''Times''}}</ref>


]
Before the ban, one of Mugabe's favorite pastimes was to travel to ].<ref name="manfist"/>


After the election, Mugabe's government deployed its "war veterans" in a violent campaign against Tsvangirai supporters.{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=146}} Between March and June 2008, at least 153 MDC supporters were killed.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=905}} There were reports of women affiliated with the MDC being subjected to ] by Mugabe supporters.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=905}} Tens of thousands of Zimbabweans were internally displaced by the violence.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=905}} These actions brought international condemnation of Mugabe's government.{{citation needed|date=September 2019}} UN Secretary-General ] expressed concern about the violence,{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=173}} which was also unanimously condemned by the ], which declared that a free and fair election was "impossible".{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=173}} 40 senior African leaders—among them ], ], and ]—signed an open letter calling for an end to the violence.{{sfn|Norman|2008|pp=170–171}}
Robert Mugabe and senior members of the Harare government are not allowed to travel to the ] because it is the position of the US government that he has worked to undermine democracy in Zimbabwe and has restricted freedom of the press.<ref>, US Dept. of Treasury, 23 November 2005 (accessed 02/07/2008)</ref> Despite strained political relations, the United States remains a leading provider of humanitarian assistance to Zimbabwe, providing roughly $400 million in humanitarian assistance from 2002–2007, mostly food aid.<ref>http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/5479.htm U.S. Department of State, Bureau of African Affairs, February 2008 (accessed 04/02/2008)</ref>


In response to the violence, Tsvangirai pulled out of the run-off.{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=74}} In the second round, Mugabe was pronounced victor with 85.5% of the vote, and immediately re-inaugurated as president.{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=175}}<ref name="CNN2008">{{cite web|url=http://cnnwire.blogs.cnn.com/2008/06/29/mugabe-wins-by-9-to-1-margin/|title=Mugabe wins by 9-to-1 margin|work=The CNN Wire|date=29 June 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090528140238/http://cnnwire.blogs.cnn.com/2008/06/29/mugabe-wins-by-9-to-1-margin/|archive-date=28 May 2009|url-status=dead|publisher=CNN}}</ref> The SADC oversaw the establishment of a power-sharing agreement; brokered by Mbeke, it was signed in September 2008.<ref name="edition.cnn.com">{{cite news |url=http://edition.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/africa/09/15/zimbabwe.powershare/?iref=mpstoryview|title=edition.cnn.com, Rivals sign Zimbabwe power-share deal|publisher=CNN|date=16 September 2008|access-date=5 September 2010|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303232421/http://edition.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/africa/09/15/zimbabwe.powershare/?iref=mpstoryview|archive-date=3 March 2016}}</ref> Under the agreement, Mugabe remained President while Tsvangirai became Prime Minister and the MDC's ] became Vice Prime Minister.{{citation needed|date=September 2019}} The cabinet was equally divided among MDC and ZANU–PF members.{{citation needed|date=September 2019}} ZANU–PF nevertheless displayed unwillingness to share power,{{sfn|Chigora|Guzura|2011|p=24}} and were anxious to prevent any sweeping political changes.{{sfn|Onslow|Redding|2009|p=63}} Under the power-sharing agreement, a number of limited reforms were passed.{{sfn|Tendi|2013|p=965}} In early 2009, Mugabe's government declared that—to combat rampant inflation—it would recognize US dollars as legal tender and would pay government employees in this currency.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=904}} This helped to stabilize prices.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=904}} ZANU–PF blocked many of the proposed reforms and a new constitution was passed in March 2013.{{sfn|Tendi|2013|p=965}}
Because ] events are exempt from the travel bans, Mugabe attended the ] (FAO) summit in Rome. African leaders threatened to boycott the event if Mugabe were blacklisted; when he was not, the ] refused to send a representative. British and Australian officials denounced the presence of Mugabe.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5iN7-bIe4r7GRfYcxabOT7WbWLaSw|title=afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5iN7-bIe4r7GRfYcxabOT7WbWLaSw<!--INSERT TITLE-->}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5gUQxFQpnXvjBlmAW76S247JHjUiQ|title=afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5gUQxFQpnXvjBlmAW76S247JHjUiQ<!--INSERT TITLE-->}}</ref>


=== Succession === === Later years: 2013–2017===
]
Because Mugabe is one of Africa's longest-lasting leaders, speculation has built over the years as to the future of his country when finally he leaves office. His age and recurring rumours of failing health have focused more attention on possible successors within his party as well as the opposition. The 11 March 2007 crackdown against a religious gathering sponsored by the opposition attracted scrutiny.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.theage.com.au/news/world/activist-held-in-zimbabwe-crackdown/2007/03/13/1173722435481.html|title="Activist held in Zimbabwe crackdown"}}</ref>


Declaring that he would "fight like a wounded animal" for re-election,{{sfn|Tendi|2013|p=963}} Mugabe approached the ] believing that it would be his last.{{sfn|Tendi|2013|p=964}} He hoped that a decisive electoral victory would secure his legacy, signal his triumph over his Western critics, and irreparably damage Tsvangirai's credibility.{{sfn|Tendi|2013|p=964}} The opposition parties believed that this election was their best chance for ousting Mugabe.{{sfn|Gallagher|2015|pp=27–28}} They portrayed him as a feeble old man who was being told what to do by the military;{{sfn|Tendi|2013|p=967}} at least one academic observer argued that this was untrue.{{sfn|Tendi|2013|p=967}}
In June 2005, a report that Mugabe had entered a hospital for tests on his heart fuelled rumours that he had died of a ].<ref>, ''CTV'', 7 June 2005.</ref> These reports were later dismissed by a Mugabe spokesman.


In contrast to 2008, there was no organised dissent against Mugabe within ZANU–PF.{{sfn|Tendi|2013|p=969}} The party elite decided to avoid the violence that had marred the 2008 election so as not to undermine its credibility,{{sfn|Tendi|2013|p=965}} particularly in the eyes of the SADC, thus allowing Zimbabwe's government to consolidate its rule without interference.{{sfn|Tendi|2013|p=965}} Mugabe called upon supporters to avoid violence,{{sfn|Tendi|2013|p=965}} and attended far fewer rallies than in past elections, in part because of his advanced age and in part to ensure that those rallies he did attend were larger.{{sfn|Tendi|2013|p=966}} The ZANU–PF offered gifts, including food and clothing, to many members of the electorate to encourage them to vote for the party.{{sfn|Gallagher|2015|pp=38–39}}
The rumours coincided with ] (or "Drive Out Trash"), a police campaign to demolish houses and businesses that had been built without permission on land previously taken from white landholders and intended for redistribution. Opponents called this an attempt to disperse urban centres of dissent into rural areas where the government had more control. Former information minister ] attributed the events to a power struggle within the party over who would succeed Mugabe.


ZANU–PF won a landslide victory, with 61% of the presidential vote and over two-thirds of parliamentary seats.{{sfn|Gallagher|2015|p=28}} The elections were not considered free and fair; there were widespread stories of vote rigging and many voters might have been fearful of the violence that had surrounded the 2008 election.{{sfn|Gallagher|2015|p=28}} During the campaign, many MDC supporters had remained quiet about their views out of fear of reprisals.{{sfn|Gallagher|2015|pp=35–36}} The MDC was also negatively impacted by its time in the coalition government, with perceptions that it had been just as corrupt as ZANU–PF.{{sfn|Gallagher|2015|pp=41–42}} ZANU–PF had also capitalized on its appeals to African race, land, and liberation, while the MDC was often associated with white farmers, Western nations, and perceived Western values such as ].{{sfn|Gallagher|2015|pp=43–44}}
], recently elevated to vice-president of ] during the December 2004 party congress and considerably younger than ], the other vice-president, has been touted as a likely successor to Mugabe. Mujuru's candidacy for the presidency is strengthened by the backing of her husband, ], who is the former head of the Zimbabwean army.
] in 2016]]


In February 2014, Mugabe underwent a ] operation in Singapore; on return he celebrated his ninetieth birthday at a ] football stadium.<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-zimbabwe-mugabe-idUSBREA1M0P420140223?feedType=RSS&feedName=worldNews | work=Reuters | title=At 90, Zimbabwe's Mugabe says has energy of 9-year-old | date=23 February 2014 | url-status=live | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924193848/http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/02/23/us-zimbabwe-mugabe-idUSBREA1M0P420140223?feedType=RSS&feedName=worldNews | archive-date=24 September 2015 | df=dmy-all }}</ref> In December 2014, Mugabe fired his vice-president, ], accusing her of plotting his overthrow.<ref>{{cite web|title=Robert Mugabe sacks deputy and seven ministers over 'plot' against him|work=The Guardian|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/dec/09/robert-mugabe-sacks-ministers-zimbabwe-joice-mujuru|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161229035110/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/dec/09/robert-mugabe-sacks-ministers-zimbabwe-joice-mujuru|archive-date=29 December 2016}}</ref> In January 2015, Mugabe was elected as the ] of the ] (AU).<ref>{{cite news |date=30 January 2015 |title=Zimbabwe's Mugabe, 90, becomes African Union chairman |url=https://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFKBN0L313I20150130|work=Reuters|access-date=30 January 2015|url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150130152759/http://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFKBN0L313I20150130 |archive-date=30 January 2015}}</ref> In November 2015, he announced his intention to run for re-election as Zimbabwe's president in 2018, at the age of 94, and was accepted as the ZANU–PF candidate.<ref>{{cite news|title = Mugabe will rule until he is 100 from special wheelchair, claims wife|url = https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/zimbabwes-robert-mugabe-will-rule-until-he-is-100-from-special-wheelchair-his-wife-claims-a6744386.html|website = The Independent|access-date = 23 November 2015|issn = 0951-9467|url-status = live|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20151123085615/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/zimbabwes-robert-mugabe-will-rule-until-he-is-100-from-special-wheelchair-his-wife-claims-a6744386.html|archive-date = 23 November 2015|df = dmy-all}}</ref> In February 2016, Mugabe said he had no plans for retirement and would remain in power "until God says 'come'".<ref>{{Cite news|date=18 February 2016 |title='Until God says come': turning 92, Zimbabwe's Mugabe refuses to relinquish power |publisher=Channel NewsAsia |url=http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/world/until-god-says-come-tu/2526514.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160219095654/http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/world/until-god-says-come-tu/2526514.html |archive-date=19 February 2016 |url-status=live}}</ref> In February 2017, right after his 93rd birthday, Mugabe stated he would not retire nor pick a successor, even though he said he would let his party choose a successor if it saw fit.<ref name="93rdPledgeRemain">{{cite web | last1=Michael | first1=Dibie Ike | title=Zimbabwe: Mugabe Celebrates 93rd Birthday, Pledges to Remain in Power | url=http://www.africanews.com/2017/02/25/zimbabwe-mugabe-celebrate-93rd-birthday-pledges-to-remain-in-power/ | date=25 February 2017 | publisher=] | access-date=25 February 2017 | url-status=live | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170226050332/http://www.africanews.com/2017/02/25/zimbabwe-mugabe-celebrate-93rd-birthday-pledges-to-remain-in-power/ | archive-date=26 February 2017 | df=dmy-all }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | last1=Bulawayo | first1=Philimon | title=Zimbabwe's Mugabe Says Will Not Impose Successor, Party Will Choose | url=https://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2017-02-25/zimbabwes-mugabe-says-will-not-impose-successor-party-will-choose | date=25 February 2017 | publisher=] (from ]) | access-date=25 February 2017 | url-status=live | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170226050302/https://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2017-02-25/zimbabwes-mugabe-says-will-not-impose-successor-party-will-choose | archive-date=26 February 2017 | df=dmy-all }}</ref> In May 2017, Mugabe took a weeklong trip to ], Mexico, ostensibly to attend a three-day conference on disaster risk reduction, eliciting criticism of wasteful spending from opposition figures.<ref>{{cite news |work=] |title=Mugabe and Entourage Live it Up in Cancún While Zimbabwe Suffers |first=Robbie |last=Gramer |date=27 May 2017 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |publisher=] |url=http://www.news24.com/Africa/Zimbabwe/mugabe-not-given-chance-to-speak-in-mexico-leaves-in-a-huff-20170526 |title=Mugabe 'not given chance to speak in Mexico' |date=26 May 2017 |quote=Mugabe, 93, left Harare for Mexico last Friday, less than a week after he returned from a trip to see his doctors in Singapore. |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170528033156/http://www.news24.com/Africa/Zimbabwe/mugabe-not-given-chance-to-speak-in-mexico-leaves-in-a-huff-20170526 |archive-date=28 May 2017}}</ref> He made three medical trips to Singapore in 2017, and Grace Mugabe called on him to name a successor.<ref>{{cite news |work=BBC News |title=Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe urged by first lady to name heir |date=27 July 2017 |access-date=28 July 2017 |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-40740359 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170728150404/http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-40740359 |archive-date=28 July 2017}}</ref>
In October 2006, a report prepared by Zimbabwe's Ministry of Economic Development acknowledged the lack of coordination among critical government departments in Zimbabwe and the overall lack of commitment to end the crisis. The report implied that the infighting in Zanu-PF over Mugabe's successor was also hurting policy formulation and consistency in implementation.<ref> ''IOL''.</ref>


In October 2017, the ] (WHO) appointed Mugabe as a ]; this attracted criticism from both the Zimbabwean opposition and various foreign governments given the poor state of the Zimbabwean health system.<ref>{{cite web |title=Robert Mugabe's WHO appointment condemned as 'an insult' |date=21 October 2017 |work=BBC News |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-41702662 |access-date=22 October 2017 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171021144046/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-41702662 |archive-date=21 October 2017 }}</ref> Responding to the outcry, WHO revoked Mugabe's appointment a day later.<ref>{{cite web |title=WHO cancels Robert Mugabe goodwill ambassador role |date=22 October 2017 |work=BBC News |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-41713919 |access-date=22 October 2017 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171022132033/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-41713919 |archive-date=22 October 2017 }}</ref> &nbsp;In response, foreign minister ] said the United Nations system should be reformed.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.iol.co.za/news/special-features/zimbabwe/harare-fumes-after-who-rescinds-mugabe-goodwill-appointment-11667175|title=Harare fumes after WHO rescinds Mugabe goodwill appointment {{!}} IOL News|access-date=23 October 2017|language=en|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171023173939/https://www.iol.co.za/news/special-features/zimbabwe/harare-fumes-after-who-rescinds-mugabe-goodwill-appointment-11667175|archive-date=23 October 2017}}</ref>
In late 2006, a plan was presented to postpone the ] until 2010, at the same time as the next parliamentary election, thereby extending Mugabe's term by two years. It was said that holding the two elections together would be a cost-saving measure,<ref>, IRIN, 14 December 2006.</ref> but plan was not approved: there were reportedly objections from some in ZANU-PF to the idea.


===Coup d'état and resignation: 2017===
In March 2007, Mugabe said that he thought that the feeling was in favour of holding the two elections together in 2008 instead of 2010. He also said that he would be willing to run for re-election again if the party wanted him to do so.<ref>, DPA (''IOL''), 12 March 2007.</ref> Other leaders in southern Africa were rumoured to be less warm on the idea of extending his term to 2010: recently, at independence celebrations in ], South African President Thabo Mbeki was rumoured to have met with Mugabe in private and told him that "he was determined that South Africa's hosting of the Football World Cup in 2010 should not be disrupted by controversial presidential elections in Zimbabwe".<ref>BBC News retrieved 4 July 2007.</ref>
{{Main|2017 Zimbabwean coup d'état}}
On 6 November 2017, Mugabe sacked his first vice-president, ]. This fuelled speculation that he intended to name Grace his successor. Grace was very unpopular with the ZANU–PF old guard. On 15 November 2017, the ] placed Mugabe under ] at his ] mansion as part of what it described as an action against "criminals" in Mugabe's circle.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://edition.cnn.com/2017/11/14/africa/zimbabwe-military-chief-treasonable-conduct/index.html|title=Zimbabwe in turmoil after apparent coup|author1=David McKenzie |author2=Brent Swails |author3=Angela Dewan|publisher=CNN|access-date=15 November 2017|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171114223043/http://edition.cnn.com/2017/11/14/africa/zimbabwe-military-chief-treasonable-conduct/index.html|archive-date=14 November 2017}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|title=Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe confined to home as army takes control |newspaper=The Guardian |date=15 November 2017 |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2017/nov/15/zimbabwe-army-control-harare-coup-robert-mugabe-live |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171115032508/https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2017/nov/15/zimbabwe-army-control-harare-coup-robert-mugabe-live |archive-date=15 November 2017}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|title=Stunned Zimbabweans face uncertain future without Mugabe |date=16 November 2017 |newspaper=SBS News |url=http://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/2017/11/16/stunned-zimbabweans-face-uncertain-future-without-mugabe |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171119134528/http://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/2017/11/16/stunned-zimbabweans-face-uncertain-future-without-mugabe |archive-date=19 November 2017 }}</ref>


On 19 November, he was sacked as leader of ZANU–PF, and Mnangagwa was appointed in his place.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-42043370|title=Ruling party sacks Mugabe as leader|date=19 November 2017|publisher=BBC|access-date=19 November 2017|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171119115929/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-42043370|archive-date=19 November 2017}}</ref> The party also gave Mugabe an ultimatum: resign by noon the following day, or it would introduce an ] resolution against him. In a nationally televised speech that night, Mugabe refused to say that he would resign.<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/19/world/africa/zimbabwe-robert-mugabe.html | title=Robert Mugabe, in Speech to Zimbabwe, Refuses to Say if He Will Resign | work=The New York Times|first=Jeffrey|last=Moyo | date=19 November 2017 | access-date=20 November 2017 | url-status=live | archive-url=https://archive.today/20171119222140/https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/19/world/africa/zimbabwe-robert-mugabe.html | archive-date=19 November 2017 | df=dmy-all }}</ref> In response, ZANU–PF deputies introduced an impeachment resolution on 21 November 2017, which was seconded by the MDC–T.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/nov/21/robert-mugabe-impeachment-proceedings-begin-in-zimbabwe-emmerson-mnangagwa|title=Impeachment proceedings against Mugabe begin in Zimbabwe|first1=Emma|last1=Graham-Harrison|first2=Jason|last2=Burke|work=]|date=21 November 2017|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171123011254/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/nov/21/robert-mugabe-impeachment-proceedings-begin-in-zimbabwe-emmerson-mnangagwa|archive-date=23 November 2017}}</ref> The constitution stipulated that removing a president from office required a two-thirds majority of both the House of Assembly and Senate in a joint sitting. However, with both major parties supporting the motion and controlling all but six seats in both houses between them (all but four in the lower house and all but two in the upper house), Mugabe's impeachment and removal appeared all but certain.
On 30 March 2007, it was announced that the ZANU-PF central committee had chosen Mugabe as the party's candidate for another term in 2008, that presidential terms would be shortened to five years, and that the parliamentary election would also be held in 2008.<ref>, Reuters (''Sydney Morning Herald''), 31 March 2007.</ref> Mugabe was chosen by acclamation as the party's presidential candidate for 2008 by ZANU-PF delegates at a party conference on 13 December 2007.<ref>, BBC News, 13 December 2007.</ref>


As per the constitution, both chambers met in joint session to debate the resolution. Hours after the debate began, the Speaker of the House of Assembly read a letter from Mugabe announcing that he had resigned, effective immediately.<ref name="auto">{{Cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-42071488|title=Zimbabwe's President Mugabe 'resigns'|date=21 November 2017|work=BBC News|access-date=21 November 2017|language=en-GB|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171121155642/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-42071488|archive-date=21 November 2017}}</ref> Mugabe and his wife had negotiated a deal before his resignation, under which he and his kin were exempted from prosecution, his business interests would remain untouched, and he would receive a payment of at least $10&nbsp;million.<ref>{{Cite news|title=Zimbabwe: Robert Mugabe to get $10m payoff and immunity for his family|last=Burke|first=Jason|date=26 November 2017 |newspaper=] |language=en-GB |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/nov/25/robert-mugabe-payoff-family-immunity-zimbabwe-zanu-pf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171128003810/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/nov/25/robert-mugabe-payoff-family-immunity-zimbabwe-zanu-pf |archive-date=28 November 2017 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|title=Mugabe, Mphoko due for big payout |date=11 December 2017 |newspaper=Daily News |url=https://www.dailynews.co.zw/articles/2017/12/11/mugabe-mphoko-due-for-big-payout |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171213181921/https://www.dailynews.co.zw/articles/2017/12/11/mugabe-mphoko-due-for-big-payout |archive-date=13 December 2017 |url-status=live }}</ref> In July 2018, the Zimbabwe Supreme Court ruled that Mugabe had resigned voluntarily, despite some of the ex-president's subsequent comments.<ref name="Voluntary">{{Cite news|date=17 July 2018 |title=Zimbabwe Court Says Mugabe Stepped Down Freely, Voluntarily |publisher=Voice of America |url=https://www.voazimbabwe.com/a/zimbabwe-mugabe-resigned-voluntarily-freely/4486081.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180718111705/https://www.voazimbabwe.com/a/zimbabwe-mugabe-resigned-voluntarily-freely/4486081.html |archive-date=18 July 2018 |url-status=live }}</ref>
At Zanu-PF's tenth annual conference in ] in December 2008, Mugabe spoke of his determination not to follow US president ] to his "political death"<ref>Quoted in ]-]. "Bob vows to hold power." '']''. ] ]. (accessed ], ]).</ref> and urged the party to ready itself for new polls. He also took the opportunity once more to cite Britain as the source of Zimbabwe's woes.


==Post-presidency==
=== SADC-facilitated government power-sharing agreement===
Late in December 2017, according to a government gazette, Mugabe was given full ] and, out of public funds, a five-bedroom house, up to 23 staff members, and personal vehicles. He further was permitted to keep the business interests and other wealth which he had amassed while in power, and he received an additional payment of about ten million dollars.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.standard.co.uk/news/world/robert-mugabes-lavish-retirement-package-includes-firstclass-flights-a-fivebedroom-house-and-23-a3728106.html|title=Robert Mugabe's lavish retirement package includes first-class flights, a five-bedroom house and 23 staff|first=Hatty|last=Collier|work=Evening Standard|date=28 December 2017|access-date=8 January 2018|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180109064226/https://www.standard.co.uk/news/world/robert-mugabes-lavish-retirement-package-includes-firstclass-flights-a-fivebedroom-house-and-23-a3728106.html|archive-date=9 January 2018}}</ref>
On 11 September 2008, at the end of the fourth day of negotiations, South African President and mediator to ], ], announced in ] that Robert Mugabe of ], Professor ] and ] (both of ]) finally signed the power-sharing agreement - "memorandum of understanding."<ref></ref> Mbeki stated: "An agreement has been reached on all items on the agenda ... all of them endorsed the document tonight, and signed it. The formal signing will be done on Monday 10am. The document will be released then. The ceremony will be attended by ] and other African regional and continental leaders. The leaders will spend the next few days constituting the inclusive government to be announced on Monday. The leaders will work very hard to mobilise support for the people to recover. We hope the world will assist so that this political agreement succeeds." In the signed historic power deal, Mugabe, on 11 September 2008 agreed to surrender day-to-day control of the government and the deal is also expected to result in a ] ] for the military and Zanu-PF party leaders. Opposition sources said "Tsvangirai will become ] at the head of a council of ministers, the principal organ of government, drawn from his Movement for Democratic Change and the president's Zanu-PF party; and Mugabe will remain president and continue to chair a cabinet that will be a largely consultative body, and the real power will lie with Tsvangirai.<ref></ref><ref></ref><ref></ref> South Africa’s '']'' reported, however, that Mugabe was refusing to sign a deal which would curtail his presidential powers.<ref></ref> '']'' said Nelson Chamisa, a spokesman for the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, announced: “This is an inclusive government. The executive power would be shared by the president, the prime minister and the cabinet. Mugabe, Tsvangirai and Arthur Mutambara have still not decided how to divide the ministries. But ], the American assistant secretary of state for African affairs, said: “We don’t know what’s on the table, and it’s hard to rally for an agreement when no one knows the details or even the broad outlines”<ref></ref>


On 15 March 2018, in his first interview since removal from the presidency, Mugabe insisted that he had been ousted in a "coup d'état" which must be undone. He stated that he would not work with Mnangagwa and termed Mnangagwa's presidency "illegal" and "unconstitutional".<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/mar/16/robert-mugabe-zimbabwe-disgraceful-coup-must-be-undone|title=Robert Mugabe says 'disgraceful' Zimbabwe coup must be undone|work=The Guardian|agency=Agence-France Presse|date=15 March 2018|access-date=15 March 2018|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180315234748/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/mar/16/robert-mugabe-zimbabwe-disgraceful-coup-must-be-undone|archive-date=15 March 2018}}</ref> In a lawsuit brought by two political parties, the ] and the ], and others, the court found that the resignation was legal, and that Mnangagwa, as vice-president, duly took over the presidency.<ref name="Voluntary" />
On ], 2008, the leaders of the 14-member ] witnessed the signing of the power-sharing agreement, brokered by South African leader Thabo Mbeki. With symbolic handshake and warm smiles at the Rainbow Towers hotel in Harare, Mugabe, Mutambara and Tsvangirai signed the deal to end violent political crisis provides. As provided, Robert Mugabe will be recognised as president, Morgan Tsvangirai will become prime minister,<ref></ref> the MDC will control the police, Mugabe’s Zanu (PF) will command the Army, and Arthur Mutambara becomes deputy prime minister.<ref></ref><ref></ref>


The state media reported that Mugabe had backed the ], which was formed by ], a former high-ranking ZANU-PF politician who resigned in protest against Mugabe's removal from the presidency. The NPF posted a picture of Mutinhiri posing with Mugabe<ref>{{cite news |url=https://news24.com/Africa/Zimbabwe/new-party-forms-in-zimbabwe-with-mugabes-backing-20180305|title=New party forms in Zimbabwe with Mugabe's backing |publisher=news24 |access-date=28 October 2019 }}</ref> and issued a press release in which it said that the former president had praised the decision.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.iol.co.za/news/africa/new-mugabe-backed-party-misplaced-mere-political-profiling-13608294|title=New Mugabe-backed party 'misplaced, mere political profiling' |publisher=iol |access-date=28 October 2019 }}</ref>
== Honours and revocations ==
In 1994 Mugabe was appointed an honorary Knight Grand Cross in the ] by ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.fco.gov.uk/en/newsroom/latest-news/?view=PressR&id=3878224|title=Mugabe honorary knighthood annulled}}</ref> This entitled him to use the postnominal letters GCB, but not to use the title "Sir." In the ], the ] Foreign Affairs Select Committee called for the removal of this honour in 2003, and on 25 June 2008, Queen Elizabeth II cancelled and annulled the honorary knighthood after advice from the ]. "This action has been taken as a mark of revulsion at the abuse of human rights and abject disregard for the democratic process in Zimbabwe over which President Mugabe has presided".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.fco.gov.uk/en/newsroom/latest-news/?view=PressR&id=3862607|title=Foreign and Commonwealth Office Statement}} See also {{citenews|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article4213800.ece|title=Queen strips Robert Mugabe of knighthood to mark 'revulsion' at violence|publisher=Times Online|accessdate=2008-06-25}} and {{citenews|url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/zimbabwe/2193924/Robert-Mugabe-to-be-stripped-of-knighthood.html|title=Robert Mugabe to be stripped of knighthood|publisher=]|accessdate=2008-06-25}} and {{citenews|author=Cowell, Alan|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/26/world/africa/26zimbabwe.html?hp |title=Queen Strips Mugabe of Knighthood|publisher=]|accessdate=2008-06-26}}</ref>


On the eve of the ], the first in 38 years in which he would not be a candidate, Mugabe held a surprise press conference, in which he stated that he would not vote for President Mnangagwa and ZANU–PF, the party he founded. Instead, he intended to vote for ], the candidate for his long-time rivals, the MDC.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-44998488 |title=Zimbabwe election: Mugabe turns on Mnangagwa in surprise pre-poll speech |work=BBC News |access-date=29 July 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180729123307/https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-44998488 |archive-date=29 July 2018 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/jul/29/robert-mugabe-zanu-pf-zimbabwe-election|title=Robert Mugabe: I won't vote for Zanu-PF in Zimbabwe election|newspaper=The Guardian|access-date=29 July 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180729143932/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/jul/29/robert-mugabe-zanu-pf-zimbabwe-election|archive-date=29 July 2018|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url=https://news.sky.com/story/zimbabwes-robert-mugabe-refuses-to-back-successor-mnangagwa-in-election-11453221 |title=Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe refuses to back successor Mnangagwa in election |publisher=Sky News |access-date=29 July 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180729163948/https://news.sky.com/story/zimbabwes-robert-mugabe-refuses-to-back-successor-mnangagwa-in-election-11453221 |archive-date=29 July 2018 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2018/07/zimbabwe-mugabe-won-vote-successor-mnangagwa-180729100342113.html |title=Zimbabwe's Mugabe says he won't vote for successor Mnangagwa |last=Mohamed |first=Hamza |date=29 July 2018 |publisher=Al Jazeera |access-date=29 July 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180729230401/https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2018/07/zimbabwe-mugabe-won-vote-successor-mnangagwa-180729100342113.html |archive-date=29 July 2018 |url-status=live }}</ref> Mnangagwa won the re-election.
Mugabe holds several ] and doctorates from international universities, awarded to him in the 1980s; at least three of these have since been revoked. In June 2007, he became the first international figure ever to be stripped of an honorary degree by a British university, when the ] withdrew the degree awarded to him in 1984.<ref>{{citenews|publisher=]|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article1896047.ece|title=Mugabe stripped of degree by Edinburgh|accessdate=2007-07-04}} See also: {{citenews|publisher=]|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2007/jul/15/highereducation.internationaleducationnews|title=Edinburgh University revokes Mugabe degree|author=Paul Kelbie|date=15 July 2007|accessdate=2008-06-28}}</ref> On 12 June 2008, the ] Board of Trustees voted to revoke the law degree awarded to Mugabe in 1986; this is the first time one of its honorary degrees has been revoked.<ref>{{citenews|url=http://www.boston.com/news/local/breaking_news/2008/06/umass_revokes_m.html|title=UMass revokes Mugabe's honorary degree|publisher=The Boston Globe|accessdate=2008-06-28}}</ref> Similarly, on 12 September 2008, ] revoked an honorary law degree that it awarded Mugabe in 1990.<ref>{{citenews|url=http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080912/NEWS06/80912055|title=Michigan State revokes Mugabe's honorary degree|publisher=Detroit Free Press|accessdate=2008-09-12}}</ref>


===Illness, death and funeral: 2019===
{| border="1"
Mugabe was unable to walk, according to Emmerson Mnangagwa in November 2018, and had been receiving treatment in Singapore for the previous two months.<ref>{{cite web| url= https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-46329242 | title= Ex-Zimbabwe President Mugabe 'unable to walk' | publisher = BBC | access-date = 8 September 2019 | date = 24 November 2018 }}</ref> He was hospitalised there in April 2019, making the last of several trips to the country for medical treatment, as he had done late in his presidency and following his resignation.<ref>{{cite web| url= https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-49604152 | title= Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe's strongman ex-president, dies aged 95
|+ Titles and honours of Robert Gabriel Mugabe
| publisher = BBC | access-date = 8 September 2019 | date = 6 September 2019 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last1=Burke |first1=Jason |last2=Smith |first2=David |date=6 September 2019 |title=Robert Mugabe: former Zimbabwean president dies aged 95 |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/sep/06/robert-mugabe-former-zimbabwean-president-dies-aged-95 |work=The Guardian |access-date=6 September 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190906054505/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/sep/06/robert-mugabe-former-zimbabwean-president-dies-aged-95 |archive-date=6 September 2019 |url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |date=6 September 2019 |title=Zimbabwe's former president Robert Mugabe dies in Singapore |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-zimbabwe-mugabe/zimbabwes-former-president-robert-mugabe-dies-in-singapore-idUSKCN1VR0FZ |work=Reuters |access-date=6 September 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190906053440/https://www.reuters.com/article/us-zimbabwe-mugabe/zimbabwes-former-president-robert-mugabe-dies-in-singapore-idUSKCN1VR0FZ |archive-date=6 September 2019 |url-status=live }}</ref> He died at ] on 6 September 2019 at about 10:40&nbsp;am, aged 95 (]), according to a senior Zimbabwean diplomat.<ref>{{cite web| url= https://www.straitstimes.com/world/africa/ex-zimbabwe-leader-robert-mugabe-dies-at-95-bbc | title= Ex-Zimbabwe leader Robert Mugabe dies at 95 in Singapore | website = The Straits Times | access-date = 8 September 2019 | date = 6 September 2019 }}</ref> Although the ] was not officially disclosed,<ref name="cbsnews.com">{{Cite web|url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/robert-mugabe-has-died-zimbabwes-founding-father-turned-strongman-dies-at-95-cause-of-death-unknown-2019-09-06/|title=Robert Mugabe has died; Zimbabwe's founding father turned strongman dies at 95 cause of death unknown|date=6 September 2019|publisher=CBS News|access-date=6 September 2019}}</ref> Mnangagwa, his successor, told ZANU–PF supporters in New York City that Mugabe had advanced cancer and his ] treatment had ceased to be effective.<ref>{{cite web |title=Mnangagwa Reveals Mugabe was Being Treated for Cancer Before his Death |url=https://ewn.co.za/2019/09/23/mnangagwa-reveals-mugabe-was-being-treated-for-cancer-before-his-death |website=Eyewitness News |access-date=23 September 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Former President Mugabe cause of death revealed |url=https://www.herald.co.zw/former-president-mugabe-cause-of-death-revealed/ |website=The Herald |access-date=23 September 2019}}</ref>
! !! Title/Honour !! Awarding body/person !! Date of award !! Reason for award !! Date of revocation/loss of award !! Reason for revocation/loss<br />(Comment)

|-
On 11 September 2019, his body was flown back to ] in Zimbabwe,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/world/robert-mugabe-body-zimbabwe-leaves-singapore-casket-funeral-11893474|title=Mugabe's body leaves Singapore for burial in Zimbabwe|website=CNA|language=en|access-date=11 September 2019|archive-date=11 September 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190911032903/https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/world/robert-mugabe-body-zimbabwe-leaves-singapore-casket-funeral-11893474|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://sg.news.yahoo.com/mugabes-body-expected-zimbabwe-burial-072247758.html|title=Mugabe's body expected in Zimbabwe, burial place still a mystery|date=11 September 2019 |publisher=Yahoo! News|language=en-SG|access-date=11 September 2019}}</ref> where 1,000 had gathered to wait for the body and listen to a speech from Mnangagwa.<ref name="crowdsoba">{{cite news|url=https://www.apnews.com/ed9ddbffc9e640a99e1dc2821f374838|title=Few turn out as Mugabe is returned to a Zimbabwe in crisis|first1=Andrew|last1=Meldrum|first2=Farai|last2=Mutsaka|work=Associated Press|date=11 September 2019|access-date=11 September 2019}}</ref> Mugabe's body was then driven to the family residence in Borrowdale for a private ] attended by his friends and family, but not Mnangagwa.<ref name="crowdsoba" /> The ] reported that no supporters had gathered along the procession route, but 500 mourners gathered in his birthplace of ].<ref name="crowdsoba" /> On 13 September 2019, it was announced that the Mugabe family had accepted the Mnangagwa government's request to have Mugabe buried at ] and to have his burial be delayed for 30 days.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.apnews.com/4ffa20cc022d459194b37fc1a850f1d2|title=Zimbabwe's Mugabe to be buried in 30 days, at new mausoleum|first=Andrew|last=Meldrum|work=Associated Press|date=13 September 2019|access-date=13 September 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://home.bt.com/news/world-news/mugabe-burial-to-be-delayed-for-30-days-nephew-says-11364394522465|title=Mugabe burial to delayed for 30 days, nephew says|author=British Telecommunications PLC|date=13 September 2019|access-date=13 September 2019}}</ref> The Mugabe family had initially rejected the government's burial plan and intended for him to be buried in Zvimba on either 16 or 17 September, a day later than the government's proposal.<ref name="crowdsoba" /><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/sep/12/robert-mugabe-family-reject-government-burial-plans-zimbabwe|title=Robert Mugabe's family rejects government burial plans|first1=Nyasha|last1=Chingono|first2=Jason|last2=Burke|work=The Guardian|date=12 September 2019|access-date=13 September 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.africanews.com/2019/09/13/govt-officials-family-fly-to-singapore-to-bring-mugabe-s-body-to-zimbabwe/|title=Family accepts to bury Mugabe at Zimbabwe Heroes' Acre|publisher=]|date=13 September 2019|access-date=13 September 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/09/robert-mugabe-buried-week-village-family-190912083607386.html|title=Robert Mugabe to be buried next week in his village: Family|work=]|date=12 September 2019|access-date=13 September 2019}}</ref>
! 1

| ]
On 14 September 2019, Mugabe's ],<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/sep/15/pomp-thin-crowds-mixed-feelings-as-robert-mugabe-laid-to-rest|title=Pomp, thin crowds and mixed feelings as Robert Mugabe is buried|first=Jason|last=Burke|work=The Guardian|date=15 September 2019|access-date=15 September 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.premier.org.uk/News/World/The-end-does-not-justify-the-means-say-Zimbabwean-bishops-as-Mugabe-s-funeral-takes-place|title='The end does not justify the means' say Zimbabwean bishops as Mugabe's funeral takes place|first=Cara|last=Bentley|publisher=Premier Christian Radio|date=14 September 2019|access-date=15 September 2019}}</ref> which was open to the public, was held at the ], with an aerial photo showing the 60,000 capacity stadium to be about a quarter full.<ref name="africaleadersfuneral">{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-49686131|title=Mugabe funeral: Leader's body kept in hometown after state funeral
| align="center" |ex officio
|work=BBC News|date=14 September 2019|access-date=14 September 2019}}</ref> The funeral was attended by leaders and former leaders of various African countries, among them were Mnangagwa, ] of Zambia, ] of Nigeria, ], ] and ] of Namibia, ] of ], ] of Kenya and ] of South Africa.<ref name="africaleadersfuneral" />
| align="center" | (date of election)

| align="center" | -
On 26 September 2019, Nick Mangwana stated that Mugabe would be buried in his home town of Kutama "to respect the wishes of families of deceased heroes".<ref>{{cite news |title=Mugabe to be buried in home town after final twist in row |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-49846340 |access-date=26 September 2019|work=BBC News |date=26 September 2019 }}</ref> The burial took place in the courtyard of his home in Kutama on 28 September 2019.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-49865776|title=Mugabe funeral: Zimbabwe ex-president laid to rest in Kutama|publisher=BBC News|date=28 September 2024|accessdate=5 June 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://edition.cnn.com/2019/09/28/africa/zimbabwe-robert-mugabe-buried-intl/index.html?no-st=1569797972|title=Zimbabwe's former President Robert Mugabe buried in his hometown|date=28 September 2019|last1=Chingono|first1=Mark|last2=Adebayo|first2=Bukola|access-date=30 September 2019|work=]}}</ref>
| align="center" | -

| align="center" | -
==Ideology==
|-
{{Quote box|width=25em|align=right|quote=Mugabeism as a form of populist reason is a multifaceted phenomenon requiring a multi-pronged approach to decipher its various meanings. At one level it represents pan-African memory and patriotism and at another level it manifests itself as a form of radical left-nationalism dedicated to resolving intractable national and agrarian questions. Yet, to others, it is nothing but a symbol of crisis, chaos and tyranny emanating from the exhaustion of nationalism.| salign=right |source=— Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni{{sfn|Ndlovu-Gatsheni|2009|p=1154}} }}
! 2

| ]
Mugabe embraced ] and ] during the 1960s.{{sfn|Ndlovu-Gatsheni|2015|p=1}} ] characterised "'''Mugabeism'''" as a ] movement that was "marked by ideological simplicity, emptiness, vagueness, imprecision, and multi-class character",{{sfn|Ndlovu-Gatsheni|2009|p=1141}} further noting that it was "a broad church".{{sfn|Ndlovu-Gatsheni|2009|p=1150}} He also characterised it as a form of "left-nationalism",{{sfn|Ndlovu-Gatsheni|2009|p=1142}} which consistently railed against ] and ].{{sfn|Ndlovu-Gatsheni|2009|p=1143}} He also argued that it was a form of ],{{sfn|Ndlovu-Gatsheni|2009|pp=1146–1147}} which was permeated by a strong "cult of victimisation" in which a binary view was propagated where Africa was a "victim" and the West was its "tormentor".{{sfn|Ndlovu-Gatsheni|2009|p=1148}} He suggested that it had been influenced by a wide range of ideologies, among them forms of ] like ] and ], as well as African nationalist ideologies like ], '']'', ], '']'', ], and African neo-traditionalism.{{sfn|Ndlovu-Gatsheni|2009|p=1141}} Mugabeism sought to deal with the problem of white settler racism by engaging in a project of anti-white racism that sought to deny white Zimbabweans citizenship by constantly referring to them as "''amabhunu''/Boers", thus enabling their removal from their land.{{sfn|Ndlovu-Gatsheni|2009|p=1151}}
| align="center" |ex officio

| align="center" | (date of election)
ZANU–PF claimed that it was influenced by ]; Onslow and Redding stated that in contrast to the Marxist emphasis on the urban ] as the main force of socio-economic change, Mugabe's party accorded that role to the rural peasantry.{{sfn|Onslow|Redding|2009|p=69}} As a result of this pro-rural view, they argued, Mugabe and the ZANU–PF demonstrated an anti-urban bias.{{sfn|Onslow|Redding|2009|p=69}} The English academic ] met Mugabe in 1962, later noting that "he struck me as not so much a doctrinaire Marxist but an old-fashioned African nationalist",{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|p=43}} while Tekere claimed that for Mugabe, Marxism-Leninism was "just rhetoric" with "no genuine vision or belief behind it".{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=49}} Carington noted that while Mugabe used Marxist rhetoric during the Lancaster House negotiations, "of course he didn't actually practise what he preached, did he? Once in office he became a capitalist".{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=65}} Mugabe has stated that "] has to be much more Christian than ]".{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|p=15}} The Zimbabwean scholar ] described Mugabe's policies as being "broadly-speaking" ].{{sfn|Shire|2007|p=33}}
| align="center" | -

| align="center" | -
During the 1980s, Mugabe indicated his desire to transform Zimbabwe from a multi-party state into a one-party state.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=29}} In 1984 he stated that "the one-party state is more in keeping with African tradition. It makes for greater unity for the people. It puts all opinions under one umbrella, whether these opinions are radical or reactionary".{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=29}} The political scientist Sue Onslow and historian Sean Redding stated that Zimbabwe's situation was "more complex than pure venial dictatorship", but that it was an "ideo-dictatorship".{{sfn|Onslow|Redding|2009|p=68}} Mugabe openly admired ] of ], praising him just before he was ] in December 1989.<ref></ref>
| align="center" | -

|-
Ndlovu-Gatsheni argued that since the mid-1990s, Mugabe's rhetoric and speeches came to be dominated by three main themes: an obsession with a perceived British threat to re-colonise Zimbabwe, to transfer the land controlled by white farmers to the black population, and issues of belonging and patriotism.{{sfn|Ndlovu-Gatsheni|2009|pp=1139–1140}} References to the Rhodesian Bush War featured prominently in his speeches.{{sfn|Tendi|2013|p=964}} The scholar of ] Abiodun Alao noted that Mugabe was determined to "take advantage of the past in order to secure a firm grip on national security".{{sfn|Alao|2012|p=xii}}
! 3

| ]
David Blair stated that "Mugabe's collected writings amount to nothing more than crude ], couched in the ponderous English of the mission school", remarking that they were heavily informed by ], ], and ], and displayed little originality.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=24}} Blair noted that Mugabe's writings called for "] in a peasant society, mixed with anti-colonial nationalism", and that in this he held "the same opinions as almost every other African guerrilla leader" of that period.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=24}} Mugabe argued that following the overthrow of European colonial regimes, Western countries continued to keep African countries in a state of subservience because they desired the continent's natural resources while preventing it from industrializing.{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=239}}
| align="center" | member of ]
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
|-
! 4
| ]
| align="center" | ZANU-PF
| align="center" | (date of appointment)
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
|-
! 5
| ]
| align="center" | Constitution
| align="center" | (date of constitutional amendment)
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
|-
! 6
| Knight Grand Cross in the ]
| align="center" | ]
| align="center" | 1994
| align="center" | "significant contributions" to relations between Britain and Zimbabwe<ref></ref>
| align="center" | 25 June 2008
| align="center" | "The abuse of human rights and abject disregard for the democratic process in Zimbabwe over which President Mugabe has presided"<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.fco.gov.uk/en/newsroom/latest-news/?view=PressR&id=3862607|title=Foreign and Commonwealth Office Statement}} See also {{citenews|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article4213800.ece|title=Queen strips Robert Mugabe of knighthood to mark 'revulsion' at violence|publisher=Times Online|accessdate=2008-06-25}} and {{citenews|url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/zimbabwe/2193924/Robert-Mugabe-to-be-stripped-of-knighthood.html|title=Robert Mugabe to be stripped of knighthood|publisher=]|accessdate=2008-06-25}} and {{citenews|author=Cowell, Alan|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/26/world/africa/26zimbabwe.html?hp |title=Queen Strips Mugabe of Knighthood|publisher=]|accessdate=2008-06-26}}</ref>
|-
! 7
| Honorary ] degree
| align="center" | University of Edinburgh
| align="center" | 1984
| align="center" | "... honoured not only for his extraordinary intellectual discipline and energy but for those qualities of statesmanship which made him one of the great figures of modern Africa.”<ref></ref>
| align="center" | June 2007
| align="center" | "The decision was taken after the university set up an academic panel to look at events between 1982 and 1984 in Matabeleland, where 20,000 people are thought to have died. The university has said that it knew nothing of the killings at the time of the award."<ref>{{citenews|publisher=]|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article1896047.ece|title=Mugabe stripped of degree by Edinburgh|accessdate=2007-07-04}} See also: {{citenews|publisher=]|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2007/jul/15/highereducation.internationaleducationnews|title=Edinburgh University revokes Mugabe degree|author=Paul Kelbie|date=15 July 2007|accessdate=2008-06-28}}</ref>
|-
! 8
| Honorary ] degree
| align="center" | University of Massachusetts
| align="center" | 1986
| align="center" | "Your gentle firmness in the face of anger, and your intellectual approach to matters which inflame the emotions of others, are hallmarks of your quiet integrity." ... "We salute you for your enduring and effective translation of a moral ethic into a strong, popular voice for freedom."<ref></ref>
| align="center" | June 2008
| align="center" | "Mugabe's corrupt, repressive regime" was deemed "antithetical to the values and beliefs of the University of Massachusetts." It is the first time the board has revoked an honorary degree.<ref>{{citenews|url=http://www.boston.com/news/local/breaking_news/2008/06/umass_revokes_m.html|title=UMass revokes Mugabe's honorary degree|publisher=The Boston Globe|accessdate=2008-06-28}}</ref>
|-
! 9
| Honorary ] degree
| align="center" | ]
| align="center" | 1990
| align="center" | "... for his achievements as the president of Zimbabwe and for establishing a strong cooperative effort between MSU and the University of Zimbabwe."<ref></ref>
| align="center" | 12 September 2008
| align="center" | "...a pattern of human rights abuses."<ref>{{citenews|url=http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080912/NEWS06/80912055|title=Michigan State revokes Mugabe's honorary degree|publisher=Detroit Free Press|accessdate=2008-09-12}}</ref>
|-
! 10
| Honorary ] degree
| align="center" | ]<ref name=offbio></ref>
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
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! 11
| Honorary ] degree
| align="center" | ]<ref name=offbio/>
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
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! 12
| Honorary ] degree
| align="center" | ]<ref name=offbio/>
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
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! 13
| Honorary ] degree
| align="center" | ]<ref name=offbio/>
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
|-
! 14
| Honorary ] degree
| align="center" | ]<ref name=offbio/>
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
|-
! 15
| Honorary ] degree
| align="center" | ]<ref name=offbio/>
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
|-
! 16
| Honorary ] degree
| align="center" | ]<ref name=offbio/>
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
|-
! 17
| Honorary D Civil Laws degree
| align="center" | ]<ref name=offbio/>
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
|-
! 18
| Honorary ] degree
| align="center" | ]<ref name=offbio/>
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
|-
! 19
| Honorary ] degree
| align="center" | ]<ref name=offbio/>
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | -
|-
! 20
| Africa Prize for Leadership for the Sustainable End of Hunger
| align="center" | US-based ]<ref name=offbio/>
| align="center" | 1988
| align="center" | Mr. Mugabe's agricultural programs "pointed the way not only for Zimbabwe but for the entire African continent."<ref></ref>
| align="center" | 8 August 2001
| align="center" | "The Hunger Project wishes to be on the record as deploring policies that have resulted in increased unemployment, poverty and hunger in Zimbabwe. This situation is inconsistent with the spirit of the Africa Prize for Leadership and Zimbabwe’s need to work for the sustainable end of hunger."<ref></ref>
|-
! 21
| Honorary ]
| align="center" | ]<ref name=offbio/>
| align="center" | 1996
| align="center" | "in recognition of his outstanding contribution to the fight for liberation and the overthrow of apartheid in Southern Africa, and his distinct leadership in the pursuit of freedom and human development throughout the African continent"
| align="center" | -
| align="center" | PRIME MINISTER Bruce Golding says Jamaica has no plan to strip President Robert Mugabe of the honorary award conferred on him in 1996, despite the ongoing political situation in Zimbabwe.
|-
|}


==Personal life== ==Personal life==
] in 2015]]
His first wife, Sally Hayfron, died in 1992 from a chronic kidney ailment.<ref></ref> Their only son, ] Nhamodzenyika Mugabe, born 27 September 1963, died on 26 December 1966 from cerebral malaria in Ghana where Sally was working while Mugabe was in prison. Sally Mugabe was a trained teacher who asserted her position as an independent political activist and campaigner<ref></ref> who was seen as Mugabe's closest friend and adviser, and some critics suggest that Mugabe began to misrule Zimbabwe after her death.<ref name="manfist" />


Mugabe measured a little over {{convert|1.70|m}},{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=25}} and exhibited what his biographer David Blair described as "curious, effeminate mannerisms".{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=25}} Mugabe took great care with his appearance, typically wearing a three-piece suit,{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=25}} and insisted that members of his cabinet dressed in a similar Anglophile fashion.{{sfn|Holland|2008|pp=109–110}} On taking power in 1980, Mugabe's hallmark was his wide-rimmed glasses,{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=14}} and he was also known for his ].{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=25}} Unlike a number of other African leaders, Mugabe did not seek to mythologise his childhood.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=17}} He avoided smoking and drinking,{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=23}} and—according to his first biographers, David Smith and Colin Simpson—had "enormous affection for children".{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|p=48}} During his early life he had an operation on his genitals which generated rumours that he had only one testicle or half a penis; such rumours were used by opponents to ridicule him and by supporters to bolster the claim that he was willing to make severe sacrifices for the revolutionary cause.{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=174}}
On 17 August 1996, Mugabe married his former secretary, ], 40 years his junior, with whom he already had two children; she first became pregnant by Mugabe while he was still married to his first wife, Sally, and while Grace was married to another man, ], now a diplomat in ].<ref></ref><ref></ref> Mugabe and Marufu were married in a ] wedding Mass at ], a Catholic mission school he previously attended. ] and Mugabe's two children by Grace were among the guests. The Mugabes have three children: Bona, Robert Peter Jr. (although Robert Mugabe's middle name is Gabriel) and Bellarmine Chatunga.


Mugabe spoke English fluently with an adopted English accent when pronouncing certain words.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=25}} He was also a fan of the English game of ], stating that "cricket civilizes people and creates good gentlemen".{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=25}} Blair noted that this cultivation of British traits suggested that Mugabe respected and perhaps admired Britain while at the same time resenting and loathing the country.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=26}} ] suggested that these Anglophile traits arose in early life, as Mugabe—who had long experienced the anti-black racism of Rhodesian society—"grasped Englishness as an antidote" to the "self-loathing" induced by societal racism.{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=211}}
As First Lady, Grace has been the subject of criticism for her lifestyle. When she was included in the 2002 ] travel sanctions on her husband, one EU parliamentarian was quoted as saying that the ban "will stop Grace Mugabe going on her shopping trips in the face of catastrophic poverty blighting the people of Zimbabwe."<ref>, ''BBC'', 22 July 2002</ref> The ''Daily Telegraph'' called her "notorious at home for her profligacy" in a 2003 coverage of a trip to Paris.<ref>, ''Telegraph'', 2 February 2003&lt;</ref> In Zimbabwe she is known sarcastically as "] Grace" or "The First Shopper" in reference to her numerous, lavish European shopping sprees. Recently Grace attacked a photographer while leaving her lavish hotel in Hong Kong, where their daughter, Bona, is a student at ].<ref name="bona-hku">{{cite web|url=http://www.scmp.com/portal/site/SCMP/menuitem.2af62ecb329d3d7733492d9253a0a0a0/?vgnextoid=14c3f5e39890f110VgnVCM100000360a0a0aRCRD |title=Mugabe's daughter studying at HKU under alias|first=Simon|last=Parry|work=South China Morning Post|accessdate=2009-01-27}}</ref> She ordered her bodyguard to hold him while she aimed punches at his face. Due to her excessive and finely cut rings the photographer gained severe cuts. <ref></ref><ref>[http://www.eastandard.net/archives/cl/hm_news/news.php?articleid=1143958026&date=10/9/2006 Ng’ang’a, Nixon, The Standard, Kenya, 10 September 2006</ref>


The academic Blessing-Miles Tendi stated that Mugabe was "an extremely complex figure, not easily captured by conventional categories".{{sfn|Tendi|2011|pp=307–308}} Blair described him as an "exceptionally complex personality".{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=26}} Smith and Simpson noted that the Zimbabwean leader had been "a serious young man, something of a loner, diligent, hard-working, a voracious reader who used every minute of his time, not much given to laughter: but above all, single-minded".{{sfn|Smith|Simpson|1981|pp=15–16}} Blair commented that Mugabe's "self-discipline, intelligence and appetite for hard work were remarkable",{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=25}} adding that his "prime characteristics" were "ruthlessness and resilience".{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=24}} Blair argued that Mugabe shared many character traits with Ian Smith, stating that they were both "proud, brave, stubborn, charismatic, deluded fantasists".{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=244}}
==In fiction==
The movie '']'' features a negative portrayal of a fictional African ruler with many parallels to Mugabe. The Mugabe government described the film as "anti-Zimbabwean" and a "CIA-campaign against Robert Mugabe".<ref>{{citenews|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/film/4216168.stm|publisher=BBC news|date=5 September 2005|title=Zimbabwe accuses CIA of film plot|accessdate=2008-06-28}}</ref>


{{Quote box|width=25em|align=left|quote=With his poor childhood development record, even minor criticism would be experienced as a wound by Mugabe. He is a person who cannot tolerate difference. Being profoundly doubtful about himself, he is oversensitive to the idea that he is not as good as everyone else. People are either with him or against him. Differences of opinion are provocative and hurtful to Mugabe, who may think that compromise reduces him.| salign=left |source=— Heidi Holland{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=52}} }}
== References ==
* ]-]. "." '']''. ] ]. (accessed ], ]).


Meredith described Mugabe as having a "soft-spoken demeanour,&nbsp;... broad intellect, and&nbsp;... articulate manner", all of which disguised his "hardened and single-minded ambition".{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=37}} Ndlovu-Gatsheni characterized him as "one of the most charismatic African leaders", highlighting that he was "very eloquent" and was able to make "fine speeches".{{sfn|Ndlovu-Gatsheni|2009|p=1142}} ], who briefly served as Mugabe's information minister before falling out with him, stated that the President could "express himself well, that is his great strength".{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=183}}
===Notes===
Tendi stated that Mugabe had a natural wittiness, but often hid this behind "an outwardly pensive and austere manner and his penchant for ceremony and tradition".{{sfn|Tendi|2013|pp=964–965}} Heidi Holland suggested that due to his "dysfunctional" upbringing, Mugabe had a "fragile self-image",{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=51}} describing him as "a man cut off from his feelings, devoid of ordinary warmth and humanity".{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=67}} According to her, Mugabe had a "marked emotional immaturity",{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=84}} and was homophobic,{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=95}} as well as racist and xenophobic.{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=83}}
{{reflist|2}}
=== Bibliography ===
*{{citebook|author=Chan, Stephen|title=Robert Mugabe: A life of power and violence|year=2003|publisher=IB Taurus|location=London|isbn=9781860648731}}
* East, R. and Thomas, Richard J. ''Profiles of People in Power: The World ́s Government Leaders'', 2003 ISBN 185743126X.
* Holland, Heidi. ''Dinner with Mugabe'', 2008. Penguin, South Africa. ISBN 9780143025573.
* Meredith, Martin : ''Mugabe: Power and Plunder in Zimbabwe'', 2003. Oxford ISBN 1586482130 (American ed.: ''Our votes, our guns''
*Mwakikagile, Godfrey. ''Nyerere and Africa: End of an Era'', 2006, Chapter Eight: "The Rhodesian Crisis: Tanzania's Role." New Africa Press, South Africa. ISBN 9780980253412.
* Nolan, Cathal J. ''Notable U.S. Ambassadors Since 1775: A Biographical Dictionary'', 1997 ISBN 0313291950
* The Times (SA) Online. . Published: 01 Mar 2008.
* Who's Who : African Nationalist Leaders in Rhodesia by Robert Cary and Diana Mitchell, 1977,1980,1994 Reprinted by Mardon Printers (PTY) Ltd, Harare.


According to Meredith, Mugabe presented himself as "articulate, thoughtful, and conciliatory" after his 1980 election victory.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=14}} Blair noted that at this period of his career, Mugabe displayed "genuine magnanimity and moral courage" despite his "intense personal reasons for feeling bitterness and hatred" toward the members of the former regime.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=17}} Following his dealing with Mugabe during the 1979 negotiations, Michael Pallister, head of the ], described Mugabe as having "a very sharp, sometimes rather aggressive, and unpleasant manner".{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=7}} The British diplomat Peter Longworth stated that in private, Mugabe was "very charming and very articulate and he's not devoid of humour. It's very difficult to relate the man you meet with the man ranting on television".{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=25}} Norman stated that "I always found him personable and honourable in his dealings. He also had a warm side to him which I saw quite clearly sometimes".{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=119}}
== External links ==

{{sisterlinks}}
], a journalist with '']'', argued that Mugabe had a "paranoidal personality", in that while he did not suffer from clinical ], he did behave in a paranoid fashion when placed under severe and sustained pressure.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=26}} Mugabe biographer Andrew Norman suggested that the leader may have suffered from ].{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=163}} Several Mugabe biographers have observed that he had an obsession with accruing power.{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=25|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=16}} According to Meredith, "power for Mugabe was not a means to an end, but the end itself."{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=233}} Conversely, Onslow and Redding suggested that Mugabe's craving for power stemmed from "ideological and personal reasons" and his belief in the illegitimacy of his political opposition.{{sfn|Onslow|Redding|2009|p=69}} ], a white politician who served in Mugabe's cabinet for many years, commented that "Mugabe isn't a flashy man driven by wealth but he does enjoy power. That's always been his motivation".{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=125}}
* , September 25, 2008

* (a commentary in defence of Mugabe)
===Marriages and children===
* (an anti-Mugabe commentary)
{{See also|Mugabe family}}
*
], in 1983]]
*

*
According to Holland, Mugabe's first wife, ], was Mugabe's "confidante and only real friend",{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=25}} being "one of the few people who could challenge Mugabe's ideas without offending him".{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=21}} Their only son, Michael Nhamodzenyika Mugabe, born 27 September 1963, died on 26 December 1966 from cerebral ] in Ghana where Sally was working while Mugabe was in prison. Sally Mugabe was a trained teacher who asserted her position as an independent political activist and campaigner.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2005/nov/01/past.politics |title=FO's fight over Mugabe's wife |work=The Guardian |date=1 November 2005 |access-date=14 June 2009 |first=Owen |last=Bowcott |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130829194743/http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2005/nov/01/past.politics |archive-date=29 August 2013 }}</ref>
*

*
Mugabe called on Zimbabwe's media to refer to his wife as "Amai" ("Mother of the Nation"),{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=96}} although many Zimbabweans resented the fact that she was a foreigner.{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=23}} She was appointed as the head of ZANU–PF's women's league,{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=96}} and was involved in a number of charitable operations, and was widely regarded as corrupt in these dealings.{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=24}} During Mugabe's premiership she suffered from renal failure, and initially had to travel to Britain for ] until Soames arranged for a dialysis machine to be sent to Zimbabwe.{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=76}}
*

*
While married to Hayfron, in 1987 Mugabe began an extra-marital affair with his secretary, ]; she was 41 years his junior and at the time was married to ]. In 1988 she bore Mugabe a daughter, Bona, and in 1990 a son, Robert.{{sfnm|1a1=Meredith|1y=2002|1p=96|2a1=Norman|2y=2008|2p=80}} The relationship was kept secret from the Zimbabwean public; Hayfron was aware of it.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=96}} According to her niece Patricia Bekele, with whom she was particularly close, Hayfron was not happy that Mugabe had an affair with Marufu but "she did what she used to tell me to do: 'Talk to your pillow if you have problems in your marriage. Never, ever, humiliate your husband.' Her motto was to carry on in gracious style".{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=22}} Hayfron died in 1992 from a chronic kidney ailment.<ref>{{cite news|agency=Associated Press |url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E0CE7DA1331F93BA15752C0A964958260 |title=The New York Times, "Obituaries: Sally Mugabe, Zimbabwe President's Wife, 60", 28 January 1992 |work=The New York Times |date=28 January 1992 |access-date=5 September 2010}}</ref>
* from the WGBH series, Ten O'clock News

*
Following Hayfron's death in 1992, Mugabe and Marufu were married in a large Catholic ceremony in August 1996.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=108}} As ], Grace gained a reputation for indulging her love of luxury, with a particular interest in shopping, clothes, and jewellery.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|pp=108–109}} These lavish shopping sprees led to her receiving the nickname "] Grace".<ref>{{cite news |url=http://nehandaradio.com/2014/11/16/gucci-grace-mugabe-worlds-first-female-dictator/ |title=Is 'Gucci' Grace Mugabe about to be the world's first female dictator? |work=Nehanda Radio |date=16 November 2014 |access-date=28 February 2015 |first=Ian |last=Birrell |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150402214602/http://nehandaradio.com/2014/11/16/gucci-grace-mugabe-worlds-first-female-dictator/ |archive-date=2 April 2015 }}</ref> She too developed a reputation for corruption.{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=109}} In 1997, ] gave birth to the couple's third child, ].<ref name="BBC">{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/744174.stm|title=Mugabe: Freedom fighter turned autocrat|work=BBC News|last=Winter|first=Joseph|access-date=1 July 2008|date=10 May 2000|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090123095912/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/744174.stm|archive-date=23 January 2009}}</ref> ] and his younger brother, Chatunga, are known for posting their lavish lifestyle on social media, which drew accusations from opposition politician ] that they were wasting Zimbabwean taxpayers' money.<ref name="veconomist">{{cite news|title=The offspring of Africa's strongmen are living it up|url=https://www.economist.com/news/middle-east-and-africa/21726097-scions-despots-post-pictures-their-lavish-lifestyles-social-media|newspaper=]|date=10 August 2017|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171017145651/https://www.economist.com/news/middle-east-and-africa/21726097-scions-despots-post-pictures-their-lavish-lifestyles-social-media|archive-date=17 October 2017}}</ref>
*

*
==Public image and legacy==
* Zimbabwe Metro
{{Quote box|width=25em|align=right|quote=The story of Robert Mugabe is a microcosm of what bedevils African democracy and economic recovery at the beginning of the 21st century. It is a classic case of a genuine hero—the guerrilla idol who conquered the country's former leader and his white supremacist regime—turning into a peevish autocrat whose standard response to those suggesting he steps down is to tell them to get lost. It is also the story of activists who try to make a better society but bear the indelible scars of the old system. Mugabe's political education came from the autocrat Ian Smith, who had learnt his formative lessons from imperious British colonisers.| salign=right |source=— Heidi Holland{{sfn|Holland|2008|pp=xiv–xv}} }}
*

By the twenty-first century, Mugabe was regarded as one of the world's most controversial political leaders.{{sfn|Ndlovu-Gatsheni|2009|p=1139}} According to '']'' journal, "depending on who you listen to...Mugabe is either one of the world's great tyrants or a fearless nationalist who has incurred the wrath of the West."{{sfn|Shire|2007|p=32}} He has been widely described as a "dictator", a "tyrant", and a "threat",{{sfn|Shire|2007|p=35}} and has been referred to as one of Africa's "most brutal" leaders.{{sfn|Alao|2012|p=xi}} At the same time he continued to be regarded as a hero in many ] countries and received a warm reception when travelling throughout Africa.{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=214}} For many in Southern Africa, he remained one of the "grand old men" of the African liberation movement.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=911}} Mugabe was known to have close ties with former ] ].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2016-10-07 |title=Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe In Surprise Visit To Malaysia |url=https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/zimbabwes-robert-mugabe-in-surprise-visit-to-malaysia-1471275 |access-date= |website=NDTV.com}}</ref>

According to Ndlovu-Gatsheni, within ZANU–PF, Mugabe was regarded as a "demi-god" who was feared and rarely challenged.{{sfn|Ndlovu-Gatsheni|2015|p=2}} Within the ZANU movement, a ] began to be developed around Mugabe during the Bush War and was consolidated after 1980.{{sfn|Ndlovu-Gatsheni|2015|p=13}} Mugabe had a considerable following within Zimbabwe,{{sfn|Tendi|2013|p=966}} with David Blair noting that "it would be wrong to imply that he lacked genuine popularity" in the country.{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=38}} Holland believed that the "great majority" of Zimbabwe's population supported him "enthusiastically" during the first twenty years of his regime.{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=192}} His strongholds of support were Zimbabwe's Shona-dominated regions of ], ], and ], while he remained far less popular in the non-Shona areas of Matabeleland and ],{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=38}} and among the Zimbabwean diaspora living abroad.{{sfn|Onslow|Redding|2009|p=71}}

At the time of his 1980 election victory, Mugabe was internationally acclaimed as a revolutionary hero who was embracing racial reconciliation,{{sfn|Meredith|2002|p=15}} and for the first decade of his governance he was widely regarded as "one of post-colonial Africa's most progressive leaders".{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=xx}} David Blair argued that while Mugabe did exhibit a "conciliatory phase" between March 1980 and February 1982, his rule was otherwise "dominated by a ruthless quest to crush his opponents and remain in office at whatever cost".{{sfn|Blair|2002|p=46}} In 2011, the scholar Blessing-Miles Tendi stated that "Mugabe is often presented in the international media as the epitome of the popular leader gone awry: the independence struggle hero who seemed initially a progressive egalitarian, but has gradually been corrupted through his attachment to power during a long and increasingly repressive spell in office."{{sfn|Tendi|2011|p=307}} Tendi argued that this was a misleading assessment, because Mugabe had displayed repressive tendencies from his early years in office, namely through the repression of ZAPU in Matabeleland.{{sfn|Tendi|2011|p=308}} Abiodun Alao concurred, suggesting that Mugabe's approach had not changed over the course of his leadership, but merely that international attention had intensified in the twenty-first century.{{sfn|Alao|2012|p=xi}}
For many Africans, Mugabe exposed the ] of Western countries; the latter had turned a blind eye to the massacre of over 20,000 black Ndebele civilians in the Gukarakundi but strongly censured the Zimbabwean government when a small number of white farmers were killed during the land seizures.{{sfn|Holland|2008|p=214}}

]
During the guerrilla war, Ian Smith referred to Mugabe as "the apostle of Satan".{{sfnm|1a1=Blair|1y=2002|1p=13|2a1=Meredith|2y=2002|2p=14|3a1=Norman|3y=2008|3p=162|4a1=Alao|4y=2012|4p=4}} George Shire expressed the view that there was "a strong racist animus" against Mugabe within Zimbabwe, and that this had typically been overlooked by Western media representations of the country.{{sfn|Shire|2007|p=33}} Mugabe himself was accused of racism; ], the Uganda-born ] in the United Kingdom, called Mugabe "the worst kind of racist dictator", for having "targeted the whites for their apparent riches".<ref>Sentamu, John, {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161128105246/https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2007/sep/16/comment.foreignpolicy |date=28 November 2016 }}, ''The Observer'' 16 September 2007. Retrieved 24 June 2008.</ref><ref name="ukanger">{{cite news|title=UK anger over Zimbabwe violence|work=BBC News|date=1 April 2000|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/698175.stm|access-date=4 January 2010|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090930103546/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/698175.stm|archive-date=30 September 2009}}</ref><ref name="mcgreal2007">{{cite news|first=Peter|last=McGreal|title=Corrupt, greedy and violent: Mugabe attacked by Catholic bishops after years of silence|work=The Guardian|date=2 April 2007|url=https://www.theguardian.com/zimbabwe/article/0,,2048032,00.html| location=London}}</ref><ref name="Bentley2007">{{cite news |first=Daniel |last=Bentley |title=Sentamu urges Mugabe Action |work=The Independent |date=17 September 2007 |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/sentamu-urges-mugabe-action-402591.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120906052233/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/sentamu-urges-mugabe-action-402591.html |archive-date=6 September 2012 |url-status=live |issn=0951-9467}}</ref> ] stated that Mugabe became "increasingly insecure, he's hitting out. One just wants to weep. It's very sad."{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=162}} South African President ] was also critical of Mugabe, referring to him as a politician who "despise the very people who put in power and think it's a privilege to be there for eternity".{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=162}}

Writing for the '']'', Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann claimed that there was "clear evidence that Mugabe was guilty of crimes against humanity".{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=909}} In 2009, ], then President of the ], and ], then executive director of the ], published a letter in '']'' stating that there was sufficient evidence of crimes against humanity to bring Mugabe to trial in front of the ].{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=917}} Australia and New Zealand had previously called for this in 2005,{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=917}} and a number of Zimbabwean NGOs did so in 2006.{{sfn|Howard-Hassmann|2010|p=917}}

A 2005 article from the New American titled "Democide in Zimbabwe" says that Mugabe reduced the population of Zimbabwe by millions in just a few years.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.thefreelibrary.com/Democide+in+Zimbabwe.-a0134782923|title=Democide in Zimbabwe|date=July 2005|website=The Free Library|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171201035822/https://www.thefreelibrary.com/Democide+in+Zimbabwe.-a0134782923|archive-date=1 December 2017|url-status=live|access-date=6 December 2017}}</ref>

In 1994, Mugabe received an honorary knighthood from the British state; this was stripped from him at the advice of the UK government in 2008.{{sfn|Norman|2008|p=174}} Mugabe held several honorary degrees and doctorates from international universities, awarded to him in the 1980s; at least three of these have since been revoked. In June 2007, he became the first international figure ever to be stripped of an honorary degree by a British university, when the ] withdrew the degree awarded to him in 1984.<ref name="timesonline.co.uk">{{cite news|work=The Times|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article1896047.ece|title=Mugabe stripped of degree by Edinburgh|access-date=4 July 2007|first1=Shirley|last1=English|first2=David|last2=Lister|date=7 June 2007|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081012204017/http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article1896047.ece|archive-date=12 October 2008}} See also: {{cite news|work=The New York Observer|url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2007/jul/15/highereducation.internationaleducationnews|title=Edinburgh University revokes Mugabe degree|author=Paul Kelbie|date=15 July 2007|access-date=28 June 2008|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130831180901/http://www.theguardian.com/uk/2007/jul/15/highereducation.internationaleducationnews|archive-date=31 August 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/edinburgh_and_east/6724271.stm|title=Mugabe stripped of degree honour|publisher=BBC|date=6 June 2007|access-date=4 January 2010|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070912175134/http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/edinburgh_and_east/6724271.stm|archive-date=12 September 2007}} See also: {{cite news |url=http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/06/13/mugabe-loses-honorary-degree-from-umass/?hp |title=Mugabe loses Honorary Degree from UMass|work=The New York Times|access-date=28 June 2008|first=Mike|last=Nizza|date=13 June 2008|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121002081032/http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/06/13/mugabe-loses-honorary-degree-from-umass/?hp|archive-date=2 October 2012}}</ref> On 12 June 2008, the ] Board of Trustees voted to revoke the law degree awarded to Mugabe in 1986, the first time one of its honorary degrees has been revoked.<ref name="boston.com">{{cite news|url=http://www.boston.com/news/local/breaking_news/2008/06/umass_revokes_m.html|title=UMass revokes Mugabe's honorary degree|work=]|access-date=28 June 2008|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090220192434/http://www.boston.com/news/local/breaking_news/2008/06/umass_revokes_m.html|archive-date=20 February 2009}}</ref> In the month after being deposed, but before he died, many of the public references to Mugabe – street names, for example – had been removed from public places.<ref>{{cite web |first=Murdoch |last=Stephens |title=What's left of the Mugabe way? |date=2018-01-31 |url=https://pantograph-punch.com/posts/mugabe-public-space |access-date=2023-09-01 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230901233810/https://pantograph-punch.com/posts/mugabe-public-space |archive-date=2023-09-01 |location=New Zealand |website=Pantograph Punch |url-status=live}}</ref>

==See also==
* '']'' (2009 documentary)
* '']'' (2010 documentary)
* '']'' (2005 film featuring a fictional African president based on Mugabe)
* ]

==References==
===Footnotes===
{{Reflist}}

===Bibliography===
{{Refbegin|30em|indent=yes}}
* {{cite book |last=Alao |first=Abiodun |year=2012 |title=Mugabe and the Politics of Security in Zimbabwe |location=Montreal and Kingston |publisher=McGill-Queen's University Press |isbn=978-0-7735-4044-6 }}
* {{cite book |last=Blair |first=David |year=2002 |title=Degrees in Violence: Robert Mugabe and the Struggle for Power in Zimbabwe |location=London and New York |publisher=Continuum |isbn=978-0-8264-5974-9 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/degreesinviolenc0000blai }}
* {{cite journal |last1=Chigora |first1=Percyslage |last2=Guzura |first2=Tobias |title=The Politics of the Government of National Unity (GNU) and Power Sharing in Zimbabwe: Challenges and Prospects for Democracy |journal=African Journal of History and Culture |volume=3 |number=2 |pages=20–26 |year=2011 }}
* {{cite journal |last=Gallagher |first=Julia |title=The Battle for Zimbabwe in 2013: From Polarisation to Ambivalence |journal=Journal of Modern African Studies |year=2015 |volume=53 |number=1 |pages=27–49 |doi=10.1017/S0022278X14000640 |s2cid=154398977 |url=https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/26245/1/gallagher-the-battle-for-zimbabwe-in-2013.pdf |issn = 0022-278X}}
* {{cite book |last=Holland |first=Heidi |year=2008 |title=Dinner with Mugabe: The Untold Story of a Freedom Fighter Who Became a Tyrant |location=London |publisher=Penguin |isbn=978-0-14-104079-0 }}
* {{cite journal |last=Howard-Hassmann |first=Rhoda E. |title=Mugabe's Zimbabwe, 2000–2009: Massive Human Rights Violations and the Failure to Protect |journal=Human Rights Quarterly |volume=32 |number=4 |year=2010 |pages=898–920 |doi=10.1353/hrq.2010.0030 |s2cid=143046672 }}
* {{cite book |last=Meredith |first=Martin |year=2002 |title=Our Votes, Our Guns: Robert Mugabe and the Tragedy of Zimbabwe |location=New York |publisher=Public Affairs |isbn=978-1-58648-186-5 }}
* {{cite journal |last=Ndlovu-Gatsheni |first=Sabelo J. |year=2009 |title=Making Sense of Mugabeism in Local and Global Politics: 'So Blair, keep your England and let me keep my Zimbabwe' |journal=Third World Quarterly |volume=30 |number=6 |pages=1139–1158 |doi=10.1080/01436590903037424 |s2cid=143775424 }}
* {{cite encyclopedia |last=Ndlovu-Gatsheni |first=Sabelo J. |author-mask={{long dash}} |contribution=Introduction: Mugabeism and Entanglements of History, Politics, and Power in the Making of Zimbabwe |title=Mugabeism? History, Politics, and Power in Zimbabwe |editor=Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni |year=2015 |pages=1–25 |location=New York |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |isbn=978-1-137-54344-8 }}
* {{cite book |last=Norman |first=Andrew |year=2008 |title=Mugabe: Teacher, Revolutionary, Tyrant |location=Stroud |publisher=The History Press |isbn=978-1-86227-491-4 }}
* {{cite journal |last1=Onslow |first1=Sue |last2=Redding |first2=Sean |year=2009 |title=Wasted Riches: Robert Mugabe and the Desolation of Zimbabwe |journal=Georgetown Journal of International Affairs |volume=10 |number=1 |pages=63–72 |jstor=43134191 }}
* {{cite journal |last=Shire |first=George |year=2007 |title=The Case for Robert Mugabe: Sinner or Sinned Against? |journal=The Black Scholar |volume=37 |number=1 |pages=32–35 |jstor=41069872 |doi=10.1080/00064246.2007.11413379 |s2cid=147587061 }}
* {{cite journal |last=Sithole |first=Masipula |year=2001 |title=Fighting Authoritarianism in Zimbabwe |journal=Journal of Democracy |volume=2 |number=1 |pages=160–169 |doi=10.1353/jod.2001.0015 |s2cid=144918292 }}
* {{cite book |last1=Smith |first1=David |last2=Simpson |first2=Colin |year=1981 |title=Mugabe |location=London |publisher=Sphere Books |isbn=978-0-7221-7868-3 }}
* {{cite journal |last=Tendi |first=Blessing-Miles |year=2011 |title=Robert Mugabe and Toxicity: History and Context Matter |journal=Representation |volume=47 |number=3 |pages=307–318 |doi=10.1080/00344893.2011.596439 |s2cid=154541752 }}
* {{cite journal |last=Tendi |first=Blessing-Miles |author-mask={{long dash}} |year=2013 |title=Robert Mugabe's 2013 Presidential Election Campaign |journal=Journal of Southern African Studies |volume=39 |number=4 |pages=963–970 |doi=10.1080/03057070.2013.858537 |s2cid=145432632 }}
{{Refend}}

==Further reading==
{{Sister project links}}
{{Refbegin}}
* {{cite book |last=Bourne |first=Richard |year=2011 |title=Catastrophe: What Went Wrong in Zimbabwe? |publisher=Zed |isbn=978-1-84813-521-5}}
* {{cite book |last=Chan |first=Stephen |year=2002 |title=Robert Mugabe: A Life of Power and Violence |publisher=I. B. Tauris |isbn=978-1-86064-873-1}}
* {{cite book |last=Godwin |first=Peter |year=2011 |title=The Fear: The Last Days of Robert Mugabe |location=London |publisher=Picador |isbn=978-0-330-50777-6}}
* {{Cite journal |last1=Moyo |last2=Yeros |first2=P |title=The Radicalised State: Zimbabwe's Interrupted Revolution |journal=Review of African Political Economy |volume=34 |number=111 |pages=103–121 |year=2007 |jstor=20406365 |doi=10.1080/03056240701340431 |s2cid=153894802 |hdl=10.1080/03056240701340431 |hdl-access=free }}
* {{cite journal |last=Raftopoulos |first=Brian |title=The Zimbabwean crisis and the challenges of the Left |journal=Journal of Southern African Studies |volume=32 |number=2 |year=2006 |pages=203–219 |jstor=25065088 |doi=10.1080/03057070600655988 |bibcode=2006JSAfS..32..203R |s2cid=59371826 }}
{{Refend}}

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Latest revision as of 04:56, 7 January 2025

President of Zimbabwe from 1987 to 2017 For his son, see Robert Mugabe Jr. For the Ugandan military officer, see Robert Freeman Mugabe. "Mugabe" redirects here. For other uses, see Mugabe (disambiguation).

Robert Mugabe
Photograph of Robert MugabeMugabe in 1979
2nd President of Zimbabwe
In office
31 December 1987 – 21 November 2017
Prime MinisterMorgan Tsvangirai (2009–2013)
Vice President See list
Preceded byCanaan Banana
Succeeded byEmmerson Mnangagwa
1st Prime Minister of Zimbabwe
In office
18 April 1980 – 31 December 1987
PresidentCanaan Banana
DeputySimon Muzenda
Preceded byAbel Muzorewa (Zimbabwe Rhodesia)
Succeeded byMorgan Tsvangirai (2009)
Leader and First Secretary of ZANU–PF
ZANU (1975–1987)
In office
18 March 1975 – 19 November 2017
Chairman
Second Secretary
  • Joseph Msika
  • John Nkomo
  • Joice Mujuru
  • Emmerson Mnangagwa
Preceded byHerbert Chitepo
Succeeded byEmmerson Mnangagwa
13th Chairperson of the African Union
In office
30 January 2015 – 30 January 2016
LeaderNkosazana Dlamini-Zuma
Preceded byMohamed Ould Abdel Aziz
Succeeded byIdriss Déby
10th Secretary-General of the Non-Aligned Movement
In office
6 September 1986 – 7 September 1989
Preceded byZail Singh
Succeeded byJanez Drnovšek
Personal details
BornRobert Gabriel Mugabe
(1924-02-21)21 February 1924
Kutama, Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe)
Died6 September 2019(2019-09-06) (aged 95)
Gleneagles Hospital, Singapore
Resting placeKutama, Zimbabwe
Political party
Spouses
Sally Hayfron ​ ​(m. 1961; died 1992)
Grace Marufu ​(m. 1996)
Children4, including Bona and Robert Jr
Alma mater
Signature

Robert Gabriel Mugabe (/mʊˈɡɑːbi/; Shona: [muɡaɓe]; 21 February 1924 – 6 September 2019) was a Zimbabwean revolutionary and politician who served as Prime Minister of Zimbabwe from 1980 to 1987 and then as President from 1987 to 2017. He served as Leader of the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU) from 1975 to 1980 and led its successor political party, the ZANU – Patriotic Front (ZANU–PF), from 1980 to 2017. Ideologically an African nationalist, during the 1970s and 1980s he identified as a Marxist–Leninist, and as a socialist during the 1990s and the remainder of his career.

Mugabe was born to a poor Shona family in Kutama, Southern Rhodesia. Educated at Kutama College and the University of Fort Hare in South Africa, he then worked as a schoolteacher in Southern Rhodesia, Northern Rhodesia, and Ghana. Angered by white minority rule of his homeland within the British Empire, Mugabe embraced Marxism and joined African nationalists calling for an independent state controlled by the black majority. After making antigovernmental comments, he was convicted of sedition and imprisoned between 1964 and 1974. On release, he fled to Mozambique, established his leadership of ZANU, and oversaw its role in the Rhodesian Bush War, fighting Ian Smith's predominantly white government. He reluctantly participated in peace talks in the United Kingdom that resulted in the Lancaster House Agreement, putting an end to the war. In the 1980 general election, Mugabe led ZANU-PF to victory, becoming Prime Minister when the country, now renamed Zimbabwe, gained internationally recognized independence later that year. Mugabe's administration expanded healthcare and education and—despite his professed desire for a socialist society—adhered largely to mainstream economic policies.

Mugabe's calls for racial reconciliation failed to stem growing white emigration, while relations with Joshua Nkomo's Zimbabwe African People's Union (ZAPU) also deteriorated. In the Gukurahundi of 1982–1987, Mugabe's Fifth Brigade crushed ZAPU-linked opposition in Matabeleland in a campaign that killed at least 20,000 people, mostly Ndebele civilians. Internationally, he sent troops into the Second Congo War and chaired the Non-Aligned Movement (1986–1989), the Organisation of African Unity (1997–1998), and the African Union (2015–2016). Pursuing decolonisation, Mugabe emphasized the redistribution of land controlled by white farmers to landless blacks, initially on a "willing seller–willing buyer" basis. Frustrated at the slow rate of redistribution, from 2000 he encouraged black Zimbabweans to violently seize white-owned farms. Food production was severely impacted, leading to famine, economic decline, and foreign sanctions. Opposition to Mugabe grew, but he was re-elected in 2002, 2008, and 2013 through campaigns dominated by violence, electoral fraud, and nationalistic appeals to his rural Shona voter base. In 2017, members of his party ousted him in a coup, replacing him with former vice president Emmerson Mnangagwa.

Having dominated Zimbabwe's politics for nearly four decades, Mugabe was a controversial figure. He was praised as a revolutionary hero of the African liberation struggle who helped free Zimbabwe from British colonialism, imperialism, and white minority rule. Critics accused Mugabe of being a dictator responsible for economic mismanagement and widespread corruption and human rights abuses, including anti-white racism, crimes against humanity, and genocide.

Early life

Childhood: 1924–1945

Robert Gabriel Mugabe was born on 21 February 1924 at the Kutama Mission village in Southern Rhodesia's Zvimba District. His father, Gabriel Matibiri, was a carpenter while his mother Bona was a Christian catechist for the village children. They had been trained in their professions by the Jesuits, the Roman Catholic religious order which had established the mission. Bona and Gabriel had six children: Miteri (Michael), Raphael, Robert, Dhonandhe (Donald), Sabina, and Bridgette. They belonged to the Zezuru clan, one of the smallest branches of the Shona tribe. Mugabe's paternal grandfather was Chief Constantine Karigamombe, alias "Matibiri", a powerful figure who served King Lobengula in the 19th century. Through his father, he claimed membership of the chieftaincy family that has provided the hereditary rulers of Zvimba for generations.

The Jesuits were strict disciplinarians and under their influence Mugabe developed an intense self-discipline, while also becoming a devout Catholic. Mugabe excelled at school, where he was a secretive and solitary child, preferring to read, rather than playing sports or socialising with other children. He was taunted by many of the other children, who regarded him as a coward and a mother's boy.

In about 1930 Gabriel had an argument with one of the Jesuits, and as a result the Mugabe family was expelled from the mission village by its French leader, Father Jean-Baptiste Loubière. The family settled in a village about 11 kilometres (7 miles) away; the children were permitted to remain at the mission primary school, living with relatives in Kutama during term-time and returning to their parental home on weekends. Around the same time, Robert's older brother Raphael died, likely of diarrhoea. In early 1934, Robert's other older brother, Michael, also died, after consuming poisoned maize. Later that year, Gabriel left his family in search of employment in Bulawayo. He subsequently abandoned Bona and their six children and established a relationship with another woman, with whom he had three further offspring.

Loubière died shortly after and was replaced by an Irishman, Father Jerome O'Hea, who welcomed the return of the Mugabe family to Kutama. In contrast to the racism that permeated Southern Rhodesian society, under O'Hea's leadership the Kutama Mission preached an ethos of racial equality. O'Hea nurtured the young Mugabe; shortly before his death in 1970 he described the latter as having "an exceptional mind and an exceptional heart". As well as helping provide Mugabe with a Christian education, O'Hea taught him about the Irish War of Independence, in which Irish revolutionaries had overthrown the British imperial regime. After completing six years of elementary education, in 1941 Mugabe was offered a place on a teacher training course at Kutama College. Mugabe's mother could not afford the tuition fees, which were paid in part by his grandfather and in part by O'Hea. As part of this education, Mugabe began teaching at his old school, earning £2 per month, which he used to support his family. In 1944, Gabriel returned to Kutama with his three new children, but died shortly after, leaving Robert to take financial responsibility for both his three siblings and three half-siblings. Having attained a teaching diploma, Mugabe left Kutama in 1945.

University education and teaching career: 1945–1960

During the following years, Mugabe taught at various schools around Southern Rhodesia, among them the Dadaya Mission school in Shabani. There is no evidence that Mugabe was involved in political activity at the time, and he did not participate in the country's 1948 general strike. In 1949 he won a scholarship to study at the University of Fort Hare in South Africa's Eastern Cape. There he joined the African National Congress youth league (ANCYL) and attended African nationalist meetings, where he met a number of Jewish South African communists who introduced him to Marxist ideas. He later related that despite this exposure to Marxism, his biggest influence at the time were the actions of Mahatma Gandhi during the Indian independence movement. In 1952, he left the university with a Bachelor of Arts degree in history and English literature. In later years he described his time at Fort Hare as the "turning point" in his life.

Mugabe was inspired by the example set by Ghana's Kwame Nkrumah.

Mugabe returned to Southern Rhodesia in 1952, by which time—he later related— he was "completely hostile to the system". Here, his first job was as a teacher at the Driefontein Roman Catholic Mission School near Umvuma. In 1953 he relocated to the Highfield Government School in Salisbury's Harari township and in 1954 to the Mambo Township Government School in Gwelo. Meanwhile, he gained a Bachelor of Education degree by correspondence from the University of South Africa, and ordered a number of Marxist tracts—among them Karl Marx's Capital and Friedrich Engels' The Condition of the Working Class in England—from a London mail-order company. Despite his growing interest in politics, he was not active in any political movement. He joined a number of inter-racial groups, such as the Capricorn Africa Society, through which he mixed with both black and white Rhodesians. Guy Clutton-Brock, who knew Mugabe through this group, later noted that he was "an extraordinary young man" who could be "a bit of a cold fish at times" but "could talk about Elvis Presley or Bing Crosby as easily as politics".

From 1955 to 1958, Mugabe lived in neighbouring Northern Rhodesia, where he worked at Chalimbana Teacher Training College in Lusaka. There he continued his education by working on a second degree by correspondence, this time a Bachelor of Administration from the University of London International Programmes through distance and learning. In Northern Rhodesia, he was taken in for a time by the family of Emmerson Mnangagwa, whom Mugabe inspired to join the liberation movement and who would later go on to be President of Zimbabwe. In 1958, Mugabe moved to Ghana to work at St Mary's Teacher Training College in Takoradi. He taught at Apowa Secondary School, also at Takoradi, after obtaining his local certification at Achimota College (1958–1960), where he met his first wife, Sally Hayfron. According to Mugabe, "I went as an adventurist. I wanted to see what it would be like in an independent African state". Ghana had been the first African state to gain independence from European colonial powers and under the leadership of Kwame Nkrumah underwent a range of African nationalist reforms; Mugabe reveled in this environment. In tandem with his teaching, Mugabe attended the Kwame Nkrumah Ideological Institute in Winneba. Mugabe later claimed that it was in Ghana that he finally embraced Marxism. He also began a relationship there with Hayfron who worked at the college and shared his political interests.

Revolutionary activity

Early political career: 1960–1963

While Mugabe was teaching abroad, an anti-colonialist African nationalist movement was established in Southern Rhodesia. It was first led by Joshua Nkomo's Southern Rhodesia African National Congress, founded in September 1957 and then banned by the colonial government in February 1959. SRANC was replaced by the more radically oriented National Democratic Party (NDP), founded in January 1960. In May 1960, Mugabe returned to Southern Rhodesia, bringing Hayfron with him. The pair had planned for their visit to be short, however Mugabe's friend, the African nationalist Leopold Takawira, urged them to stay.

Joshua Nkomo became one of the leading figures of resistance to white minority rule in Southern Rhodesia.

In July 1960, Takawira and two other NDP officials were arrested; in protest, Mugabe joined a demonstration of 7,000 people who planned to march from Highfield to the Prime Minister's office in Salisbury. The demonstration was stopped by riot police outside Stoddart Hall in Harare township. By midday the next day, the crowd had grown to 40,000 and a makeshift platform had been erected for speakers. Having become a much-respected figure through his profession, his possession of three degrees, and his travels abroad, Mugabe was among those invited to speak to the crowd. Following this event, Mugabe decided to devote himself full-time to activism, resigning his teaching post in Ghana (after having served two years of the four-year teaching contract). He chaired the first NDP congress, held in October 1960, assisted by Chitepo on the procedural aspects. Mugabe was elected the party's publicity secretary. Mugabe consciously injected emotionalism into the NDP's African nationalism, hoping to broaden its support among the wider population by appealing to traditional cultural values. He helped to form the NDP Youth Wing and encouraged the incorporation of ancestral prayers, traditional costume, and female ululation into its meetings. In February 1961 he married Hayfron in a Roman Catholic ceremony conducted in Salisbury; she had converted to Catholicism to make this possible.

The British government held a Salisbury conference in 1961 to determine Southern Rhodesia's future. Nkomo led an NDP delegation, which hoped that the British would support the creation of an independent state governed by the black majority. Representatives of the country's white minority—who then controlled Southern Rhodesia's government—were opposed to this, promoting continued white minority rule. Following negotiations, Nkomo agreed to a proposal which would allow the black population representation through 15 of the 65 seats in the country's parliament. Mugabe and others in the NDP were furious at Nkomo's compromise. Following the conference, Southern Rhodesia's African nationalist movement fell into disarray. Mugabe spoke at a number of NDP rallies before the party was banned by the government in December 1961. Many of its members re-grouped as the Zimbabwe African People's Union (ZAPU) several days later, with Mugabe appointed as ZAPU's publicity secretary and general secretary.

Racial violence was growing in the country, with aggrieved black Africans targeting the white community. Mugabe deemed such conflict a necessary tactic in the overthrow of British colonial dominance and white minority rule. This contrasted with Nkomo's view that African nationalists should focus on international diplomacy to encourage the British government to grant their demands. Nine months after it had been founded, ZAPU was also banned by the government, and in September 1962 Mugabe and other senior party officials were arrested and restricted to their home districts for three months. Both Mugabe and his wife were in trouble with the law; he had been charged with making subversive statements in a public speech and awarded bail before his trial. Hayfron had been sentenced to two years imprisonment—suspended for 15 months—for a speech in which she declared that the British Queen Elizabeth II "can go to hell".

Europeans must realise that unless the legitimate demands of African nationalism are recognised, then racial conflict is inevitable.

— Mugabe, early 1960s

The rise of African nationalism generated a white backlash in Southern Rhodesia, with the right-wing Rhodesian Front winning the December 1962 general election. The new government sought to preserve white minority rule by tightening security and establishing full independence from the United Kingdom. Mugabe met with colleagues at his house in Salisbury's Highbury district, where he argued that as political demonstrations were simply being banned, it was time to move towards armed resistance. Both he and others rejected Nkomo's proposal that they establish a government-in-exile in Dar es Salaam. He and Hayfron skipped bail to attend a ZAPU meeting in the Tanganyikan city. There, the party leadership met Tanganyika's president, Julius Nyerere, who also dismissed the idea of a government-in-exile and urged ZAPU to organise their resistance to white minority rule within Southern Rhodesia itself.

In August, Hayfron gave birth to Mugabe's son, whom they named Nhamodzenyika, a Shona term meaning "suffering country". Mugabe insisted that she take their son back to Ghana, while he decided to return to Southern Rhodesia. There, African nationalists opposed to Nkomo's leadership had established a new party, the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU), in August; Ndabaningi Sithole became the group's president, while appointing Mugabe to be the group's secretary-general in absentia. Nkomo responded by forming his own group, the People's Caretaker Council, which was widely referred to as "ZAPU" after its predecessor. ZAPU and ZANU violently opposed one another and soon gang warfare broke out between their rival memberships.

Imprisonment: 1963–1975

Mugabe was arrested on his return to Southern Rhodesia in December 1963. His trial lasted from January to March 1964, during which he refused to retract the subversive statements that he had publicly made. In March 1964 he was sentenced to 21 months' imprisonment. Mugabe was first imprisoned at Salisbury Maximum Security Prison, before being moved to the Wha Wha detention centre and then the Sikombela detention centre in Que Que. At the latter, he organised study classes for the inmates, teaching them basic literacy, maths, and English. Sympathetic black warders smuggled messages from Mugabe and other members of the ZANU executive committee to activists outside the prison. At the executive's bidding, ZANU activist Herbert Chitepo had organised a small guerrilla force in Lusaka. In April 1966 the group carried out a failed attempt to destroy power pylons at Sinoia, and shortly after attacked a white-owned farm near Hartley, killing its inhabitants. The government responded by returning the members of the ZANU executive, including Mugabe, to Salisbury Prison in 1966. There, forty prisoners were divided among four communal cells, with many sleeping on the concrete floor due to overcrowding; Mugabe shared his cell with Sithole, Enos Nkala, and Edgar Tekere. He remained there for eight years, devoting his time to reading and studying. During this period, he gained several further degrees from the University of London: a masters in economics, a bachelor of administration, and two law degrees.

While Mugabe was imprisoned, Ian Smith became leader of Rhodesia.

While imprisoned, Mugabe learned that his son had died of encephalitis at the age of three. Mugabe was grief-stricken and requested a leave of absence to visit his wife in Ghana. He never forgave the prison authorities for refusing this request. Claims have also circulated among those who knew him at the time that Mugabe was subjected to both physical and mental torture during his imprisonment. According to Father Emmanuel Ribeiro, who was Mugabe's priest during his imprisonment, Mugabe got through the experience "partly through the strength of his spirituality" but also because his "real strength was study and helping others to learn".

While Mugabe was imprisoned, in August 1964, the Rhodesian Front government—now under the leadership of Ian Smith—banned ZANU and ZAPU and arrested all remaining leaders of the country's African nationalist movement. Smith's government made a unilateral declaration of independence from the United Kingdom in November 1965, renaming Southern Rhodesia as Rhodesia; the UK refused to recognize the legitimacy of this and imposed economic sanctions on the country.

In 1972, the African nationalists launched a guerrilla war against Smith's government. Among the revolutionaries, it was known as the "Second Chimurenga". Paramilitary groups based themselves in neighboring Tanzania and Zambia; many of their fighters were inadequately armed and trained. ZANU's military wing, the Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army (ZANLA), consisted largely of Shona. It was based in neighboring Mozambique and gained funds from the People's Republic of China. ZAPU's military wing, the Zimbabwe People's Revolutionary Army (ZIPRA), was instead funded by the Soviet Union, was based in Zambia, and consisted largely of Ndebele.

Mugabe and other senior ZANU members had growing doubts about Sithole's leadership, deeming him increasingly irritable and irrational. In October 1968 Sithole had tried to smuggle a message out of the prison commanding ZANU activists to assassinate Smith. His plan was discovered, and he was put on trial in January 1969; desperate to avoid a death sentence, he declared that he renounced violence and his previous ideological commitments. Mugabe denounced Sithole's "treachery" in rejecting ZANU's cause, and the executive removed him as ZANU President in a vote of no confidence, selecting Mugabe as his successor. In November 1974, the ZANU executive voted to suspend Sithole's membership of the organization.

Fearing that the guerrilla war would spread south, the South African government pressured Rhodesia to advance the process of détente with the politically moderate black governments of Zambia and Tanzania. As part of these negotiations, Smith's government agreed to release a number of black revolutionaries who had been indefinitely detained. After almost eleven years of imprisonment, Mugabe was released in November 1974. He moved in with his sister Sabina at her home in Highfield township. He was intent on joining the ZANU forces and taking part in the guerrilla war, recognizing that to secure dominance of ZANU he would have to take command of ZANLA. This was complicated by internal violence within the paramilitary group, predominately between members of the Manyika and Karange groups of Shona.

Guerrilla war: 1975–1979

The flag of the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU)

In March 1975, Mugabe resolved to leave Rhodesia for Mozambique, ambitious to take control of ZANU's guerrilla campaign. After his friend Maurice Nyagumbo was arrested, he feared the same fate but was hidden from the authorities by Ribeiro. Ribeiro and a sympathetic nun then assisted him and Edgar Tekere in smuggling themselves into Mozambique. Mugabe remained in exile there for two years. Mozambique's Marxist President Samora Machel was sceptical of Mugabe's leadership abilities and was unsure whether to recognise him as ZANU's legitimate leader. Machel gave him a house in Quelimane and kept him under partial house arrest, with Mugabe requiring permission to travel. It would be almost a year before Machel accepted Mugabe's leadership of ZANU.

Mugabe travelled to various ZANLA camps in Mozambique to build support among its officers. By mid-1976, he had secured the allegiance of ZANLA's military commanders and established himself as the most prominent guerrilla leader battling Smith's regime. In August 1977, he was officially declared ZANU President at a meeting of the party's central committee held in Chimoio. During the war, Mugabe remained suspicious of many of ZANLA's commanders and had a number of them imprisoned. In 1977 he imprisoned his former second-in-command, Wilfred Mhanda, for suspected disloyalty. After Josiah Tongogara was killed in a car accident in 1979, there were suggestions made that Mugabe may have had some involvement in it; these rumours were never substantiated.

Mugabe remained aloof from the day-to-day military operations of ZANLA, which he entrusted to Tongogara. In January 1976, ZANLA launched its first major infiltration from Mozambique, with nearly 1000 guerrillas crossing the border to attack white-owned farms and stores. In response, Smith's government enlisted all men under the age of 35, expanding the Rhodesian army by 50%. ZANLA's attacks forced large numbers of white landowners to abandon their farms; their now-unemployed black workers joined ZANLA by the thousands. By 1979, ZANLA were in a position to attack a number of Rhodesian cities. Over the course of the war, at least 30,000 people were killed. As a proportion of their wider population, the whites had higher number of fatalities, and by the latter part of the decade the guerrillas were winning.

Mugabe in a meeting with Romanian communist leader Nicolae Ceaușescu in 1976

Mugabe focused on the propaganda war, making regular speeches and radio broadcasts. In these, he presented himself as a Marxist-Leninist, speaking warmly of Marxist-Leninist revolutionaries like Vladimir Lenin, Joseph Stalin, and Fidel Castro. Despite his Marxist views, Mugabe's meetings with Soviet representatives were unproductive, for they insisted on Nkomo's leadership of the revolutionary struggle. His relationship with the People's Republic of China was far warmer, as the Chinese Maoist government supplied ZANLA with armaments without any conditions. He also sought support from Western nations, visiting Western embassies in Mozambique, and travelled to both Western states like Italy and Switzerland and Marxist-governed states like the Soviet Union, China, North Korea, Vietnam, and Cuba.

Mugabe called for the overthrow of Rhodesia's predominately white government, the execution of Smith and his "criminal gang", the expropriation of white-owned land, and the transformation of Rhodesia into a one-party Marxist state. He repeatedly called for violence against the country's white minority, referring to white Rhodesians as "blood-sucking exploiters", "sadistic killers", and "hard-core racists". In one typical example, taken from a 1978 radio address, Mugabe declared: "Let us hammer to defeat. Let us blow up his citadel. Let us give him no time to rest. Let us chase him in every corner. Let us rid our home of this settler vermin". For Mugabe, armed struggle was an essential part of the establishment of a new state. In contrast to other black nationalist leaders like Nkomo, Mugabe opposed a negotiated settlement with Smith's government. In October 1976 ZANU nevertheless established a joint platform with ZAPU known as the Patriotic Front. In September 1978 Mugabe met with Nkomo in Lusaka. He was angry with the latter's secret attempts to negotiate with Smith.

Lancaster House Agreement: 1979

The beginning of the end for Smith came when South African Prime Minister B. J. Vorster concluded that white minority rule was unsustainable in a country where blacks outnumbered whites 22:1. Under pressure from Vorster, Smith accepted in principle that white minority rule could not be maintained forever. He oversaw the 1979 general election which resulted in Abel Muzorewa, a politically moderate black bishop, being elected Prime Minister of the reconstituted Zimbabwe Rhodesia. Both ZANU and ZAPU had boycotted the election, which did not receive international recognition. At the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting 1979, held in Lusaka, the British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher surprised delegates by announcing that the UK would officially recognize the country's independence if it transitioned to democratic majority rule.

Lancaster House in London's St James's district

The negotiations took place at Lancaster House in London and were led by the Conservative Party politician Peter Carington. Mugabe refused to attend these London peace talks, opposing the idea of a negotiated rather than military solution to the Rhodesian War. Machel insisted that he must, threatening to end Mozambican support for the ZANU-PF if he did not. Mugabe arrived in London in September 1979. There, he and Nkomo presented themselves as part of the "Patriotic Front" but established separate headquarters in the city. At the conference the pair were divided in their attitude; Nkomo wanted to present himself as a moderate while Mugabe played up to his image as a Marxist revolutionary, with Carrington exploiting this division. Throughout the negotiations, Mugabe did not trust the British and believed that they were manipulating events to their own advantage.

The ensuing Lancaster House Agreement called for all participants in the Rhodesian Bush War to agree to a ceasefire, with a British governor, Christopher Soames, arriving in Rhodesia to oversee an election in which the various factions could compete as political parties. It outlined a plan for a transition to formal independence as a sovereign republic under black-majority rule, also maintaining that Rhodesia would be renamed Zimbabwe, a name adopted from the Iron Age archaeological site of Great Zimbabwe. The agreement also ensured that the country's white minority retained many of its economic and political privileges, with 20 seats to be reserved for whites in the new Parliament. By insisting on the need for a democratic black majority government, Carington was able to convince Mugabe to compromise on the other main issue of the conference, that of land ownership. Mugabe agreed to the protection of the white community's privately owned property on the condition that the UK and U.S. governments provide financial assistance allowing the Zimbabwean government to purchase much land for redistribution among blacks. Mugabe was opposed to the idea of a ceasefire, but under pressure from Machel he agreed to it. Mugabe signed the agreement, but felt cheated, remaining disappointed that he had never achieved a military victory over the Rhodesian forces.

Electoral campaign: 1980

Returning to Salisbury in January 1980, Mugabe was greeted by a supportive crowd. He settled into a house in Mount Pleasant, a wealthy, white-dominated suburb. Machel had cautioned Mugabe not to alienate Rhodesia's white minority, warning him that any white flight after the election would cause economic damage as it had in Mozambique. Accordingly, during his electoral campaign, Mugabe avoided the use of Marxist and revolutionary rhetoric. Mugabe insisted that in the election, ZANU would stand as a separate party to ZAPU, and refused Nkomo's request for a meeting. He formed ZANU into a political party, known as Zimbabwe African National Union – Patriotic Front (ZANU–PF). Predictions were made that ZANU–PF would win the election on the basis of the country's ethnic divisions; Mugabe was Shona, a community that made up around 70% of the country's population, while Nkomo was Ndebele, a tribal group who made up only around 20%. For many in the white community and in the British government, this outcome was a terrifying prospect due to Mugabe's avowed Marxist beliefs and the inflammatory comments that he had made about whites during the guerrilla war.

During the campaign, Mugabe survived two assassination attempts. In the first, which took place on 6 February, a grenade was thrown at his Mount Pleasant home, where it exploded against a garden wall. In the second, on 10 February, a roadside bomb exploded near his motorcade as he left a Fort Victoria rally. Mugabe himself was unharmed. Mugabe accused the Rhodesian security forces of being responsible for these attacks. In an attempt to quell the possibility that Rhodesia's security forces would launch a coup to prevent the election, Mugabe met with Peter Walls, the commander of Rhodesia's armed forces, and asked him to remain in his position in the event of a ZANU–PF victory. At the time Walls refused.

The electoral campaign was marred by widespread voter intimidation, perpetrated by Nkomo's ZAPU, Abel Muzorewa's United African National Council (UANC), and Mugabe's ZANU–PF. Commenting on ZANU–PF's activities in eastern Rhodesia, Nkomo complained that "the word intimidation is mild. People are being terrorized. It is terror." Reacting to ZANU–PF's acts of voter intimidation, Mugabe was called before Soames at Government House. Mugabe regarded the meeting as a British attempt to thwart his electoral campaign. Under the terms of the negotiation, Soames had the power to disqualify any political party guilty of voter intimidation. Rhodesia's security services, Nkomo, Muzorewa, and some of his own advisers all called on Soames to disqualify ZANU–PF. After deliberation, Soames disagreed, believing that ZANU–PF were sure to win the election and that disqualifying them would wreck any chance of an orderly transition of power.

In the February election, ZANU–PF secured 63% of the national vote, gaining 57 of the 80 parliamentary seats allocated for black parties and providing them with an absolute majority. ZAPU had gained 20 seats, and UANC had three. Mugabe was elected MP for the Salisbury constituency of Highfield. Attempting to calm panic and prevent white flight, Mugabe appeared on television and called for national unity, stability, and law and order, insisting that the pensions of white civil servants would be guaranteed and that private property would be protected.

Prime Minister of Zimbabwe: 1980–1987

Statues atop the tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Heroes' Acre; the monument was designed by North Korean architects who reported directly to Mugabe.

Southern Rhodesia gained internationally recognized independence on 18 April 1980. Mugabe took the oath of office as the newly minted country's first Prime Minister shortly after midnight. He gave a speech at Salisbury's Rufaro Stadium announcing that Rhodesia would be renamed "Zimbabwe" and pledged racial reconciliation. Soames aided Mugabe in bringing about an orderly transition of power; for this Mugabe remained grateful, describing Soames as a good friend. Mugabe unsuccessfully urged Soames to remain in Zimbabwe for several more years, and also failed to convince the UK to assume a two-year "guiding role" for his government because most ZANU–PF members lacked experience in governing. ZANU–PF's absolute parliamentary majority allowed them to rule alone, but Mugabe created a government of national unity by inviting members of rival parties to join his cabinet. Mugabe moved into the Premier's residence in Salisbury, which he left furnished in the same style as Smith had left it.

Mugabe with US president Ronald Reagan in 1983

Across the country, statues of Cecil Rhodes were removed and squares and roads named after prominent colonial figures were renamed after black nationalists. In 1982 Salisbury was renamed Harare. Mugabe employed North Korean architects to design Heroes' Acre, a monument and complex in western Harare to commemorate the struggle against minority rule. Zimbabwe also received much aid from Western countries, whose governments hoped that a stable and prosperous Zimbabwe would aid the transition of South Africa away from apartheid and minority rule. The United States provided Zimbabwe with a $25 million three-year aid package. The UK financed a land reform program, and provided military advisers to aid the integration of the guerrilla armies and old Rhodesian security forces into a new Zimbabwean military. Members of both ZANLA and ZIPRA were integrated into the army; though, there remained a strong rivalry between the two groups. As Prime Minister, Mugabe retained Walls as the head of the armed forces.

Mugabe's government continued to make regular pronouncements about converting Zimbabwe into a socialist society. In contrast to Mugabe's talk of socialism, his government's budgetary policies were conservative, operating within a capitalist framework and emphasizing the need for foreign investment. In office, Mugabe sought a gradual transformation away from capitalism and tried to build upon existing state institutions. From 1980 to 1990, the country's economy grew by an average of 2.7% a year, but this was outstripped by population growth and real income declined. The unemployment rate rose, reaching 26% in 1990. The government ran a budget deficit year-on-year that averaged at 10% of the country's gross domestic product. Under Mugabe's leadership, there was a massive expansion in education and health spending. In 1980, Zimbabwe had just 177 secondary schools, by 2000 this number had risen to 1,548. During that period, the adult literacy rate rose from 62% to 82%, one of the highest levels in Africa. Levels of child immunization were raised from 25% of the population to 92%.

A new leadership elite were formed, who often expressed their newfound status through purchasing large houses and expensive cars, sending their children to private schools, and obtaining farms and businesses. To contain their excesses, in 1984 Mugabe drew up a "leadership code" which prohibited any senior figures from obtaining more than one salary or owning over 50-acres of agricultural land. There were exceptions, with Mugabe giving permission to General Solomon Mujuru to expand his business empire, resulting in his becoming one of the Zimbabwe's wealthiest people. Growing corruption among the socio-economic elite generated resentment among the wider population, much of which was living in poverty.

Mugabe departing Andrews Air Force Base after a state visit to the United States in 1983

ZANU–PF also began establishing its own business empire, founding the M&S Syndicate in 1980 and the Zidoo Holdings in 1981. By 1992, the party had fixed assets and businesses worth an estimated Z$500 million (US$75 million). In 1980, ZANU–PF used Nigerian funds to set up the Mass Media Trust, through which they bought out a South African company that owned most of Zimbabwe's newspapers. The white editors of these newspapers were sacked and replaced by government appointees. These media outlets subsequently became a source of the party's propaganda.

At independence, 39% of Zimbabwe's land was under the ownership of around 6000 white large-scale commercial farmers, while 4% was owned by black small-scale commercial farmers, and 41% was 'communal land' where 4 million people lived, often in overcrowded conditions. The Lancaster House agreement ensured that until 1990, the sale of land could only take place on a "willing seller-willing buyer" basis. The only permitted exceptions were if the land was "underutilized" or needed for a public purpose, in which case the government could compulsorily purchase it while fully compensating the owner. This meant that Mugabe's government was largely restricted to purchasing land which was of poor quality. Its target was to resettle 18,000 black families on 2.5 million acres of white-owned land over three years. This would cost £30 million (US$60 million), half of which was to be provided by the UK government as per the Lancaster House Agreement.

In 1986, Mugabe became chair of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM), a position that he retained until 1989. As the leader of one of the Front Line States, the countries bordering apartheid South Africa, he gained credibility within the anti-apartheid movement.

Race relations

The wrongs of the past must now stand forgiven and forgotten. If ever we look to the past, let us do so for the lesson the past has taught us, namely that oppression and racism are inequalities that must never find scope in our political and social system. It could never be a correct justification that just because the whites oppressed us yesterday when they had power, the blacks must oppress them today because they have power. An evil remains an evil whether practised by white against black or black against white.

— Mugabe's speech after his 1980 victory

Mugabe initially emphasized racial reconciliation and he was keen to build a good relationship with white Zimbabweans. He hoped to avoid a white exodus and tried to allay fears that he would nationalize white-owned property. He appointed two white ministers—David Smith and Denis Norman—to his government, met with white leaders in agriculture, industry, mining, and commerce, and impressed senior figures in the outgoing administration like Smith and Ken Flower with his apparent sincerity. With the end of the war, petrol rationing, and economic sanctions, life for white Zimbabweans improved during the early years of Mugabe's rule. In the economic boom that followed, the white minority—which controlled considerable property and dominated commerce, industry, and banking—were the country's main beneficiaries.

Nevertheless, many white Zimbabweans complained that they were the victims of racial discrimination. Many whites remained uneasy about living under the government of a black Marxist and they also feared that their children would be unable to secure jobs. There was a growing exodus to South Africa, and in 1980, 17,000 whites—approximately a tenth of the white Zimbabwean population—emigrated. Mugabe's government had pledged support for the African National Congress and other anti-apartheid forces within South Africa but did not allow them to use Zimbabwe as a base for their military operations. To protest apartheid and white minority rule in South Africa, Mugabe's government banned Zimbabwe from engaging South Africa in any sporting competitions. In turn, South Africa tried to destabilise Zimbabwe by blocking trade routes into the country and supporting anti-Mugabe militants among the country's white minority.

Mugabe in the Netherlands, 1982

In December 1981, a bomb struck ZANU–PF headquarters, killing seven and injuring 124. Mugabe blamed South African-backed white militants. He criticised "reactionary and counter-revolutionary elements" in the white community, stating that despite the fact that they had faced no punishment for their past actions, they rejected racial reconciliation and "are acting in collusion with South Africa to harm our racial relations, to destroy our unity, to sabotage our economy, and to overthrow the popularly elected government I lead". Increasingly he criticised not only the militants but the entire white community for holding a monopoly on "Zimbabwe's economic power". This was a view echoed by many government ministers and the government-controlled media. One of these ministers, Tekere, was involved in an incident in which he and seven armed men stormed a white-owned farmhouse, killing an elderly farmer; they alleged that in doing so they were foiling a coup attempt. Tekere was acquitted of murder; however, Mugabe dropped him from his cabinet.

Racial mistrust and suspicion continued to grow. In December 1981, the elderly white MP Wally Stuttaford was accused of being a South African agent, arrested, and tortured, generating anger among whites. In July 1982, South African-backed white militants destroyed 13 aircraft at Thornhill. A number of white military officers were accused of complicity, arrested, and tortured. They were put on trial but cleared by judges, after which they were immediately re-arrested. Their case generated an international outcry, which Mugabe criticized, stating that the case only gained such attention because the accused were white. His defence of torture and contempt for legal procedures damaged his international standing. White flight continued to grow, and within three years of Mugabe's premiership half of all white Zimbabweans had emigrated. In the 1985 election, Smith's Conservative Alliance of Zimbabwe won 15 of the 20 seats allocated for white Zimbabweans. Mugabe was outraged by this result, lambasting white Zimbabweans for not repenting "in any way" by continuing to support Smith and other white politicians who had committed "horrors against the people of Zimbabwe".

Relations with ZAPU and the Gukurahundi

Main article: Gukurahundi
The flag of ZAPU, which was largely eliminated by ZANU-PF in the Gukurahundi.

Under the new constitution, Zimbabwe's presidency was a ceremonial role with no governmental power; the first President was Canaan Banana. Mugabe had previously offered the position to Nkomo, who had turned it down in favour of becoming Minister of Home Affairs. While working together, there remained an aura of resentment and suspicion between Mugabe and Nkomo. Mugabe gave ZAPU four cabinet seats, but Nkomo demanded more. In contrast, some ZANU–PF figures argued that ZAPU should not have any seats in government, suggesting that Zimbabwe be converted into a one-party state. Tekere and Enos Nkala were particularly adamant that there should be a crackdown on ZAPU. After Nkala called for ZAPU to be violently crushed during a rally in Entumbane, street clashes between the two parties broke out in the city.

In January 1981, Mugabe demoted Nkomo in a cabinet reshuffle; the latter warned that this would anger ZAPU supporters. In February, violence between ZAPU and ZANU–PF supporters broke out among the battalion stationed at Ntabazinduna, soon spreading to other army bases, resulting in 300 deaths. An arms cache featuring land mines and anti-aircraft missiles were then discovered at Ascot Farm, which was part-owned by Nkomo. Mugabe cited this as evidence that ZAPU were plotting a coup, an allegation that Nkomo denied. Likening Nkomo to "a cobra in the house", Mugabe sacked him from the government, and ZAPU-owned businesses, farms, and properties were seized.

Members of both ZANLA and ZIPRA had deserted their positions and engaged in banditry. In Matabeleland, ZIPRA deserters who came to be known as "dissenters" engaged in robbery, holding up buses, and attacking farmhouses, creating an environment of growing lawlessness. These dissidents received support from South Africa through its Operation Mute, by which it hoped to further destabilize Zimbabwe. The government often conflated ZIPRA with the dissenters, although Nkomo denounced the dissidents and their South African supporters. Mugabe authorized the police and army to crack down on the Matabeleland dissenters, declaring that state officers would be granted legal immunity for any "extra-legal" actions they may perform while doing so. During 1982 he had established the Fifth Brigade, an elite armed force trained by the North Koreans; membership was drawn largely from Shona-speaking ZANLA soldiers and were answerable directly to Mugabe. In January 1983, the Fifth Brigade were deployed in the region, overseeing a campaign of beatings, arson, public executions, and massacres of those accused of being sympathetic to the dissidents. The scale of the violence was greater than that witnessed in the Rhodesian War. Interrogation centres were established where people were tortured. Mugabe acknowledged that civilians would be persecuted in the violence, claiming that "we can't tell who is a dissident and who is not." The ensuing events became known as the "Gukurahundi", a Shona word meaning "wind that sweeps away the chaff before the rains".

The Gukurahundi took place in Zimbabwe's western provinces of Matabeleland (highlighted).

In 1984 the Gukurahundi spread to Matabeleland South, an area then in its third year of drought. The Fifth Brigade closed all stores, halted all deliveries, and imposed a curfew, exacerbating starvation for a period of two months. The Bishop of Bulawayo accused Mugabe of overseeing a project of systematic starvation. When a Roman Catholic delegation provided Mugabe with a dossier listing atrocities committed by the Fifth Brigade, Mugabe refuted all its allegations and accused the clergy of being disloyal to Zimbabwe. He had the Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace in Zimbabwe suppressed. In 1985, an Amnesty International report on the Gukurahundi was dismissed by Mugabe as "a heap of lies". Over the course of four years, approximately 10,000 civilians had been killed, and many others had been beaten and tortured. Genocide Watch later estimated that approximately 20,000 had been killed and classified the events as genocide.

Margaret Thatcher's UK government was aware of the killings but remained silent on the matter, cautious not to anger Mugabe and threaten the safety of white Zimbabweans. The United States also did not raise strong objections, with President Ronald Reagan welcoming Mugabe to the White House in September 1983. In October 1983, Mugabe attended the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in New Delhi, where no participating states mentioned the Gukurahundi. In 2000, Mugabe acknowledged that the mass killings had happened, stating that it was "an act of madness ... it was wrong and both sides were to blame". His biographer Martin Meredith argued that Mugabe and his ZANU–PF were solely to blame for the massacres. Various Mugabe biographers have seen the Gukurahundi as a deliberate attempt to eliminate ZAPU and its support base to advance his desire for a ZANU–PF one-party state.

There was further violence in the build-up to the 1985 election, with ZAPU supporters facing harassment from ZANU–PF Youth League brigades. Despite this intimidation, ZAPU won all 15 of the parliamentary seats in Matabeleland. Mugabe then appointed Enos Nkala as the new police minister. Nkala subsequently detained over 100 ZAPU officials, including five of its MPs and the Mayor of Bulawayo, banned the party from holding rallies or meetings, closed all of their offices, and dissolved all of the district councils that they controlled. To avoid further violence, in December 1987 Nkomo signed a Unity Accord in which ZAPU was officially disbanded and its leadership merged into ZANU–PF. The merger between the two parties left ZANU–PF with 99 of the 100 seats in parliament, and established Zimbabwe as a de facto one-party state.

President of Zimbabwe

Constitutional and economic reform: 1987–1995

In late 1987, Zimbabwe's parliament amended the constitution. On 30 December it declared Mugabe to be executive president, a new position that combined the roles of head of state, head of government, and commander-in-chief of the armed forces. This position gave him the power to dissolve parliament, declare martial law, and run for an unlimited number of terms. According to Meredith, Mugabe now had "a virtual stranglehold on government machinery and unlimited opportunities to exercise patronage". The constitutional amendments also abolished the twenty parliamentary seats reserved for white representatives, and left parliament less relevant and independent.

In the build-up to the 1990 election, parliamentary reforms increased the number of seats to 120; of these, twenty were to be appointed by the President and ten by the Council of Chiefs. This measure made it more difficult for any opposition to Mugabe to gain a parliamentary majority. The main opposition party in that election was the Zimbabwe Unity Movement (ZUM), launched in April 1989 by Tekere; although a longstanding friend of Mugabe, Tekere accused him of betraying the revolution and establishing a dictatorship. ZANU–PF propaganda made threats against those considering voting ZUM in the election; one television advert featured images of a car crash with the statement "This is one way to die. Another is to vote ZUM. Don't commit suicide, vote ZANU-PF and live." In the election, Mugabe was re-elected President with nearly 80% of the vote, while ZANU–PF secured 116 of the 119 available parliamentary seats.

Mugabe had long hoped to convert Zimbabwe into a one-party state, but in 1990 he officially "postponed" these plans as both Mozambique and many Eastern Bloc states transitioned from one-party states to multi-party republics. Following the collapse of the Marxist-Leninist regimes in the Soviet Union and the Eastern Bloc, in 1991 ZANU–PF removed references to "Marxism-Leninism" and "scientific socialism" in its material; Mugabe maintained that "socialism remains our sworn ideology". That year, Mugabe pledged himself to free market economics and accepted a structural adjustment programme provided by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). This economic reform package called for Zimbabwe to privatise state assets and reduce import tariffs; Mugabe's government implemented some but not all of its recommendations. The reforms encouraged employers to cut their wages, generating growing opposition from the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions.

By 1990, 52,000 black families had been settled on 6.5 million acres. This was insufficient to deal with the country's overcrowding problem, which was being exacerbated by the growth in the black population. That year, Zimbabwe's parliament passed an amendment allowing the government to expropriate land at a fixed price while denying land-owners the right of appeal to the courts. The government hoped that by doing so it could settle 110,000 black families on 13 million acres, which would require the expropriation of approximately half of all white-owned land. Zimbabwe's Commercial Farmers Union argued that the proposed measures would wreck the country's economy, urging the government to instead settle landless blacks on the half-a-million acres of land that was either unproductive or state-owned.

Concerns about the proposed measure—particularly its denial of the right to appeal—were voiced by the UK, US, and Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace. The US, UK, International Monetary Fund, and World Bank threatened that if Zimbabwe implemented the law, it would forfeit foreign aid packages. Responding to the criticisms, the government removed the ban on court appeals from the bill, which was then passed as law. Over the following few years, hundreds of thousands of acres of largely white-owned land were expropriated. In April 1994, a newspaper investigation found that not all of this was redistributed to landless blacks; much of the expropriated land was being leased to ministers and senior officials such as Witness Mangwede, who was leased a 3000-acre farm in Hwedza. Responding to this scandal, in 1994 the UK government—which had supplied £44 million for land redistribution—halted its payments.

In January 1992, Mugabe's wife died. In April 1995, Horizon magazine revealed that Mugabe had secretly been having an affair with his secretary Grace Marufu since 1987 and that she had borne him a son and a daughter. His secret revealed, Mugabe decided to hold a much-publicized wedding. 12,000 people were invited to the August 1996 ceremony, which took place in Kutama and was orchestrated by the head of the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Harare, Patrick Chakaipa. The ceremony was controversial among the Catholic community because of the adulterous nature of Mugabe and Marufu's relationship. To house his family, Mugabe then built a new mansion at Borrowdale. In the 1995 parliamentary election—which saw a low turnout of 31.7%—ZANU–PF gained 147 out of 150 seats. Following the election, Mugabe expanded his cabinet from 29 to 42 ministers while the government adopted a 133% pay rise for MPs.

Economic decline: 1995–2000

By the mid-1990s Mugabe had become an irascible and petulant dictator, brooking no opposition, contemptuous of the law and human rights, surrounded by sycophantic ministers and indifferent to the incompetence and corruption around him. His record of economic management was lamentable. He had failed to satisfy popular expectations in education, health, land reform, and employment. And he had alienated the entire white community. Yet all the while Mugabe continued to believe in his own greatness. Isolated and remote from ordinary reality, possessing no close friends and showing clear signs of paranoia, he listened only to an inner circle of conspiratorial aides and colleagues. Whatever difficulties occurred he attributed to old enemies—Britain, the West, the old Rhodesian network—all bent, he believed, on destroying his "revolution".

— Mugabe biographer Martin Meredith

Over the course of the 1990s, Zimbabwe's economy steadily deteriorated. By 2000, living standards had declined from 1980; life expectancy was reduced, average wages were lower, and unemployment had trebled. By 1998, unemployment was almost at 50%. As of 2009, three to four million Zimbabweans—the greater part of the nation's skilled workforce—had left the country. In 1997 there were growing demands for pensions from those who had fought for the guerrilla armies in the revolutionary war, and in August 1997 Mugabe put together a pension package that would cost the county Z$4.2 billion. To finance this pension scheme, Mugabe's government proposed new taxes, but a general strike was called in protest in December 1997; amid protest from ZANU–PF itself, Mugabe's government abandoned the taxes. In January 1998, riots about lack of access to food broke out in Harare; the army was deployed to restore order, with at least ten killed and hundreds injured.

Mugabe increasingly blamed the country's economic problems on Western nations and the white Zimbabwean minority, who still controlled most of its commercial agriculture, mines, and manufacturing industry. He called on supporters "to strike fear in the hearts of the white man, our real enemy", and accused his black opponents of being dupes of the whites. Amid growing internal opposition to his government, he remained determined to stay in power. He revived the regular use of revolutionary rhetoric and sought to re-assert his credentials as an important revolutionary leader.

Mugabe also developed a growing preoccupation with homosexuality, lambasting it as an "un-African" import from Europe. He described gay people as being "guilty of sub-human behavior", and of being "worse than dogs and pigs". This attitude may have stemmed in part from his strong conservative values, but it was strengthened by the fact that several ministers in the British government were gay. Mugabe began to believe that there was a "gay mafia" and that all of his critics were homosexuals. Critics also accused Mugabe of using homophobia to distract attention from the country's problems. In August 1995, he was due to open a human rights-themed Zimbabwe International Book Fair in Harare but refused to do so until a stall run by the group Gays and Lesbians of Zimbabwe was evicted.

In 1996, Mugabe was appointed chair of the defense arm of the Southern African Development Community (SADC). Without consulting parliament, in August 1998 he ordered Zimbabwean troops into the Democratic Republic of the Congo to side with President Laurent Kabila in the Second Congo War. He initially committed 3000 troops to the operation; this gradually rose to 11,000. He also persuaded Angola and Namibia to commit troops to the conflict. Involvement in the war cost Zimbabwe an approximate US$1 million a day, contributing to its economic problems. Opinion polls demonstrated that it was unpopular among Zimbabwe's population. However, several Zimbabwean businesses profited, having been given mining and timber concessions and preferential trade terms in minerals from Kabila's government.

In January 1999, 23 military officers were arrested for plotting a coup against Mugabe. The government sought to hide this, but it was reported by journalists from The Standard. The military subsequently illegally arrested the journalists and tortured them. This brought international condemnation, with the EU and seven donor nations issuing protest notes. Lawyers and human rights activists protested outside parliament until they were dispersed by riot police, and the country's Supreme Court judges issued a letter condemning the military's actions. In response, Mugabe publicly defended the use of extra-legal arrest and torture.

British prime minister Tony Blair, with whom Mugabe had a particularly antagonistic relationship

In 1997, Tony Blair was elected Prime Minister of the UK after 18 years of Conservative rule. His Labour government expressed reticence toward restarting the land resettlement payments promised by the Lancaster House Agreement, with minister Clare Short rejecting the idea that the UK had any moral obligation to fund land redistribution. This attitude fuelled anti-imperialist sentiment across Africa. In October 1999, Mugabe visited Britain and in London, the human rights activist Peter Tatchell attempted to place him under citizen's arrest. Mugabe believed that the British government had deliberately engineered the incident to embarrass him. It further damaged Anglo-Zimbabwean relations, with Mugabe expressing scorn for what he called "Blair and company". In May 2000, the UK froze all development aid to Zimbabwe. In December 1999, the IMF terminated financial support for Zimbabwe, citing economic mismanagement and widespread corruption as impediments to reform.

To meet growing demand for constitutional reform, in April 1999 Mugabe's government appointed a 400-member Constitutional Commission to draft a new constitution which could be put to a referendum. The National Constitutional Assembly—a pro-reform pressure group established in 1997—expressed concern that this commission was not independent of the government, noting that Mugabe had the power to amend or reject the draft. The NCA called for the draft constitution to be rejected, and in a February 2000 referendum it was, with 53% against to 44% in favor; turnout was under 25%. It was ZANU–PF's first major electoral defeat in twenty years. Mugabe was furious, and blamed the white minority for orchestrating his defeat, referring to them as "enemies of Zimbabwe".

Land seizures and growing condemnation: 2000–2008

Main article: Land reform in Zimbabwe
Morgan Tsvangirai led the MDC to growing success in opposing Mugabe's regime in the 2000 parliamentary election.

The June 2000 parliamentary elections were Zimbabwe's most important since 1980. Sixteen parties took part, and the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC)—led by trade unionist Morgan Tsvangirai—was particularly successful. During the election campaign, MDC activists were regularly harassed and in some cases killed. The Zimbabwe Human Rights Forum documented 27 murders, 27 rapes, 2466 assaults, and 617 abductions, with 10,000 people displaced by violence; the majority, but not all, of these actions were carried out by ZANU–PF supporters. Observers from the European Union (EU) ruled that the election was neither free nor fair. The vote produced 48% and 62 parliamentary seats for ZANU-PF and 47% and 57 parliamentary seats for the MDC. For the first time, ZANU–PF were denied the two-thirds parliamentary majority required to push through constitutional change. ZANU–PF had relied heavily on their support base in rural Shona-speaking areas, and retained only one urban constituency.

In February 2000, land invasions began as armed gangs attacked and occupied white-owned farms. The government referred to the attackers as "war veterans" but the majority were unemployed youth too young to have fought in the Rhodesian War. Mugabe claimed that the attacks were a spontaneous uprising against white land owners, although the government had paid Z$20 million to Chenjerai Hunzvi's War Veterans Association to lead the land invasion campaign and ZANU–PF officials, police, and military figures were all involved in facilitating it. Some of Mugabe's colleagues described the invasions as retribution for the white community's alleged involvement in securing the success of the 'no' vote in the recent referendum. Mugabe justified the seizures by the fact that this land had been seized by white settlers from the indigenous African population in the 1890s. He portrayed the invasions as a struggle against colonialism and alleged that the UK was trying to overthrow his government. In May 2000, he issued a decree under the Presidential Powers (Temporary Measures) Act which empowered the government to seize farms without providing compensation, insisting that it was the British government that should make these payments.

In March 2000, Zimbabwe's High Court ruled that the land invasions were illegal; they nevertheless continued, and Mugabe began vilifying Zimbabwe's judiciary. After the Supreme Court also backed this decision, the government called on its judges to resign, successfully pressuring Chief Justice Anthony Gubbay to do so. ZANU–PF member Godfrey Chidyausiku was appointed to replace him, while the number of Supreme Court judges was expanded from five to eight; the three additional seats went to pro-Mugabe figures. The first act of the new Supreme Court was to reverse the previous declaration that the land seizures were illegal. In November 2001, Mugabe issued a presidential decree permitting the expropriation of virtually all white-owned farms in Zimbabwe without compensation. The farm seizures were often violent; by 2006 a reported sixty white farmers had been killed, with many of their employees experiencing intimidation and torture. A large number of the seized farms remained empty, while many of those redistributed to black peasant-farmers were unable to engage in production for the market because of their lack of access to fertiliser.

The courts can do whatever they want, but no judicial decision will stand in our way ... My own position is that we should not even be defending our position in the courts. This country is our country and this land is our land ... They think because they are white they have a divine right to our resources. Not here. The white man is not indigenous to Africa. Africa is for Africans, Zimbabwe is for Zimbabweans.

— Mugabe on the land seizures

The farm invasions severely impacted agricultural development. Zimbabwe had produced over two million tons of maize in 2000; by 2008 this had declined to approximately 450,000. By October 2003, Human Rights Watch reported that half of the country's population were food insecure, lacking enough food to meet basic needs. By 2009, 75% of Zimbabwe's population were relying on food aid, the highest proportion of any country at that time. Zimbabwe faced continuing economic decline. In 2000, the country's GDP was US$7.4 billion; by 2005 this had declined to US$3.4 billion. Hyperinflation resulted in economic crisis. By 2007, Zimbabwe had the highest inflation rate in the world, at 7600%. By 2008, inflation exceeded 100,000% and a loaf of bread cost a third of the average daily wage. Increasing numbers of Zimbabweans relied on remittances from relatives abroad.

Other sectors of society were negatively affected too. By 2005, an estimated 80% of Zimbabwe's population were unemployed, and by 2008 only 20% of children were in schooling. The breakdown of water supplies and sewage systems resulted in a cholera outbreak in late 2008, with over 98,000 cholera cases in Zimbabwe between August 2008 and mid-July 2009. The ruined economy also impacted the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the country; by 2008 the HIV/AIDS rate for individuals aged between 15 and 49 was 15.3%. In 2007, the World Health Organization declared the average life expectancy in Zimbabwe to be 34 for women and 36 for men, down from 63 and 54 respectively in 1997. The country's lucrative tourist industry was decimated, and there was a rise in poaching, including of endangered species. Mugabe directly exacerbated this problem when he ordered the killing of 100 elephants to provide meat for an April 2007 feast.

In October 2000, the MDC's MPs attempted to impeach Mugabe, but were thwarted by the Speaker of the House, Mugabe loyalist Emmerson Mnangagwa. ZANU–PF increasingly equated itself with Zimbabwean patriotism, with MDC supporters being portrayed as traitors and enemies of Zimbabwe. The party presented itself as being on the progressive side of history, with the MDC representing a counter-revolutionary force that seeks to undermine the achievements of the ZANU–PF revolution and of decolonization itself. Mugabe claimed that the build-up to the 2002 presidential election represented "the third Chimurenga" and that it would set Zimbabwe free from its colonial heritage. In the build-up to the election, the government changed the electoral rules and regulations to improve Mugabe's chances of victory. New security legislation was introduced making it illegal to criticize the president. The defense force commander, General Vitalis Zvinavashe, stated that the military would not recognize any election result other than a Mugabe victory. The EU withdrew its observers from the country, stating that the vote was neither free nor fair. The election resulted in Mugabe securing 56% of the vote to Tsvangirai's 42%. In the aftermath of the election Mugabe declared that the state-owned Grain Marketing Board had the sole right to import and distribute grain, with the state distributors giving food to ZANU–PF supporters while withholding it from those suspected of backing the MDC. In 2005, Mugabe instituted Operation Murambatsvina ("Operation Drive Out the Rubbish"), a project of forced slum clearance; a UN report estimated that 700,000 were left homeless. Since the inhabitants of the shantytowns overwhelmingly voted MDC, many alleged that the bulldozing was politically motivated.

Mugabe in 2008

Mugabe's actions brought strong criticism. The Zimbabwe Council of Churches accused him of plunging the country into "a de facto state of warfare" to stay in power. Several Southern African states remonstrated with him at a summit in Harare in September 2001. In 2002, the Commonwealth expelled Zimbabwe from among its ranks; Mugabe blamed this on anti-black racism, a view echoed by South Africa's President Thabo Mbeki. Mbeki favoured a policy of "quiet diplomacy" in dealing with Mugabe, and prevented the African Union (AU) from introducing sanctions against him. The Africa-Europe Summit, scheduled to take place in Lisbon in April 2003, was deferred repeatedly because African leaders refused to attend while Mugabe was banned; it eventually took place in 2007 with Mugabe in attendance. In response to the torture of MDC MP Job Sikhala, Zimbabwean Test Cricketers Andy Flower and Henry Olonga staged a protest during the 2003 Cricket World Cup co-hosted by Zimbabwe, wearing black armbands to "mourn the death of democracy in Zimbabwe". Both men would go into exile, with Olonga charged with treason. In 2004, the EU imposed a travel ban and asset freeze on Mugabe. It extended these sanctions in 2008, with the US government introducing further sanctions this same year. The US and UK introduced a resolution at the UN Security Council calling for an arms embargo of Zimbabwe alongside an asset freeze and travel ban of Mugabe and other government figures; it was vetoed by Russia and China. In 2009, the SADC demanded that Western states lift their targeted sanctions against Mugabe and his government. ZANU–PF presented the sanctions as a form of Western neo-colonialism and blamed the West for Zimbabwe's economic problems. According to Carren Pindiriri of the University of Zimbabwe, sanctions did not negatively affect employment and poverty in the country.

British prime minister Tony Blair allegedly planned regime change in Zimbabwe in the early 2000s as pressure intensified for Mugabe to step down. British General Charles Guthrie, the Chief of the Defence Staff, revealed in 2007 that he and Blair had discussed the invasion of Zimbabwe. However, Guthrie advised against military action: "Hold hard, you'll make it worse." In 2013, South African President Thabo Mbeki said that Blair had also pressured South Africa to join in a "regime change scheme, even to the point of using military force" in Zimbabwe. Mbeki refused because he felt that "Mugabe is part of the solution to this problem." However, a spokesman for Blair said that "he never asked anyone to plan or take part in any such military intervention."

Power-sharing with the opposition MDC: 2008–2013

Main article: 2008 Zimbabwean presidential election

In March 2008, the parliamentary and presidential elections were held. In the former, ZANU–PF secured 97 seats to the MDC's 99 and the rival MDC – Ncube's 9. In May, the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission announced the presidential vote results, confirming that Tsvangirai secured 47.9%, to Mugabe's 43.2%. As neither candidate secured 50%, a run-off vote was scheduled. Mugabe saw his defeat as an unacceptable personal humiliation. He deemed it a victory for his Western, and in particular British, detractors, whom he believed were working with Tsvangirai to end his political career. ZANU–PF claimed that the MDC had rigged the election.

Mugabe in 2011

After the election, Mugabe's government deployed its "war veterans" in a violent campaign against Tsvangirai supporters. Between March and June 2008, at least 153 MDC supporters were killed. There were reports of women affiliated with the MDC being subjected to gang rape by Mugabe supporters. Tens of thousands of Zimbabweans were internally displaced by the violence. These actions brought international condemnation of Mugabe's government. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon expressed concern about the violence, which was also unanimously condemned by the UN Security Council, which declared that a free and fair election was "impossible". 40 senior African leaders—among them Desmond Tutu, Kofi Annan, and Jerry Rawlings—signed an open letter calling for an end to the violence.

In response to the violence, Tsvangirai pulled out of the run-off. In the second round, Mugabe was pronounced victor with 85.5% of the vote, and immediately re-inaugurated as president. The SADC oversaw the establishment of a power-sharing agreement; brokered by Mbeke, it was signed in September 2008. Under the agreement, Mugabe remained President while Tsvangirai became Prime Minister and the MDC's Arthur Mutambara became Vice Prime Minister. The cabinet was equally divided among MDC and ZANU–PF members. ZANU–PF nevertheless displayed unwillingness to share power, and were anxious to prevent any sweeping political changes. Under the power-sharing agreement, a number of limited reforms were passed. In early 2009, Mugabe's government declared that—to combat rampant inflation—it would recognize US dollars as legal tender and would pay government employees in this currency. This helped to stabilize prices. ZANU–PF blocked many of the proposed reforms and a new constitution was passed in March 2013.

Later years: 2013–2017

Mugabe and his wife in 2013

Declaring that he would "fight like a wounded animal" for re-election, Mugabe approached the 2013 elections believing that it would be his last. He hoped that a decisive electoral victory would secure his legacy, signal his triumph over his Western critics, and irreparably damage Tsvangirai's credibility. The opposition parties believed that this election was their best chance for ousting Mugabe. They portrayed him as a feeble old man who was being told what to do by the military; at least one academic observer argued that this was untrue.

In contrast to 2008, there was no organised dissent against Mugabe within ZANU–PF. The party elite decided to avoid the violence that had marred the 2008 election so as not to undermine its credibility, particularly in the eyes of the SADC, thus allowing Zimbabwe's government to consolidate its rule without interference. Mugabe called upon supporters to avoid violence, and attended far fewer rallies than in past elections, in part because of his advanced age and in part to ensure that those rallies he did attend were larger. The ZANU–PF offered gifts, including food and clothing, to many members of the electorate to encourage them to vote for the party.

ZANU–PF won a landslide victory, with 61% of the presidential vote and over two-thirds of parliamentary seats. The elections were not considered free and fair; there were widespread stories of vote rigging and many voters might have been fearful of the violence that had surrounded the 2008 election. During the campaign, many MDC supporters had remained quiet about their views out of fear of reprisals. The MDC was also negatively impacted by its time in the coalition government, with perceptions that it had been just as corrupt as ZANU–PF. ZANU–PF had also capitalized on its appeals to African race, land, and liberation, while the MDC was often associated with white farmers, Western nations, and perceived Western values such as LGBT rights.

Mugabe meeting Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe in 2016

In February 2014, Mugabe underwent a cataract operation in Singapore; on return he celebrated his ninetieth birthday at a Marondera football stadium. In December 2014, Mugabe fired his vice-president, Joice Mujuru, accusing her of plotting his overthrow. In January 2015, Mugabe was elected as the Chairperson of the African Union (AU). In November 2015, he announced his intention to run for re-election as Zimbabwe's president in 2018, at the age of 94, and was accepted as the ZANU–PF candidate. In February 2016, Mugabe said he had no plans for retirement and would remain in power "until God says 'come'". In February 2017, right after his 93rd birthday, Mugabe stated he would not retire nor pick a successor, even though he said he would let his party choose a successor if it saw fit. In May 2017, Mugabe took a weeklong trip to Cancún, Mexico, ostensibly to attend a three-day conference on disaster risk reduction, eliciting criticism of wasteful spending from opposition figures. He made three medical trips to Singapore in 2017, and Grace Mugabe called on him to name a successor.

In October 2017, the World Health Organization (WHO) appointed Mugabe as a goodwill ambassador; this attracted criticism from both the Zimbabwean opposition and various foreign governments given the poor state of the Zimbabwean health system. Responding to the outcry, WHO revoked Mugabe's appointment a day later.  In response, foreign minister Walter Mzembi said the United Nations system should be reformed.

Coup d'état and resignation: 2017

Main article: 2017 Zimbabwean coup d'état

On 6 November 2017, Mugabe sacked his first vice-president, Emmerson Mnangagwa. This fuelled speculation that he intended to name Grace his successor. Grace was very unpopular with the ZANU–PF old guard. On 15 November 2017, the Zimbabwe National Army placed Mugabe under house arrest at his Blue Roof mansion as part of what it described as an action against "criminals" in Mugabe's circle.

On 19 November, he was sacked as leader of ZANU–PF, and Mnangagwa was appointed in his place. The party also gave Mugabe an ultimatum: resign by noon the following day, or it would introduce an impeachment resolution against him. In a nationally televised speech that night, Mugabe refused to say that he would resign. In response, ZANU–PF deputies introduced an impeachment resolution on 21 November 2017, which was seconded by the MDC–T. The constitution stipulated that removing a president from office required a two-thirds majority of both the House of Assembly and Senate in a joint sitting. However, with both major parties supporting the motion and controlling all but six seats in both houses between them (all but four in the lower house and all but two in the upper house), Mugabe's impeachment and removal appeared all but certain.

As per the constitution, both chambers met in joint session to debate the resolution. Hours after the debate began, the Speaker of the House of Assembly read a letter from Mugabe announcing that he had resigned, effective immediately. Mugabe and his wife had negotiated a deal before his resignation, under which he and his kin were exempted from prosecution, his business interests would remain untouched, and he would receive a payment of at least $10 million. In July 2018, the Zimbabwe Supreme Court ruled that Mugabe had resigned voluntarily, despite some of the ex-president's subsequent comments.

Post-presidency

Late in December 2017, according to a government gazette, Mugabe was given full diplomatic status and, out of public funds, a five-bedroom house, up to 23 staff members, and personal vehicles. He further was permitted to keep the business interests and other wealth which he had amassed while in power, and he received an additional payment of about ten million dollars.

On 15 March 2018, in his first interview since removal from the presidency, Mugabe insisted that he had been ousted in a "coup d'état" which must be undone. He stated that he would not work with Mnangagwa and termed Mnangagwa's presidency "illegal" and "unconstitutional". In a lawsuit brought by two political parties, the Liberal Democrats and the Revolutionary Freedom Fighters, and others, the court found that the resignation was legal, and that Mnangagwa, as vice-president, duly took over the presidency.

The state media reported that Mugabe had backed the National Political Front, which was formed by Ambrose Mutinhiri, a former high-ranking ZANU-PF politician who resigned in protest against Mugabe's removal from the presidency. The NPF posted a picture of Mutinhiri posing with Mugabe and issued a press release in which it said that the former president had praised the decision.

On the eve of the 29 July 2018 general election, the first in 38 years in which he would not be a candidate, Mugabe held a surprise press conference, in which he stated that he would not vote for President Mnangagwa and ZANU–PF, the party he founded. Instead, he intended to vote for Nelson Chamisa, the candidate for his long-time rivals, the MDC. Mnangagwa won the re-election.

Illness, death and funeral: 2019

Mugabe was unable to walk, according to Emmerson Mnangagwa in November 2018, and had been receiving treatment in Singapore for the previous two months. He was hospitalised there in April 2019, making the last of several trips to the country for medical treatment, as he had done late in his presidency and following his resignation. He died at Gleneagles Hospital on 6 September 2019 at about 10:40 am, aged 95 (Singapore Standard Time), according to a senior Zimbabwean diplomat. Although the cause of death was not officially disclosed, Mnangagwa, his successor, told ZANU–PF supporters in New York City that Mugabe had advanced cancer and his chemotherapy treatment had ceased to be effective.

On 11 September 2019, his body was flown back to Harare airport in Zimbabwe, where 1,000 had gathered to wait for the body and listen to a speech from Mnangagwa. Mugabe's body was then driven to the family residence in Borrowdale for a private wake attended by his friends and family, but not Mnangagwa. The Associated Press reported that no supporters had gathered along the procession route, but 500 mourners gathered in his birthplace of Zvimba. On 13 September 2019, it was announced that the Mugabe family had accepted the Mnangagwa government's request to have Mugabe buried at Heroes' Acre Cemetery and to have his burial be delayed for 30 days. The Mugabe family had initially rejected the government's burial plan and intended for him to be buried in Zvimba on either 16 or 17 September, a day later than the government's proposal.

On 14 September 2019, Mugabe's state funeral, which was open to the public, was held at the National Sports Stadium, with an aerial photo showing the 60,000 capacity stadium to be about a quarter full. The funeral was attended by leaders and former leaders of various African countries, among them were Mnangagwa, Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia, Olusegun Obasanjo of Nigeria, Sam Nujoma, Hifikepunye Pohamba and Hage Geingob of Namibia, Joseph Kabila of DR Congo, Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya and Cyril Ramaphosa of South Africa.

On 26 September 2019, Nick Mangwana stated that Mugabe would be buried in his home town of Kutama "to respect the wishes of families of deceased heroes". The burial took place in the courtyard of his home in Kutama on 28 September 2019.

Ideology

Mugabeism as a form of populist reason is a multifaceted phenomenon requiring a multi-pronged approach to decipher its various meanings. At one level it represents pan-African memory and patriotism and at another level it manifests itself as a form of radical left-nationalism dedicated to resolving intractable national and agrarian questions. Yet, to others, it is nothing but a symbol of crisis, chaos and tyranny emanating from the exhaustion of nationalism.

— Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni

Mugabe embraced African nationalism and anti-colonialism during the 1960s. Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni characterised "Mugabeism" as a populist movement that was "marked by ideological simplicity, emptiness, vagueness, imprecision, and multi-class character", further noting that it was "a broad church". He also characterised it as a form of "left-nationalism", which consistently railed against imperialism and colonialism. He also argued that it was a form of nativism, which was permeated by a strong "cult of victimisation" in which a binary view was propagated where Africa was a "victim" and the West was its "tormentor". He suggested that it had been influenced by a wide range of ideologies, among them forms of Marxism like Stalinism and Maoism, as well as African nationalist ideologies like Nkrumaism, Ujamaa, Garveyism, Négritude, Pan-Africanism, and African neo-traditionalism. Mugabeism sought to deal with the problem of white settler racism by engaging in a project of anti-white racism that sought to deny white Zimbabweans citizenship by constantly referring to them as "amabhunu/Boers", thus enabling their removal from their land.

ZANU–PF claimed that it was influenced by Marxism–Leninism; Onslow and Redding stated that in contrast to the Marxist emphasis on the urban proletariat as the main force of socio-economic change, Mugabe's party accorded that role to the rural peasantry. As a result of this pro-rural view, they argued, Mugabe and the ZANU–PF demonstrated an anti-urban bias. The English academic Claire Palley met Mugabe in 1962, later noting that "he struck me as not so much a doctrinaire Marxist but an old-fashioned African nationalist", while Tekere claimed that for Mugabe, Marxism-Leninism was "just rhetoric" with "no genuine vision or belief behind it". Carington noted that while Mugabe used Marxist rhetoric during the Lancaster House negotiations, "of course he didn't actually practise what he preached, did he? Once in office he became a capitalist". Mugabe has stated that "socialism has to be much more Christian than capitalism". The Zimbabwean scholar George Shire described Mugabe's policies as being "broadly-speaking" social-democratic.

During the 1980s, Mugabe indicated his desire to transform Zimbabwe from a multi-party state into a one-party state. In 1984 he stated that "the one-party state is more in keeping with African tradition. It makes for greater unity for the people. It puts all opinions under one umbrella, whether these opinions are radical or reactionary". The political scientist Sue Onslow and historian Sean Redding stated that Zimbabwe's situation was "more complex than pure venial dictatorship", but that it was an "ideo-dictatorship". Mugabe openly admired Nicolae Ceaușescu of Romania, praising him just before he was overthrown in December 1989.

Ndlovu-Gatsheni argued that since the mid-1990s, Mugabe's rhetoric and speeches came to be dominated by three main themes: an obsession with a perceived British threat to re-colonise Zimbabwe, to transfer the land controlled by white farmers to the black population, and issues of belonging and patriotism. References to the Rhodesian Bush War featured prominently in his speeches. The scholar of African studies Abiodun Alao noted that Mugabe was determined to "take advantage of the past in order to secure a firm grip on national security".

David Blair stated that "Mugabe's collected writings amount to nothing more than crude Marxism, couched in the ponderous English of the mission school", remarking that they were heavily informed by Karl Marx, Mao Zedong, and Frantz Fanon, and displayed little originality. Blair noted that Mugabe's writings called for "command economics in a peasant society, mixed with anti-colonial nationalism", and that in this he held "the same opinions as almost every other African guerrilla leader" of that period. Mugabe argued that following the overthrow of European colonial regimes, Western countries continued to keep African countries in a state of subservience because they desired the continent's natural resources while preventing it from industrializing.

Personal life

Mugabe meeting Russian president Vladimir Putin in 2015

Mugabe measured a little over 1.70 metres (5 ft 7 in), and exhibited what his biographer David Blair described as "curious, effeminate mannerisms". Mugabe took great care with his appearance, typically wearing a three-piece suit, and insisted that members of his cabinet dressed in a similar Anglophile fashion. On taking power in 1980, Mugabe's hallmark was his wide-rimmed glasses, and he was also known for his tiny moustache. Unlike a number of other African leaders, Mugabe did not seek to mythologise his childhood. He avoided smoking and drinking, and—according to his first biographers, David Smith and Colin Simpson—had "enormous affection for children". During his early life he had an operation on his genitals which generated rumours that he had only one testicle or half a penis; such rumours were used by opponents to ridicule him and by supporters to bolster the claim that he was willing to make severe sacrifices for the revolutionary cause.

Mugabe spoke English fluently with an adopted English accent when pronouncing certain words. He was also a fan of the English game of cricket, stating that "cricket civilizes people and creates good gentlemen". Blair noted that this cultivation of British traits suggested that Mugabe respected and perhaps admired Britain while at the same time resenting and loathing the country. Heidi Holland suggested that these Anglophile traits arose in early life, as Mugabe—who had long experienced the anti-black racism of Rhodesian society—"grasped Englishness as an antidote" to the "self-loathing" induced by societal racism.

The academic Blessing-Miles Tendi stated that Mugabe was "an extremely complex figure, not easily captured by conventional categories". Blair described him as an "exceptionally complex personality". Smith and Simpson noted that the Zimbabwean leader had been "a serious young man, something of a loner, diligent, hard-working, a voracious reader who used every minute of his time, not much given to laughter: but above all, single-minded". Blair commented that Mugabe's "self-discipline, intelligence and appetite for hard work were remarkable", adding that his "prime characteristics" were "ruthlessness and resilience". Blair argued that Mugabe shared many character traits with Ian Smith, stating that they were both "proud, brave, stubborn, charismatic, deluded fantasists".

With his poor childhood development record, even minor criticism would be experienced as a wound by Mugabe. He is a person who cannot tolerate difference. Being profoundly doubtful about himself, he is oversensitive to the idea that he is not as good as everyone else. People are either with him or against him. Differences of opinion are provocative and hurtful to Mugabe, who may think that compromise reduces him.

— Heidi Holland

Meredith described Mugabe as having a "soft-spoken demeanour, ... broad intellect, and ... articulate manner", all of which disguised his "hardened and single-minded ambition". Ndlovu-Gatsheni characterized him as "one of the most charismatic African leaders", highlighting that he was "very eloquent" and was able to make "fine speeches". Jonathan Moyo, who briefly served as Mugabe's information minister before falling out with him, stated that the President could "express himself well, that is his great strength". Tendi stated that Mugabe had a natural wittiness, but often hid this behind "an outwardly pensive and austere manner and his penchant for ceremony and tradition". Heidi Holland suggested that due to his "dysfunctional" upbringing, Mugabe had a "fragile self-image", describing him as "a man cut off from his feelings, devoid of ordinary warmth and humanity". According to her, Mugabe had a "marked emotional immaturity", and was homophobic, as well as racist and xenophobic.

According to Meredith, Mugabe presented himself as "articulate, thoughtful, and conciliatory" after his 1980 election victory. Blair noted that at this period of his career, Mugabe displayed "genuine magnanimity and moral courage" despite his "intense personal reasons for feeling bitterness and hatred" toward the members of the former regime. Following his dealing with Mugabe during the 1979 negotiations, Michael Pallister, head of the British Foreign Office, described Mugabe as having "a very sharp, sometimes rather aggressive, and unpleasant manner". The British diplomat Peter Longworth stated that in private, Mugabe was "very charming and very articulate and he's not devoid of humour. It's very difficult to relate the man you meet with the man ranting on television". Norman stated that "I always found him personable and honourable in his dealings. He also had a warm side to him which I saw quite clearly sometimes".

Colin Legum, a journalist with The Observer, argued that Mugabe had a "paranoidal personality", in that while he did not suffer from clinical paranoia, he did behave in a paranoid fashion when placed under severe and sustained pressure. Mugabe biographer Andrew Norman suggested that the leader may have suffered from antisocial personality disorder. Several Mugabe biographers have observed that he had an obsession with accruing power. According to Meredith, "power for Mugabe was not a means to an end, but the end itself." Conversely, Onslow and Redding suggested that Mugabe's craving for power stemmed from "ideological and personal reasons" and his belief in the illegitimacy of his political opposition. Denis Norman, a white politician who served in Mugabe's cabinet for many years, commented that "Mugabe isn't a flashy man driven by wealth but he does enjoy power. That's always been his motivation".

Marriages and children

See also: Mugabe family
Mugabe's first wife, Sally Hayfron, in 1983

According to Holland, Mugabe's first wife, Sally Hayfron, was Mugabe's "confidante and only real friend", being "one of the few people who could challenge Mugabe's ideas without offending him". Their only son, Michael Nhamodzenyika Mugabe, born 27 September 1963, died on 26 December 1966 from cerebral malaria in Ghana where Sally was working while Mugabe was in prison. Sally Mugabe was a trained teacher who asserted her position as an independent political activist and campaigner.

Mugabe called on Zimbabwe's media to refer to his wife as "Amai" ("Mother of the Nation"), although many Zimbabweans resented the fact that she was a foreigner. She was appointed as the head of ZANU–PF's women's league, and was involved in a number of charitable operations, and was widely regarded as corrupt in these dealings. During Mugabe's premiership she suffered from renal failure, and initially had to travel to Britain for dialysis until Soames arranged for a dialysis machine to be sent to Zimbabwe.

While married to Hayfron, in 1987 Mugabe began an extra-marital affair with his secretary, Grace Marufu; she was 41 years his junior and at the time was married to Stanley Goreraza. In 1988 she bore Mugabe a daughter, Bona, and in 1990 a son, Robert. The relationship was kept secret from the Zimbabwean public; Hayfron was aware of it. According to her niece Patricia Bekele, with whom she was particularly close, Hayfron was not happy that Mugabe had an affair with Marufu but "she did what she used to tell me to do: 'Talk to your pillow if you have problems in your marriage. Never, ever, humiliate your husband.' Her motto was to carry on in gracious style". Hayfron died in 1992 from a chronic kidney ailment.

Following Hayfron's death in 1992, Mugabe and Marufu were married in a large Catholic ceremony in August 1996. As First Lady of Zimbabwe, Grace gained a reputation for indulging her love of luxury, with a particular interest in shopping, clothes, and jewellery. These lavish shopping sprees led to her receiving the nickname "Gucci Grace". She too developed a reputation for corruption. In 1997, Grace Mugabe gave birth to the couple's third child, Chatunga Bellarmine. Robert Mugabe Jr. and his younger brother, Chatunga, are known for posting their lavish lifestyle on social media, which drew accusations from opposition politician Tendai Biti that they were wasting Zimbabwean taxpayers' money.

Public image and legacy

The story of Robert Mugabe is a microcosm of what bedevils African democracy and economic recovery at the beginning of the 21st century. It is a classic case of a genuine hero—the guerrilla idol who conquered the country's former leader and his white supremacist regime—turning into a peevish autocrat whose standard response to those suggesting he steps down is to tell them to get lost. It is also the story of activists who try to make a better society but bear the indelible scars of the old system. Mugabe's political education came from the autocrat Ian Smith, who had learnt his formative lessons from imperious British colonisers.

— Heidi Holland

By the twenty-first century, Mugabe was regarded as one of the world's most controversial political leaders. According to The Black Scholar journal, "depending on who you listen to...Mugabe is either one of the world's great tyrants or a fearless nationalist who has incurred the wrath of the West." He has been widely described as a "dictator", a "tyrant", and a "threat", and has been referred to as one of Africa's "most brutal" leaders. At the same time he continued to be regarded as a hero in many Third World countries and received a warm reception when travelling throughout Africa. For many in Southern Africa, he remained one of the "grand old men" of the African liberation movement. Mugabe was known to have close ties with former Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad.

According to Ndlovu-Gatsheni, within ZANU–PF, Mugabe was regarded as a "demi-god" who was feared and rarely challenged. Within the ZANU movement, a cult of personality began to be developed around Mugabe during the Bush War and was consolidated after 1980. Mugabe had a considerable following within Zimbabwe, with David Blair noting that "it would be wrong to imply that he lacked genuine popularity" in the country. Holland believed that the "great majority" of Zimbabwe's population supported him "enthusiastically" during the first twenty years of his regime. His strongholds of support were Zimbabwe's Shona-dominated regions of Mashonaland, Manicaland, and Masvingo, while he remained far less popular in the non-Shona areas of Matabeleland and Bulawayo, and among the Zimbabwean diaspora living abroad.

At the time of his 1980 election victory, Mugabe was internationally acclaimed as a revolutionary hero who was embracing racial reconciliation, and for the first decade of his governance he was widely regarded as "one of post-colonial Africa's most progressive leaders". David Blair argued that while Mugabe did exhibit a "conciliatory phase" between March 1980 and February 1982, his rule was otherwise "dominated by a ruthless quest to crush his opponents and remain in office at whatever cost". In 2011, the scholar Blessing-Miles Tendi stated that "Mugabe is often presented in the international media as the epitome of the popular leader gone awry: the independence struggle hero who seemed initially a progressive egalitarian, but has gradually been corrupted through his attachment to power during a long and increasingly repressive spell in office." Tendi argued that this was a misleading assessment, because Mugabe had displayed repressive tendencies from his early years in office, namely through the repression of ZAPU in Matabeleland. Abiodun Alao concurred, suggesting that Mugabe's approach had not changed over the course of his leadership, but merely that international attention had intensified in the twenty-first century. For many Africans, Mugabe exposed the double standards of Western countries; the latter had turned a blind eye to the massacre of over 20,000 black Ndebele civilians in the Gukarakundi but strongly censured the Zimbabwean government when a small number of white farmers were killed during the land seizures.

Example of foreign criticism: a demonstration against Mugabe's regime next to the Zimbabwe embassy in London (mid-2006)

During the guerrilla war, Ian Smith referred to Mugabe as "the apostle of Satan". George Shire expressed the view that there was "a strong racist animus" against Mugabe within Zimbabwe, and that this had typically been overlooked by Western media representations of the country. Mugabe himself was accused of racism; John Sentamu, the Uganda-born Archbishop of York in the United Kingdom, called Mugabe "the worst kind of racist dictator", for having "targeted the whites for their apparent riches". Desmond Tutu stated that Mugabe became "increasingly insecure, he's hitting out. One just wants to weep. It's very sad." South African President Nelson Mandela was also critical of Mugabe, referring to him as a politician who "despise the very people who put in power and think it's a privilege to be there for eternity".

Writing for the Human Rights Quarterly, Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann claimed that there was "clear evidence that Mugabe was guilty of crimes against humanity". In 2009, Gregory Stanton, then President of the International Association of Genocide Scholars, and Helen Fein, then executive director of the Institute for the Study of Genocide, published a letter in The New York Times stating that there was sufficient evidence of crimes against humanity to bring Mugabe to trial in front of the International Criminal Court. Australia and New Zealand had previously called for this in 2005, and a number of Zimbabwean NGOs did so in 2006.

A 2005 article from the New American titled "Democide in Zimbabwe" says that Mugabe reduced the population of Zimbabwe by millions in just a few years.

In 1994, Mugabe received an honorary knighthood from the British state; this was stripped from him at the advice of the UK government in 2008. Mugabe held several honorary degrees and doctorates from international universities, awarded to him in the 1980s; at least three of these have since been revoked. In June 2007, he became the first international figure ever to be stripped of an honorary degree by a British university, when the University of Edinburgh withdrew the degree awarded to him in 1984. On 12 June 2008, the University of Massachusetts Amherst Board of Trustees voted to revoke the law degree awarded to Mugabe in 1986, the first time one of its honorary degrees has been revoked. In the month after being deposed, but before he died, many of the public references to Mugabe – street names, for example – had been removed from public places.

See also

References

Footnotes

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  4. ^ Meredith 2002, p. 19.
  5. Smith & Simpson 1981, p. 11; Blair 2002, p. 17.
  6. ^ Blair 2002, p. 26.
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  12. Blair 2002, p. 18; Meredith 2002, pp. 20–21.
  13. Holland 2008, pp. 6–7.
  14. Blair 2002, pp. 17–18.
  15. Smith & Simpson 1981, p. 11; Blair 2002, p. 18; Holland 2008, p. 224.
  16. Blair 2002, p. 18; Meredith 2002, p. 21; Norman 2008, p. 15.
  17. Meredith 2002, p. 21.
  18. Smith & Simpson 1981, p. 15; Norman 2008, p. 16.
  19. Smith & Simpson 1981, p. 12; Blair 2002, p. 18; Norman 2008, p. 16.
  20. Meredith 2002, p. 21; Norman 2008, p. 16.
  21. Smith & Simpson 1981, p. 14; Blair 2002, p. 18; Meredith 2002, p. 21; Norman 2008, p. 16.
  22. ^ Blair 2002, p. 18; Norman 2008, p. 16.
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  26. Blair 2002, p. 19.
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Bibliography

Further reading

Party political offices
Preceded byHerbert Chitepo Leader of Zimbabwe African National Union
1975–1987
Position abolished
New political party
Merger of ZANU and ZAPU
Leader of Zimbabwe African National Union – Patriotic Front
1987–2017
Succeeded byEmmerson Mnangagwa
Political offices
Preceded byAbel Muzorewaas Prime Minister of Zimbabwe Rhodesia Prime Minister of Zimbabwe
1980–1987
VacantPosition suspendedTitle next held byMorgan Tsvangirai
Preceded byCanaan Banana President of Zimbabwe
1987–2017
Succeeded byEmmerson Mnangagwa
Diplomatic posts
Preceded byZail Singh Secretary General of the Non-Aligned Movement
1986–1989
Succeeded byJanez Drnovšek
Preceded byPaul Biya Chairperson of the Organisation of African Unity
1997–1998
Succeeded byBlaise Compaoré
Preceded byMohamed Ould Abdel Aziz Chairperson of the African Union
2015–2016
Succeeded byIdriss Déby
Robert Mugabe
Revolutionary
activity
Premiership &
presidency
Elections
Popular
culture
Family
Residences
Related
Related topics
Zimbabwe Ministers of the Zimbabwean Government of Robert Mugabe
June 2000 – February 2009
2008 Zimbabwean presidential election and subsequent events
Candidates
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See also
Presidents of Zimbabwe and its antecedents
 Rhodesia
(1965–1979, an unrecognised state)
 Zimbabwe Rhodesia
(1979, an unrecognised state)
 Zimbabwe
(since 1980, a recognised state)
*Acting President
Prime ministers of Zimbabwe and its antecedents
 Southern Rhodesia
(1923–1965, the internationally accepted legal name until 1980)
 Rhodesia and Nyasaland
(1953–1963, of which Southern Rhodesia was part)
 Rhodesia
(1965–1979, an unrecognised state)
 Zimbabwe Rhodesia
(1979, an unrecognised state)
 Zimbabwe
(since 1980, a recognised state)
Chairpersons of the Organisation of African Unity and the African Union
Organisation of
African Unity
African Union
Chairs of the Non-Aligned Movement
Members of the 1st Parliament of Zimbabwe (1980–1985)
Prime Minister: Robert Mugabe (ZANU–PF); Leader of the Opposition: Ian Smith (RF)
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