(Reuters/NAN) Former Zimbabwean leader Robert Mugabe has
died aged 95, the country’s President Emmerson Mnangagwa said on his official
Twitter account.
Mugabe died in Singapore, where he has often received
medical treatment in recent years, a source with direct knowledge of the matter
told Reuters.
“It is with the utmost sadness that I announce the passing
on of Zimbabwe’s founding father and former President, Cde Robert Mugabe,” a
post on Mnangagwa’s official presidential Twitter account said.
In November, Mnangagwa said Mugabe was no longer able to
walk when he had been admitted to a hospital in Singapore, without saying what
treatment Mugabe had been undergoing.
Mugabe, who ruled the southern African nation for nearly
four decades since independence from Britain in 1980, was forced to resign in
November 2017 after an army coup.
He was feted as an African liberation hero and champion of
racial reconciliation when he first came to power in a nation divided by nearly
a century of white colonial rule.
Following are key milestones in the life of Zimbabwe’s
former leader Robert Mugabe.
1924 – Mugabe is born on Feb. 21 in what was then British-ruled
Southern Rhodesia.
1960s – Mugabe campaigns for Zimbabwe’s independence and is
imprisoned in 1964 for political agitation.
While incarcerated, he earns two law degrees from the
University of London External Programme.
1974 – Released from prison, he escapes to Mozambique where
Zimbabwe African National Union guerrilla fighters elect him to lead their
struggle against white minority rule.
1980 – Mugabe’s ZANU-PF party wins independent Zimbabwe’s
first election. He takes office as prime minister on April 18.
1982 – Mugabe deploys North Korean-trained troops to crush
an insurgency by former guerrillas loyal to his liberation war rival, Joshua
Nkomo.
Government forces are accused of involvement in the killing
of 20,000 civilians, which Mugabe denies.
1987 – He becomes president with sweeping executive powers
after changes to the constitution and signs a unity pact with Nkomo, who becomes
one of his two deputies.
1990 – ZANU-PF and Mugabe win parliamentary and presidential
elections.
1998 – An economic crisis marked by high interest rates and
inflation sparks riots.
2000 – Zimbabweans reject a new constitution in a
referendum, Mugabe’s first defeat at the ballot box.
Thousands of independence war veterans and their allies,
backed by the government, seize white-owned farms, saying the land was
illegally appropriated by white settlers.
2001 – The United States puts a financial freeze on Mugabe’s
government in response to land seizures, beginning a wave of Western sanctions.
Mugabe’s relationship with the West, especially the U.S. and Britain, never
recovered.
2002 – Mugabe wins a disputed presidential vote, which
observers condemn as flawed.
Zimbabwe is suspended from the British Commonwealth over
accusations of human rights abuses and economic mismanagement.
Mugabe pulls his country from the group the following year.
2008 – Hyperinflation reaches 500 billion per cent, the
nadir of an economic implosion that forces millions of people to leave the
country, many to neighboring South Africa.
– Mugabe loses a presidential vote but wins the run-off
after opponent Morgan Tsvangirai withdraws citing violence against his
supporters by security forces and war veterans. A power-sharing agreement is
signed.
2010 – Media reports say Mugabe is seriously ill with
cancer, speculation that continues in following years.
2013 – Mugabe wins another disputed presidential vote.
Western observers site multiple accounts of electoral fraud.
2016 – Protesters led by a pastor stage the biggest show of
defiance against Mugabe in a decade, prompting speculation about life after the
veteran leader.
2017 – Mugabe is forced to resign in November following an
army coup and is replaced by Emmerson Mnangagwa, the man he had fired as his
deputy two weeks earlier.
2018 – Mugabe is seen in public for the first time since
leaving power. He berates his former ZANU-PF allies and backs opposition leader
Nelson Chamisa on the eve of an election.
2019 – Mugabe travels several times to Singapore to seek
medical treatment as pictures of the gaunt, gray-haired former leader circulate
on social media.
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