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Mugabe’s possible successor falls ill, flown to South Africa

Tuesday August 15 2017
Mnangagwa

Zimbabwe's vice president, Emmerson Mnangagwa(left), who is seen as favourite to succeed President Robert Mugabe. AFP PHOTO | JEKESAI NJIKIZANA

By AFP

Zimbabwe’s vice president, Emmerson Mnangagwa, who is seen as favourite to succeed President Robert Mugabe, has been flown to South Africa for emergency medical care, officials said on Monday.

Mr Mnangagwa, 74, fell ill at a rally where Mugabe spoke on Saturday in the southern town of Gwanda, and suffered from a suspected food poisoning.

“Some of his doctors are in South Africa,” health minister David Parirenyatwa told reporters in the capital Harare.

“He is well. He is much better, he is almost jovial. He was vomiting with diarrhoea and he became dehydrated. He has done a battery of tests.” With Mugabe, 93, in increasingly frail health, speculation over his successor has focused on Mr Mnangagwa, a veteran regime loyalist.

Mr Mnangagwa’s main rivals within the ruling Zanu-PF party are the younger “Generation 40” or “G40” group, which is seen as supported by Mugabe’s wife Grace, who could herself be a potential presidential candidate.

READ: President Mugabe's wife asks him to name successor

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Mr Mugabe, who often travels abroad for medical treatment, has refused to name a successor. “Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa is not yet back from hospital in Johannesburg,” Mugabe said in a speech on Monday.

Zimbabwe is due to hold elections next year, with opposition parties in talks to try to unite and field one candidate to oppose Mugabe.

READ: Zimbabwe's opposition unites to take on Mugabe

Past elections have been tainted by violence and intimidation by ZANU-PF operatives.
“We hope the election exercise will be done in peace,” Mr Mugabe said.

“We need peace within our party. We need peace between our party and others. We need national peace in our country.”

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