Even In A Village Old People Have The Right To An Opinion, Charamba On Mugabe.
25 February 2019
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Correspondent|PRESIDENT Emerson Mnangagwa’s spokesperson has dismissed sentiments by former President Robert Mugabe over the shooting and killing of unarmed civilians as the irrelevant opinion of an aged man.

During his 95th birthday celebrations last week the former president took Harare to task over the shooting of defenceless civilians in August last year and in January this year, following the deployment of soldiers as protests and unrest erupted, saying the government was showing bad leadership

Presidential Spokesman George Charamba responded by deriding Mugabe saying that even in a village old people have the right to an opinion.

“Former President Mugabe is an elderly man whose age is quite advanced. At that age, people tend to have some feebleness of the mind,” said Charamba.

The rantings of an old man: That’s how George Charamba takes Mugabe’s sentiments
Nick Ndavaningi Mnagwana, the Ministry of Information’s permanent secretary, joined in the dismissal of Mugabe’s assertions by adding that Mugabe was no superman but in fact rather decrepit.

“That state of decrepitude manifests in different ways. Some of the ways are that one is taken advantage of by having words deceptively attributed to them and, in other cases, manipulated to say things they have no lucidity or presence of mind to make sense of,” said Mnagwana.

The permanent secretary added that most people aged 95 could not be held responsible for their actions or words. But despite this Zimbabweans would continue to remember the positive contributions Mugabe had made.

Under Mugabe’s leadership many unarmed civilians were killed. One of the more infamous incidents was the Gukurahundi series of massacres of Ndebele civilians carried out by the Zimbabwe National Army from early 1983 to late 1987 where an estimated 20 000 people were slaughtered.