Zimbabwe’s Mugabe Denounces Party He Founded Day Before Poll

Former Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe holds a press briefing at his residence in Harare, July 29, 2018, on the eve of the country's elections.

Zimbabwe’s former president, Robert Mugabe, lashed out Sunday at the political party he founded, saying he could not vote for the ruling ZANU-PF in Monday’s poll.

This election is the first in 38 years without Mugabe on the ballot as head of ZANU-PF. Mugabe, now 94, resigned in November under pressure from the military. His longtime deputy, 75-year-old Emmerson Mnangagwa, took over and is now running for president.

WATCH: Anita Powell's video report

Your browser doesn’t support HTML5

Zimbabwe’s Mugabe Denounces Former Party Day Before Elections

“I cannot vote for those who have tormented me,” said Mugabe, who invited journalists to his Blue Roof mansions in a wealthy Harare suburb. He spoke, slowly but uninterrupted, for more than two hours, as an aide intervened occasionally to prop up his slumping body with tiger-print cushions.

When asked directly who he would choose in Monday’s poll, Mugabe demurred. Although 23 candidates registered to run for president, the poll has effectively come down to a two-man contest, with Mnangagwa facing stiff competition from the new head of the largest opposition party, 40-year-old Nelson Chamisa.

“I cannot vote for ZANU-PF,” Mugabe said. “I cannot vote for those who have cause me to be in this condition.”

He said ruled out several other candidates: “I have also said, Ma [Joice] Mujuru and Ma [Thokozani] Khupe don’t offer very much. So there is Chamisa left.”

Mugabe both directly and indirectly denounced his party and its new leader, saying, “it was a thorough coup d’Etat” that saw him lose power. He complained of his treatment over the last seven months, saying family members had been harassed and intimidated, and bemoaned that his government pension amounted to $460,000 and two houses. His Chinese-built mansion, identifiable by its pagoda-style blue roof, he said, is falling down.

He also bemoaned the state of affairs in Zimbabwe, saying freedoms and rule of law have eroded since his departure. But critics and rights groups have repeatedly and credibly accused Mugabe’s regime of human rights abuses, of stifling free speech, and of rigging elections. The U.S. and European nations put Mugabe and his top cronies on sanctions lists over those allegations.

Mugabe said he hoped the election would bring a new day for Zimbabwe — which is the same thing many candidates, and many voters, are also hoping for.

“I have, during all this time, cried for a return, our return to constitutionality, our return to legality, our return to freedom for our people, an environment in which our people would be free”