Zimbabwean President, Robert Mugabe, has alleged that his former Vice President and other top officials in his ruling Zanu-PF sought the services of Nigerian witch doctors in a bid to kill him.
According to the Africa Review, President Mugabe made the bizarre claims last weekend as he celebrated his 91st birthday at a lavish party hosted by the party’s communist-styled 21st February movement.
The veteran ruler, in power since Zimbabwe’s independence in 1980, claims he was ordained by God
to rule forever, according to the report. He told party supporters at the celebrations that sacked Vice-President Joice Mujuru used two Nigerian witch doctors in her alleged plot to have him killed.
Ms Mujuru was sacked together with more than 10 Cabinet ministers for allegedly plotting to assassinate President Mugabe and being involved in corrupt activities. The former VP has repeatedly denied the allegations and some of the ministers were preparing a court application to challenge their expulsion from Zanu-PF.
President Mugabe said Ms Mujuru was now too desperate to push him out of power even after he won an election in 2013.
“We managed to know what (Ms) Mujuru was doing at her house, even consulting witchdoctors,” he claimed.
Recently she invited two Nigerian witchdoctors. We heard that they were specialists in the field of witchcraft. They were specialists, yes, but specialists in robbing people, foolish people.”
He said the Nigerians ordered Ms Mujuru to buy chickens that were named after herself, the President, his wife and Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa. The President claimed the former Vice-President who was his deputy for 10 years, performed the rituals naked.
“Where do these Nigerians get the powers to entrap the soul of a human being into a chicken or sheep and then kill him? God is for us all. I also go to church, I do not believe in superstition. We were taught God’s teachings.”
Despite claims made since October last year that Ms Mujuru plotted to kill President Mugabe, she has not been charged with any crime. President Mugabe has repeatedly threatened that the sacked government officials would be sent to jail for alleged corruption, but no action has been taken up to now.
Last year, Nigeria’s Foreign Affairs ministry summoned Zimbabwean envoy in Abuja Stanley Kunjeku to protest after President Mugabe said Nigerians were corrupt. The Nigerian government at the time said it had lodged ‘the strongest protest’ against the veteran ruler’s statements