Yahoo – AFP, Reagan Mashavave, 15 Sep 2015
Harare (AFP) - Zimbabwe's 91-year-old President Robert Mugabe read the wrong speech at the opening of a new session of parliament on Tuesday, repeating an address he gave to the legislature last month.
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Zimbabwe
President Robert Mugabe -- who has been in power since 1980 --
delivers a
speech to lawmakers in Harare, on September 15, 2015 (AFP
Photo/Jekesai
Njikizana)
|
Harare (AFP) - Zimbabwe's 91-year-old President Robert Mugabe read the wrong speech at the opening of a new session of parliament on Tuesday, repeating an address he gave to the legislature last month.
The veteran
leader read the 25-minute speech through to the end, apparently unaware that he
was delivering the same text he presented during his state of the nation
address last month.
"There
has been a mix-up of speeches resulting in a situation where... the president
delivered the wrong speech," said presidential spokesman George Charamba.
"The
mix-up happened in his secretarial office," Charamba was quoted as saying
in the state-owned Herald newspaper's online edition.
"The
error is sincerely regretted and corrective measures are being
considered."
Mugabe,
Africa's oldest leader, earlier this year fell down the steps leading from a
podium. He was unhurt, but video of the fall went viral on social media.
The opening
of parliament was also tarnished by claims by opposition legislators that they
had received anonymous death threats warning them against booing Mugabe during
his address.
Last month,
they booed and heckled him during his state of the nation address in parliament
-- which is the speech he repeated on Tuesday.
Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC) chief whip Innocent Gonese said seven opposition
lawmakers received SMS text messages on their mobile phones warning them not to
disrupt Mugabe's address.
"The
message is coming from a number which is not reflecting but it's titled
'death'," Gonese told journalists after Mugabe's speech.
"It
warns the members concerned to know that immunity ends at parliament and once
they step out of parliament that parliamentary immunity does not operate."
Gonese said
the party, led by Morgan Tsvangirai, is "worried" about the threats
to its lawmakers.
The MDC in
a statement called on Mugabe to resign over the blunder, saying it showed that
"he is too old."
"This
clearly goes to show that Robert Mugabe no longer has the requisite mental
faculties that are needed for him to continue in office as the Head of
State," said party spokesman Obert Gutu.
"The
MDC would like to call upon Robert Mugabe to immediately tender his resignation
as the President of Zimbabwe."
Gutu said
Mugabe "is way past his prime" when he failed to recognise that he
was reading the wrong speech in parliament.
"This
is a sure sign of senility and grossly failing mental and physical
health," he said.
"Zimbabwe
doesn't deserve to be run by a nonagenarian President who, in fact, is long
overdue for retirement."

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