The ex-model wife of Vice President Constantino Chiwenga
has spoken out about her bandaged hands and a harrowing story of an explosion
that rocked a Zanu PF rally at White City Stadium in Bulawayo that could have
ended in her being amputated.
In an interview at her Harare home, Marry Chiwenga said she
was undergoing treatment for injuries sustained from the bomb attack which
apparently targeted President Emmerson Mnangagwa.
She also denied claims that she was bleaching her skin
together with her husband, saying the hand injuries were the result of the
Bulawayo bombing.
At least 49 people, including both of Zimbabwe’s vice
presidents Chiwenga and Kembo Mohadi, were injured by the explosion that
occurred close to the VIP podium immediately after Mnangagwa finished his
speech.
Still looking vivacious, it was clear she was not fully
healed, with hands wrapped in bandages that extended up her slightly-swollen
hands to her elbows.
She said her husband — who was also admitted at a top South
African hospital where he was discharged last Wednesday and flew back home via
Manyame Airbase — was also on the mend.
The public acknowledgment is a rare disclosure of a health
matter in the top echelons of the state.
Ailing top officials usually treat such issues as grave
national security secrets, a closely guarded secret even as they appear frail
in public.
In the rare interview with the Daily News on Sunday, she
said the couple were taking care of each other as they recover from the
condition.
Marry said they were doing fine and are not in critical
condition as claimed on social media.
“Why are people concerned about my sickness in that way?
They should instead be praying for me. Was I not part of the bomb blast in
Bulawayo where some people even lost their lives? People should be asking how
their families are carrying on,” she told the Daily News on Sunday.
“I have these bandages on but my hands are no longer
swollen, the bandages are to cover the wounds from infection. Yes, my hands and
legs were affected during that bomb blast, but I am recovering well. I feel
fine. I even go to work and I even drive, I have carried on living as I used
to. But you can’t expect the effects to just disappear.
“I read somewhere where they were saying the Health
minister (deputy minister John Mangwiro) was babysitting us. No, we do not need
anyone to take care of us. He (Chiwenga) is taking care of me and I am taking
care of him,” she said of her husband.
The Daily News on Sunday also asked her about the woman who
claimed to be Chiwenga’s niece who got a “prophecy” from South Africa-based
prophet Alph Lukau, claiming that Chiwenga was a victim of witchcraft.
Marry said they did not even know the woman and that they
did not have relatives in South Africa.
“No, she’s not a relative, I do not know her and the VP
does not know her, and to be honest I didn’t see any prophecy there because the
woman had said the name.
Whatever he said about witchcraft I don’t know, I know what
the doctors told us,” Marry said.
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