Cde Robert Mugabe planned to return to the country at the
end of this month and mutually agreed to meet President Emmerson Mnangagwa upon
his homecoming before his untimely death last Friday, Director-General in the
President’s Office Mr Isaac Moyo said.
DG Moyo, who was the point man in liaisons between the
State and the former First Family, said the former President died around 4am at
Gleneagles Hospital in Singapore, despite having briefly shown signs of
improvement earlier in the week.
Cde Mugabe spent five months receiving treatment in
Singapore.
The State materially supported Cde Mugabe and his family’s
upkeep during the period.
In an exclusive hour-long interview with The Sunday Mail
yesterday, in which he described intricate details of his time with the
Mugabes, Mr Moyo gave details of how he had learnt of the devastating news of
Cde Mugabe’s demise in the wee hours of Friday, after having communicated daily
with Mrs Mugabe last week.
“Last Saturday, I got a call from Amai Mugabe and she said
that the former President had been admitted to hospital. We again spoke on
Sunday and she said there was not much change.
“We spoke earlier in the week and she said that his
condition had improved. However, on Wednesday night, she said there had been a
significant deterioration in his condition.
“That day, she spoke in an agonised voice and I did the
best I could to comfort her. I spoke to her again on Thursday, in the morning
and in the evening and she said the situation was really bad.
“When I woke up at around 4am on day morning, I saw a
missed WhatsApp call from the former First Lady and I immediately sensed that
something was wrong. Ever since we had communicated, she had not called around
that time.
“Upon returning the call, she conveyed the sad news that
the former President had passed on. She broke down and it was painful hearing
her voice from the other side of the phone,” he said.
Amai Mugabe told him that Cde Mugabe passed on “between two
to three minutes” after the missed call.
Mr Moyo said soon after speaking to the former First Lady,
he conveyed the message to President Mnangagwa, who informed him that he would
call Amai Mugabe to convey his condolences.
“At that point, I needed to advise the President and I
called him just after 4am. Fortunately, the President is the type of person who
picks up his phone, unlike others whom when you call at night you will be lucky
to get answered. He picked up his phone from Cape Town and I broke the news to
him. After that, the President then also called Mai Mugabe to say that he had
heard the news and to convey his condolences.”
DG Moyo said he could hear from the tone of the President
that the news of his former boss had devasted him given the fact that the two
had mutually agreed to meet upon Cde Mugabe’s return.
“The former President hoped he was going to come back home
and that he wished to see the former President upon his return. We had told him
that the President looked forward to seeing him upon his return and he had also
expressed similar sentiments that he would be delighted to meet the President.
And at that time, we were told that the last date of his medical engagements
was the 17th of October and that soon after he would return home. A week after
our return, I then got a call from Mrs Mugabe and she said that the treatment
regime that the former President was having would no longer be extended to
October, it would end in September instead and because of that, they were now
scheduled to come back home at the end of September.”
DG Moyo said since last year, he had developed a cordial
relationship with the Mugabes, characterised by frank engagements with the
couple who freely opened up to him on their concerns.
“For the last year, in fact even before the elections, the
President assigned me to be the link man between former President Cde Robert
Mugabe and his wife . . .
“Members of the Mugabe family like Walter Chidhakwa and
Albert Mugabe (nephews to Cde Mugabe) visited me and told me of their desire to
visit Singapore and from that time I had also informed the President in turn
had tasked me to work with the family, and he tasked me to ensure that they
were able to go.
“We had actually assisted the former first lady’s sister —
Mrs Gumbochuma — to go to Singapore. She did not have a passport and we used
our good relations with the Registrar-General to consider treating her passport
application as a humanitarian emergency.”
DG Moyo said he was surprised to see news that Cde Mugabe
had refused to be buried at the National Heroes Acre.
“I saw it in the newspapers. When we went there to see the
former President, there was absolutely none of that. I was actually surprised
to see it in one of the newspapers. If they had such a feeling, they had
managed to hide it from us. You can see from the description I gave there was
no hint of that. We actually had a very good engagement.
“Even when I engaged with Walter and Albert, they knew what
Government had been doing for the former President, they were full of praise
for the President. They knew that Government had gone out of its way to support
the former President to have stayed that long in Singapore.”
Hospital costs
DG Moyo said last year, Cde Mugabe visited Singapore for
routine medical check-ups before returning home, but this year, doctors had
requested for an extension of his time under treatment.
“He was staying in a house that he was renting privately.
It was not paid by Government, but from his own resources. Government only paid
for his medicals. But the accommodation he paid for himself. It was fairly
small (single storey) Singaporean suburban house that was convenient for his
condition.”
DG Moyo said: “Of course here and there, there were also
moments we had our tensions. I remember when I first went to see him after his
press conference, where he announced he was going to vote for Chamisa. We
really had an exchange that day, but what then emerged was that he said despite
having threatened to vote for Chamisa, he actually did not vote for Chamisa and
I was told on how on the eve of the elections, he had agonised, he could not
sleep. According to the former First Lady, he had woken up around 2am somewhere
and he said he could not sleep and the idea that he would go and vote for
Chamisa was rebuffed, he could not do that.
“And the former First Lady said she then encouraged him to
follow his real wishes and to vote for comrades he has always been with and not
to worry about the small matters between them, and so the former First Lady,
with the concurrence of Cde Mugabe himself, said he had not voted for MDC, but
he had voted correctly, I found that fun and I enjoyed the story.” Sunday Mail
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