By David Smith
During a state banquet
in Pretoria , South
Africa , in April 2015, I had a brief encounter with Grace
Mugabe, the first lady of Zimbabwe .
I was asking her husband, Robert Mugabe, about the question of her succeeding
him as president. “She doesn’t have those ambitions,” began Mugabe, the
spectacles perched on his nose reminiscent of an elderly librarian, a narrow
moustache clinging to his upper lip like a caterpillar.
Suddenly he interrupted himself with mock
alarm: “Careful, there she comes!” The frail 91-year-old, who increasingly
resembles a hanger for his well-tailored suits, remained seated. I rose and
turned to behold his 49-year-old wife, with her cropped hair and long black
dress, lace hanging daintily at the wrist. Grace, who had been the subject of
persistent gossip about a serious illness, was returning from an interlude on
the dancefloor that delighted dinner guests.
“Hello, David Smith of the Guardian. We were just talking about you.”
“Hello, David Smith of the Guardian. We were just talking about you.”
“I
just wanted to ask you if it’s true you might like to be president one day,” I
asked.
Her
hard features, which can resemble a mask with striking dark eyes and sculpted
cheekbones, dissolved into a laugh. She did not deny it. “I don’t know, I don’t
know.”
Just then a band struck up and I beat a
retreat, past the glares of South African protocol mandarins, one of whom
ordered me to leave, snarling: “I hope we never see you again.”
Few
women in Africa provoke such fascination, or
such loathing, as Grace Mugabe. Loyalists describe her as “Amai” (Mother), “The
Lady of the Revelation” or, predictably, “Amazing Grace”, while detractors prefer
“DisGrace”, “Gucci Grace” or “First Shopper”. There are reports that the couple
have substantial foreign properties and multiple offshore bank accounts,
Grace’s overseas shopping expeditions are legendary: she was widely reported to
have spent £75,000 on luxury goods in one day in Paris
in 2003, and to have taken 15 trolley-loads of purchases into the first-class
lounge of Singapore
airport. She has been forced to deny rumours that she has been unfaithful to
the president and defends herself against accusations that she is pampered and
lazy.
The
four-decade age difference between her and her husband has invited urgent
questions about what will happen to her after his death. She stands to lose the
presidential credit card and possibly the luxurious mansion in the Zimbabwean
capital, Harare .
She has grown up in a country where proximity to power is no guarantee of
survival, and knows how quickly loyalties can turn. Mugabe’s long years of
cunning divide and conquer have left the ruling Zanu-PFparty and the country
without an obvious successor, creating an atmosphere among the ruling elite
that seethes with mutual suspicion and treachery, and bitter factional
divisions.
Grace
had always appeared acquiescent, an adornment, mother of the president’s
children. No one, until now, considered that she might have political
ambitions. But late last year, the world met a new Grace Mugabe. Suddenly,
without warning, she transformed from smiling president’s wife to political
player in her own right. In early December, she was elevated to a senior role
in Zanu-PF and confirmed as the new head of its women’s league. She then
embarked on a national promotional trip, nicknamed the “Graceland
tour”, flying across the country to attend a series of rallies, where she
delivered tirades against her husband’s perceived enemies. At one of the
rallies, Grace made her agenda clear. She declared: “They say I want to be
president. Why not? Am I not a Zimbabwean?”
The
political establishment was rocked back on its heels. Ibbo Mandaza, a former
civil servant who has known the president and his wife for years, said: “Grace
was always sedate, sitting in the background looking beautiful. Then suddenly
this woman is someone else you can’t recognise. She was uncouth, unbecoming.”
Part of the rebranding was her award of a PhD in sociology from the University of Zimbabwe in just three months – all the more remarkable because she reportedly once dropped out of a correspondence course at the University of London after failing most of the exams with marks as low as 7%. One academic said: “It’s an embarrassment to the university. Everybody here jokes about it. It made the university a laughing stock.”
Robert and Grace Mugabe |
Part of the rebranding was her award of a PhD in sociology from the University of Zimbabwe in just three months – all the more remarkable because she reportedly once dropped out of a correspondence course at the University of London after failing most of the exams with marks as low as 7%. One academic said: “It’s an embarrassment to the university. Everybody here jokes about it. It made the university a laughing stock.”
She
appeared to be carving out a political identity that would protect her against
the loss of her husband. Having risen from selling chickens in her home village
to working as a receptionist at State House and then becoming first lady, the
prospect of losing everything was unthinkable. One political insider, who did
not wish to be named, said: “The Mugabes are feeling cornered by time and
circumstances. She comes across as this ambitious climber creating an image and
it’s getting worse as she’s getting older. She’s experienced this massive
wealth and doesn’t want to lose that.”
When Muammar Gaddafi was dragged from a drainpipe, beaten and sodomised with a bayonet in 2011, there was cause for sleepless nights in the bed chambers of many of
At
a rally a year later, Mugabe cited the fall of Gaddafi and Saddam Hussein and
again swiped at the west: “All of them were killed and these nations are left
in chaos as people fight among each other. Beware that is what they are seeking
when you hear them speak of removing Mugabe because they say he is the
impediment to our goals.”
Mugabe’s
reference to Gaddafi’s family was no accident. The first lady, who turns 50
this month, has made enemies among the political elite and the general
population; she and the couple’s three children may be vulnerable. Her son by a
previous husband was last month convicted of manslaughter and fined the
equivalent of £520 for running over and killing a man, which sparked protests
at his lenient treatment. Grace’s abrupt emergence on the political stage last
year can be seen as a frantic act of self-preservation. At one rally she
inveighed against the then vice-president Joice Mujuru: “She has been telling
people that once Mugabe dies, she will draw me close to her, and my secretaries
told me that she will drag me in the streets, with people laughing while my
flesh sticks on the tarmac.”
Grace
is viewed as an opportunistic, greedy, selfish, aggressive woman motivated by
fear of her husband’s death. “Today Grace is viewed as an opportunistic,
greedy, selfish, aggressive woman motivated by fear of her husband’s death,”
said Andy Moyse, a veteran Zimbabwean journalist. “She’s going to be terribly
exposed once he’s gone because there’s no political structure to save her.
She’s trying to entrench her position and her assets.”
Robert
Mugabe was already a political prisoner in Rhodesia
when Grace Marufu was born in Benoni ,
South Africa .
Like many Zimbabweans, Grace’s parents had crossed the border to look for
employment. Her father, Johnston Marufu, worked in Johannesburg for several years. Grace, the
youngest of five children, was five years old when the family left South Africa in
1970. In
that time, she formed some impressions of the country’s apartheid regime, but
her formative years were spent in rural Zimbabwe .
As
a young girl, Grace lived in Sadza, a village in Mashonaland East province,
150km south of the capital, Harare .
Even now the signs of its butcher, grocer and “bottle store” display the bold,
unironic fonts of a bygone age. Maize grows in the garden of the modest white
farmhouse Grace once shared with her aunt. Just in front of its barbed wire
fence stands the primary school she attended. The building nestles amid
ravishing green hills, but the dusty grounds where Grace once played now look
tired, with washing hung out to dry and a concrete courtyard where flies buzz
and chickens strut. The rudimentary classrooms have battered doors and dirty
windows, yet their walls are hung with colourful cartoon illustrations of
animals. The school has 739 pupils, aged from four to 15, and just 21 teachers.
Tapiwa
Chengeta, 42, the deputy headteacher, complained that the school is starved of
resources. “We have a room that could be a computer lab but no computers. We
are still waiting for tar for the road.” Grace last visited, by helicopter, in
June 2008 but has not provided any help. “It’s very difficult to put pressure
on such a person,” Chengeta said.
Grace
continued her education at St Francis of Assisi ,
a Catholic boarding secondary school in Madondo, close to her home. That
institution bore the stamp of British colonialism, offering O- and A-levels.
Its former headteacher, Stephen Chiurayi, 66, said Grace gained entry on merit,
aged 14, but was there for less than a year because the school was burned down
in 1979 during the bush war, in which Robert Mugabe led a guerrilla struggle
against Rhodesia’s white minority rulers. This may have been a traumatising
moment for the teenage Grace, but it did not appear to politicise her. The
upheaval forced her to complete her schooling at Kriste Mambo
High School in Rusape,
Manicaland province. She then took a secretarial course at the Christian College
of Southern Africa . Grace was still a teenager
when she married Stanley Goreraza, an air force pilot, and 20 when she was
recruited as a typist at State House, the seat of power in Harare . By then, her father had died,
creating a vacuum in her life that would soon be filled in a most unexpected
way.
Mugabe
rose to power with quiet ruthlessness. At the racially inclusive Fort Hare University in South Africa he experienced a
political awakening after encountering the African National Congress (ANC)
youth league. He became a teacher in Ghana
and, inspired by Kwame Nkrumah, who had led that country to independence,
returned home in 1960 to what was then Rhodesia , where white settlers
dominated politics and farmed the most fertile land. Mugabe was arrested for
“subversive speech” and served a 10-year jail term, after which he fled to
neighbouring Mozambique
to lead guerrilla forces in a protracted war against Rhodesian prime minister
Ian Smith’s government. One veteran of the war of independence, which took
place between 1964 and 1979, is Didymus Mutasa, who spent eight months with
Mugabe behind bars. “He was an outstanding person among us,” he recalled. “When
he went out to fight it glorified him more. He was the brains.”
For
their part in bringing an end to the war and the start of independence, Mugabe
and Lord Carrington, the British foreign secretary, were nominated jointly for
the Nobel peace prize. As the new prime minister of Zimbabwe , in 1980, Mugabe announced
a policy of reconciliation and invited whites to help rebuild the country. In
these early years Zimbabwe
prospered, with booming agriculture, new hospitals and schools – the latter of
which resulted in the highest literacy rate in Africa .
With his eloquence, intellect and charm, Mugabe was such a darling of the west
a blind eye was turned to his brutal crushing of an armed rebellion in the province of Matabeleland in the 1980s.
By
the time the 20-year-old Grace came to work at State House in 1985, an aura of
mastery surrounded Mugabe. “At the time I looked at him as a father figure,”
she told interviewer Dali Tambo on the South African Broadcasting Corporation
(SABC) in 2013. “He just started talking to me, asking me about my life – were
you married before, things like that. But I was just saying, ‘He’s my boss, he
must ask.’ I didn’t know it was leading somewhere. I was quite a shy person,
very shy.”
“She
was very beautiful, pretty braids, sitting at the switchboard at State House,”
said Ibbo Mandaza, who is now head of the Southern African Political and
Economic Series Trust thinktank in Harare .
“All the girls were attractive but Grace especially. I said, ‘Let’s go for
lunch’, but someone said, ‘You’ll get in trouble.’” Then one day Mandaza
noticed that Grace was pregnant. “And it clicked.”
Mugabe’s
pursuit of the young secretary was kept quiet, for the perfectly simple reason
that he was already married. He had met Sally Hayfron, a fellow teacher, in her
native Ghana .
They married in 1961 and had one child, Michael Nhamodzenyika, who died aged
three from cerebral malaria. By then Mugabe was in jail in Rhodesia , and
he was denied permission to attend his son’s funeral. Sally held a political
role in the Zanu women’s league that she continued after independence, and set
up a children’s health charity. She was greatly respected and loved; revered as
the mother of the nation. According to the journalist Angus Shaw, Grace suffers
by comparison: “Sally always had an ideological base. She appeared to be very
committed to freedom and believed in a socialist ethic of equality. Grace has
never shown that; she has shown greed. Sally was a modest person and didn’t
yell like a Billingsgate fishwife.”
In
her 50s, Sally became gravely ill with kidney disease, and was hospitalised for
long periods, while her husband was conducting his affair with Grace. There was
a painful, farcical episode when Grace gave birth to Mugabe’s daughter, Bona,
and Mugabe had to shuttle between the maternity ward and his dying wife’s
intensive care unit.
In
the 2013 SABC interview, Tambo put it to Grace that Mugabe was still married to
Sally when they got together. Grace admitted: “I felt a bit uncomfortable … He
told me that they had discussed it and she was sort of agreeable … Of course
she knew I was there, she knew the children were there, that’s what he told me.
So I’m sure they had come to some agreement of some sort.”
According
to Sally’s friend Margaret Dongo, Sally only discovered her husband’s adultery
when word leaked that Grace was pregnant, in 1989. “She came to my house and
said, ‘How could this happen?’ It hurt her. Inside her heart she cared, but
being first lady she couldn’t stand on a rooftop and say this is what happened
to me. She didn’t want to embarrass him. This would have been one of the most
damaging things to his career … I would never forgive him because, to me, it
was an indirect torture. It shows that element of cruelty in him.” Dongo’s
verdict on Grace is scathing: “If Sally saw Grace today she would say, ‘God,
let me go back quickly and rest in peace.’”
The
affair was hushed up for as long as possible,but one night in the early 1990s
Grace’s mother was admitted to a hospital in Harare while experiencing a psychotic
episode. The head of state soon arrived on the scene. One witness recalls: “The
entire presidential cavalcade came, which made people scared. Robert Mugabe and
Grace arrived together. The affair was rumoured, but it was an extraordinarily
well kept secret.”
Indeed,
the news did not reach the wider public until three years after Sally’s death.
The March/April 1995 issue of Horizon, then Zimbabwe’s top-selling lifestyle
magazine, broke the story that Mugabe had paid lobola – bride price – to
Grace’s family at the end of 1992, 11 months after Sally’s death. Andy Moyse,
then publisher and editor of Horizon, said: “The issue sold out in about a day:
we were printing 60,000 to 70,000 copies. It became the talk of the country and
there was quite a lot of resentment towards Grace. It’s suggested that Sally
had given her blessing but she had no choice: he was bonking Grace anyway.”
Grace
is thought to have divorced Stanley Goreraza in the mid-1990s, after which he
was assigned to China
as defence attache. Another obstacle to the president’s happiness was swiftly
taken care of. Mugabe was raised Roman Catholic – he is never without his
rosary – and his church would not normally countenance a divorced mother
remarrying. But the so-called “St Paul
prerogative” was invoked. Grace had not been baptised prior to her wedding to
Goreraza, so the elaborate argument went, and was therefore not a Christian at
the time, so that marriage should not be recognised. She was duly baptised in
1996 ahead of a lavish wedding in Kutama, the Jesuit mission where Mugabe went
to school. Mozambique ’s
president Joaquim Chissano, the best man, escorted the groom up the aisle.
Some
6,000 invited guests, including South African president Nelson Mandela, joined
the celebration, and an estimated 40,000 citizens gathered to show their
support. Pope John Paul II wished the couple “an abundance of divine joy”. The
lavish banquet attracted some criticism at a time when drought had reportedly
driven more than 100,000 Zimbabweans to the brink of starvation. The event cost
an estimated $6.5m, with about $2m coming from state coffers.
The
Mugabes take care to nurture the image of a happy couple: in the SABC
interview, they took each other’s hands and expressed their love for one
another. There was mirth around the family table as Grace rose to give the
president a chaste kiss. Another glimpse of Mugabe family life appeared online
last year with photos of their Christmas holiday in Singapore : Grace looking at an iPad
with a glass of red wine; the teetotal Mugabe appearing somewhat disengaged as
their children celebrated.
Still,
there has been much conjecture about the first lady’s private life. One
unconfirmed rumour has linked her to a businessman named Peter Pamire, who died
in a car crash in 1997. There have also been suggestions of a relationship with
the governor of the reserve bank, which she has publicly denied.
A
2007 diplomatic cable from the US embassy in Harare, published by WikiLeaks,
stated: “Within the last year, it was rumoured (unconfirmed) she had fled to
east Asia and that her husband travelled there to convince her to return to
Zimbabwe … Grace has few friends, even within the Mugabe family … Grace’s
primary personal interest appears to be shopping; she reportedly spends large
amounts of forex on her infrequent trips to Asia. In Zimbabwe , she makes contributions
to women’s cooperatives.” The cable concluded: “We believe Grace has little or
no political influence over her husband. She is concerned about her children
and would seek to influence the president to act in ways that would benefit or
protect them.”
At
this time Grace appeared content in a role typical of first ladies in Africa : the demure companion at her husband’s side. There
was little hint of ambition. One acquaintance, who did not wish to be named,
said bluntly: “When she’s out of her depth, she’s aware of her intellectual
inferiority. If someone would talk about a subject at a committee meeting and
reach a decision, five minutes later she would bring it up again … She had
strong opinions and didn’t hear what people were saying. I had a strong feeling
that she was almost trying to make herself a royal figure, slightly distanced
from the hoi polloi. She’s been quite good at reinventing herself.”
Grace
has certainly made efforts to correct her public image. “I’m not really what
they say I am,” she declared in a TV interview two years ago. “And I’m actually
surprised to hear some of the things they say: that she’s a very lazy person,
she’s always eating. I work so hard I have no time to pamper myself.”
Trudy
Stevenson, the Zimbabwean ambassador to Senegal , said: “You know all the
rumours but I have to tell you she has certainly improved herself enormously
and can hold her own with the best of them. She has very strong opinions on all
sorts of things and she’s very happy to debate those opinions.
Grace,
meanwhile, has cultivated an image as a philanthropist, perhaps conscious of
the previous first lady’s achievements in this area. She has opened an
orphanage in Mazowe, outside Harare ,
where an imposing security gate and bell tower are visible to passing motorists
amid the rolling countryside. Andy Moyse said: “Grace has done this orphanage
to outdo Sally. It’s a political thing: people will compare her and Sally and
she needs to have some credibility.”
“People
are terrified of her: when she’s coming to a place, that place gets
“People are terrified of her: when she’s coming to a place, that place gets transformed,” said an acquaintance. “There’s no shortage of money when she’s coming to town. She does have a good sense of humour but if you say the wrong thing she might have your head chopped off, so be circumspect.”
There are people inZimbabwe
who have never forgiven Mugabe for betraying his first wife. Some also believe
that without Sally’s guiding force, he became politically and morally lost.
According to Angus Shaw: “Sally was regarded as a decent woman. The consensus
view is she could have kept Mugabe more on the rails.”
In the early days of the 21st century, the ground began shifting under the Mugabes’ feet. Mobs of self-styled war veterans seized farms with the government’s blessing in what was billed as an attempt to correct the colonialist legacy that left immense tracts of land in the hands of a shameless white minority. Many saw it as a crude attempt to isolate the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) which enjoyed support among white farmers and black farm workers.
“People are terrified of her: when she’s coming to a place, that place gets transformed,” said an acquaintance. “There’s no shortage of money when she’s coming to town. She does have a good sense of humour but if you say the wrong thing she might have your head chopped off, so be circumspect.”
There are people in
In the early days of the 21st century, the ground began shifting under the Mugabes’ feet. Mobs of self-styled war veterans seized farms with the government’s blessing in what was billed as an attempt to correct the colonialist legacy that left immense tracts of land in the hands of a shameless white minority. Many saw it as a crude attempt to isolate the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) which enjoyed support among white farmers and black farm workers.
In
a wave of vicious attacks, both landowners and their long-time managers and
farm hands were killed, beaten or chased away and the properties taken over by
Zanu-PF cronies or citizens, many of whom lacked the skills or capital to farm.
The world was transfixed by images of farm buildings ablaze and acts of truly
horrific violence. In the eyes of many, the party that had brought liberation
and hope to Zimbabwe
was now irredeemably corrupt and motivated by self-enrichment and power at all
costs. That transformation reflected more on Mugabe than anyone else. Food
production imploded and one of Africa ’s
strongest economies shrank to half the size it had been in 1980. Later, record
hyperinflation would render supermarket shelves bare and the national currency
worthless. In a region of fertile land with probably the most pleasant climate
on earth, 10% of the population have fled to neighbouring countries in penury,
hunger and fear.
From
1999 Mugabe faced an unprecedented challenge. He clung to power through a
series of hotly disputed elections, culminating in 2008 when he lost the first
round to MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai. It was the first potential “Gaddafi
moment” when the Mugabes could have found themselves suddenly stripped of their
invincibility. Instead, Zanu-PF triggered an explosion of political violence in
which more than 200 people were killed and many more tortured. Mugabe displayed
political genius by inviting the MDC into a power-sharing agreement in
September 2008 by which he remained president and Tsvangirai was appointed
prime minister. It is now widely held that he outmanoeuvred Tsvangirai
brilliantly, conceding few real powers and distracting the MDC from the next
election, which it lost heavily. In 2009, Tsvangirai’s wife Susan was killed in
a car crash. The prime minister accepted that it was an accident, but the
tragedy was another reminder to Grace of the fragility of existence.
After
allegations of violence and vote-rigging, Mugabe, once the shining star of
Africa, became an international pariah – assets belonging to Mugabe and Grace
have been frozen and both have been subject to an EU travel ban – yet they
emerged from the chaos unscathed, smiling, and rich. Opponents had been beaten
or seduced while the west had been faced down. The first couple are now said to
be the biggest landowners in the country after acquiring farms spanning thousands
of acres, one of which Grace used to set up a dairy. A 2008 diplomatic cable
from then US
ambassador James McGee reported that Grace was said to be among “a small group
of high-ranking Zimbabwean officials who have been extracting tremendous diamond
profits” from the country’s mines.
She’s
been an unmitigated disaster as first lady and I fear for her safety once her
husband is no longer in his position, Eddie Cross
Since
she stepped into the limelight, Grace’s popularity has taken a battering. MP
Eddie Cross, 75, the MDC’s secretary for local government, said: “She’s
arrogant and greedy, a very nasty woman. I don’t think she has any redeeming
features; the contrast with Sally could not be greater. She’s been an
unmitigated disaster as first lady and I really fear for her safety once her
husband is no longer in his current position.”
At
one of her firebrand political rallies late last year, dressed in colourful
regalia including an elaborate headwrap featuring her husband’s image, Grace
jabbed an angry finger and accused Joice Mujuru of plotting to assassinate
Robert Mugabe. Mujuru had been his deputy for many years and was the favourite
to take over when he dies. Nevertheless, Grace brought Mujuru down, accusing
her of witchcraft, murder plots and indecent behaviour. She proclaimed that if
Mujuru were killed, “dogs and fleas would not disturb her carcass”. Mujuru was
ousted from her position as vice-president in December last year, and this
March, expelled from the party.
A
former guerrilla fighter with the nom-de-guerre Teurai Ropa (spill blood),
Mujuru refused to trade insults with Grace. She responded: “We are not of the
same background so our understanding is totally different. You can’t blame
someone when you have no understanding who she is. I leave it to herself and
the people of Zimbabwe
to judge her. She was a first lady housewife. I was vice-president with a fully
fledged financial office. I wouldn’t spend much time with housewives. I only
saw her interested in politics last year. I had not seen her as politically
minded herself: she was first lady. For the first few years she told us she
wasn’t interested.”
Mujuru,
whose husband Solomon, a former army chief, died in an unexplained farmhouse
fire in 2011, vehemently denies plotting to kill the president and said she
appealed to Mugabe in person three times last year. “I’m so shocked a man of
his calibre believes such lies. You work with someone such a long time and you
don’t know him.” Among the old guard cast into the wilderness with Mujuru was
Mugabe’s former friend from the independence struggle, Didymus Mutasa. He has
known Mugabe since 1972 and regards Grace as a wrecking ball: “The words she
uttered against Mrs Mujuru are not words any leader with respect would say
about another woman … Joice Mujuru will be our next president come any
election. Those who now call themselves Zanu-PF have no following and no one
wants to see them today.”
Mujuru’s
long-time rival Emmerson Mnangagwa, known as “the crocodile” – became
vice-president late last year, but officials have played down the idea that he
is the heir apparent. Does that leave the way open for Grace? Mutasa, who is
now 79, said: “That has been said to a great extent, particularly in Zanu-PF.
There was a rumour that the president made a request to the current Zanu-PF
hierarchy to assist the first lady to take over from him. I don’t know the
response but I don’t think any of the current leaders would accept it. It’s
totally un-African.”
Rugare
Gumbo, 75, who was formerly Zanu-PF’s spokesperson, a politician who has known
Mugabe for half a century, said: “Under an erratic woman, Mugabe’s legacy has
been destroyed. The party has been destroyed. The liberation legacy has been
destroyed. She’s young, she’s beautiful and the old man is charmed by that. He
can’t say anything.”
Some
have compared Grace to Jiang Qing, the third wife of Mao Zedong. An essay by
political analyst William Muchayi, published last year, points out that both
were secretaries who began affairs with older, married men. Both struggled to
gain public acceptance, sought to exploit their husbands’ reputations and
turned crises in their political parties into personal opportunities. Muchayi
pointed out that Jiang attempted to seize power after her husband’s death, only
to be arrested a month later and sentenced to death – her punishment was later
reduced to a life sentence but she eventually committed suicide in prison.
Even
at 93, Robert Mugabe does not appear in imminent mortal danger. He walks
without the aid of a stick and still possesses an easy charisma evocative of
the first generation of post-independence African leaders. But he cannot go on
forever. Zimbabwe
stands at the edge of the precipice and Grace Mugabe is determined not to fall.
To avoid a diabolical end at the hands of a mob, she is capable of anything.
– The Guardian
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