Zimbabwe has made former president Robert Mugabe’s
birthday a public holiday, a state daily reported Monday, nearly a week after
the long-time ruler stepped down.
“It is hereby declared that February 21 of every year henceforth shall be a public holiday to be known as the Robert Mugabe National Youth Day,” The Herald newspaper reported, citing a government gazette.
“It is hereby declared that February 21 of every year henceforth shall be a public holiday to be known as the Robert Mugabe National Youth Day,” The Herald newspaper reported, citing a government gazette.
The move follows intense lobbying by the ruling
ZANU-PF party’s youth league and came weeks after the country’s biggest airport
was renamed after the veteran politician
who ruled Zimbabwe for nearly 40
years.
His tenure withstood repeated claims of hanging on
to power through brutal repression of dissent, election rigging and corruption,
until concerted pressure from the military finally forced to quit.
Parliament had begun proceedings to impeach Mugabe
for allowing his wife and a coterie of followers to “capture” the ruling party.
The 93-year-old was replaced by Emmerson Mnangagwa,
who was vice president until Mugabe fired him just weeks ago.
The
declaration of his birthday as a holiday is the latest of many accolades.
Zimbabwe’s school of intelligence was named after him while a $1-billion Robert
Mugabe university is also in the works.
Several buildings and roads across the country are
also named after him. Zimbabwe’s opposition accuse Mugabe of spending scarce
money on wasteful projects despite the country being forced to grapple with
poverty and an unemployment rate of more than 90 percent.
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