Ex-Barcelona players paid millions to prop-up Zimbabwean tyrant




President Mugabe's nephew Patrick Zhuwao, Higher Education Minister Professor Jonayhan Moyo alongside former Barcelona stars Patrick Kluivert and Edgar Davids Spanish event manager Rayco Garcia.
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HARARE – Former Barcelona stars Patrick Kluivert and Edgar Davids joined Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe on stage at a weekend political rally, drawing sharp criticism from government opponents amid reports government paid millions of dollars to bring the stars.

Davids and Kluivert were pictured on Saturday alongside Mugabe, 93, at a youth rally for the ruling ZANU-PF party in the southern town of Gwanda, in what local media described as a “surprise appearance“.

Mugabe has ruled Zimbabwe since independence from Britain in 1980, and he is often criticised for brutal repression of his opponents, election rigging and his country’s economic collapse.

The president, who is in increasingly frail health, is due to stand in elections next year that could see him hold onto power until he is nearly 100.

The footballers’ trip was led by Spanish event manager Rayco Garcia, who said Davids and Kluivert were helping organise a match for the Barcelona Legends team in Zimbabwe in November; but on Sunday a high level government official told The Zimbabwe Mail that the stars were paid millions of dollars through the Ministry of Tourism with bank transfers into a Spanish bank in Madrid.

Zimbabwe Tourism and Hospitality Industry Minister Dr Walter Mzembi who was the brains behind this is believed to have close friend in the Spanish Tourism government ministry. In January this year he attended a reception cocktail hosted by His Majesty, King Felipe VI of Spain, at Palacio de El Pardo, the official residence of the Monarch on the outskirts of Madrid in Spain.

“My job is to bring all the legends of Barcelona here, the likes of Ronaldinho, Rivaldo, Juliano Belletti, Kluivert, Davids… and to play a team of legends from Zimbabwe,” Garcia told local press.

“I think that is going to give hope to the youth while promoting talent in the country and bringing a piece of Europe to Zimbabwe.”

The state-owned Herald newspaper on Saturday ran a photo of former Dutch internationals Kluivert and Davids presenting a replica Barcelona shirt with the name “R.G. Mugabe” on it to Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa.The paper said that Mnangagwa would give the shirt to President Mugabe, along with another shirt for Mugabe’s wife Grace, which had the name “Amai” (“Mother“) on it.

Kluivert was quoted by the Herald — which is seen as a mouthpiece of Mugabe’s regime — as saying: “Zimbabwe is a great country, I think that has been ruled very good, but it has a bad (image) in Europe.” The three visitors held meetings with Mnangagwa and sports minister Makhosini Hlongwane in the capital Harare on Friday.

They also inspected the 60,000-seater Chinese-built National Sports Stadium where the veterans game is scheduled to be held.

“I am sure we will need screens outside the stadium,” Mnangagwa said, according to the Herald.

“The fact that you are honouring our President Mugabe by giving him your own jerseys is something extremely important.” The privately-owned Standard newspaper, which printed a picture of the trio with Mugabe, said they had made a brief appearance at the rally on Saturday after attending the opening of a local community information centre.

“They should be ashamed of themselves,” Obert Gutu, spokesman of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) opposition party, told AFP.

“They seemed to be endorsing a despotic tyrant. I used to support these stars during their illustrious careers. Many people are offended.” Mugabe’s ZANU-PF party has been accused of routinely using violence, intimidation and fraud to ensure Mugabe’s election victories.

Davids and Kluivert both started their careers at Ajax and also appeared for AC Milan amongst other teams.

They also plan to set up a training foundation for young players in Zimbabwe.

The national team sit at a lowly 101st in the world rankings, but several players play in Europe including captain Knowledge Musona at Oostende in Belgium and defender Costa Nhamoninesu at Czechs Sparta Prague.

Veteran President Robert Mugabe has dominated the country’s political scene since independence from Britain in 1980.

Landlocked, the southern African country is bordered by Zambia in the north, Mozambique in the east, Botswana in the west and South Africa in the south.

Once the bread basket of the region, since 2000 Zimbabwe has struggled to feed its own people due to severe droughts and the effects of a land reform programme which saw the seizure of white-owned farms redistributed to landless black Zimbabweans which led to sharp falls in production.

Cash-strapped and impoverished, Zimbabwe’s economy faces severe challenges. Unemployment and poverty are endemic and political strife and repression commonplace. Many Zimbabweans have left the country in search of work in South Africa.

Veteran leader Robert Mugabe has presided over Zimbabwe for the last three decades.

Born in 1924 in the village of Kutama, south-west of the capital Harare, he was educated by Jesuits and went on to become a teacher before joining the liberation struggle.

He became a key figure in the fight for independence from white minority-rule as leader of the Zimbabwe African National Union and spent 11 years in prison before becoming Zimbabwe’s first post-independence prime minister in 1980.

In December 2015, Mr Mugabe was endorsed once more as the ruling party candidate for the 2018 presidential elections but media continue to speculate about a potential successor.