Mugabe laid to rest in Zimbabwe village

Former leader's family rejected government proposals for him to be buried at a national monument in the capital

epa07877528 The coffin of the late former Zimbabwean president Robert Mugabe, in Zvimba, Zimbabwe, 28 September 2019. Mugabe passed away on 06 September aged 95 in Singapore, where he had been receiving treatment since April this year. Mugabe led the country post-independence from 1980 to 2017 when he was ousted.  EPA/AARON UFUMELI
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The body of Zimbabwe's former president Robert Mugabe was buried on Saturday in a low-key ceremony in his home village after weeks of wrangling over his resting place.

Family members threw white roses into the grave as the coffin of the liberation hero turned despot was lowered into the ground in the courtyard of his rural home about 90 kilometres west of the capital, Harare.

A boys' choir from Mr Mugabe's high school sang in the background.

The burial in the village of Kutama came after the Mugabe family rejected government proposals that he be laid to rest at the National Heroes Acre in the capital.

Mr Mugabe died in a Singapore hospital on September 6, aged 95, almost two years after a military coup ended his autocratic 37-year rule.

Hundreds of mourners assembled for the burial, which was initially intended to be a private family event.

Many wore white Mugabe-emblazoned T-shirts with the slogans "founding father", "liberator" and "torch bearer".

Some sang and danced. Others sat quietly under two white tents.

His wife Grace and his children accompanied the coffin.

Clad in black, they took their places in a VIP tent before the service.

The words "DAD" and "BABA", meaning "father" in the local Shona language were spelt out in white flowers.

"Our hearts are bleeding because we have lost our father," said the officiating priest, standing next to a portrait of Mugabe framed by white carnations. "This is a man who made use of the gifts he was given by God. This man was an asset; he was not a liability."

No senior government officials were among the mourners.

A mausoleum was being constructed at the site in Harare reserved for heroes of Zimbabwe's liberation struggle.

However, the Mugabe family said on Saturday that he would not have wanted to have been buried there.

"What we have done is his wish," said former first lady Grace Mugabe's older sister Shuvai Gumbochuma.

"He [Mugabe] said with his own mouth that he didn't want to be buried at the Heroes Acre," she said.

The ruling ZANU-PF party described the family's decision as "most unfortunate".

"All patriotic Zimbabweans were shocked to learn that the remains of the former president had been surreptitiously taken yesterday to Zvimba for a private burial," said spokesman Simon Khaya-Moyo on Friday.

Former guerrilla leader Mugabe took power after independence from white minority rule in 1980.

Initially hailed as a pan-African liberator, Mugabe's rule became increasingly repressive as he cracked down on his political opponents.

This was combined with a series of disastrous economic policies that drove millions of Zimbabweans abroad.

Mugabe was eventually toppled by formerly loyal military generals in 2017.

Many in the family are bitter about his overthrow and the role played by his deputy and successor Emmerson Mnangagwa, who was elected president last year.

The army turned against Mugabe after he sacked Mr Mnangagwa, a move many saw as an attempt to position Grace Mugabe to succeed him.

Zimbabwe remains deeply split over his legacy.

"I was very comfortable that he be buried at the Heroes Acre," said local official Christopher Ndlovu before the ceremony.

"That's what we wanted as local villagers. But since it's a family decision to bury him here, we will respect it."