"Those who can't stomach
the defeat, you can commit suicide. Even dogs will not sniff their
carcasses," said the 89-year-old leader while addressing an event to
commemorate veterans of Zimbabwe's war for independence.
It was his first public speech since the Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission declared him winner, with 61% of the vote, of the July 31 elections, beating Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai.
Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change last week challenged the election results, accusing the electoral commission of rigging the polls for Mugabe's ZANU-PF.
"We will never go back on our victory. We do not know what is retreating," Mugabe said.
To the West "we are
delivering democracy on a platter. Will you take?" asked Africa's oldest
leader. "We say take it or leave it. We will never go back on our
victory."
Some of the people that
attended the event Monday had placards reading "Which Africa Observed
Elections in Europe or America?"; "Come on, concede defeat"; "Obama:
Zimbabwe will never be a second Chile"; "Thank you Zimbabwe for
defending our sovereignty"; and "Zimbabwe will never be a colony again."
Tsvangirai -- who got 34% of the July 31 vote -- and officials of his MDC party boycotted the Monday event.
No comments:
Post a Comment