Nearly a million dollars in cash was stolen from a suitcase owned by
ousted Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, state media reported Friday,
as three suspects including a relative of the former leader face trial
for the theft.
According to updated court papers Mugabe had filled the bag with a
million dollars and stashed it in the library of his country home in
Zvimba, west of the capital, in 2016.
Only $78,000 was found in the bag on January 6 this year, according to The Herald citing court documents.
The three accused — which include Constancia Mugabe, 50, a relative
of the president — appeared before Chinhoyi magistrates court on
Thursday and were ordered to return on February 7.
The suspected thieves are accused of spending the money on cars, houses and farm animals.
Mugabe’s whereabouts have been unconfirmed since late November when
President Emmerson Mnangagwa, his successor, said the ailing 94-year-old
was in Singapore for medical treatment and was now unable to walk.
His 37-year reign was marked by state corruption, economic collapse and brutal repression of dissent.
According to prosecutors Constancia Mugabe had keys to Mugabe’s rural
house allowing the other suspects, who were employed as cleaners, to
gain full access to the property when the theft occurred.
The court earlier this month heard that the three suspected thieves
had stolen $150,000, but the updated court papers released on Thursday
showed that he lost $922,000.
US dollars are prized in crisis-hit Zimbabwe, where a currency crisis
was one of the reasons behind deadly protests that rocked the country
last week.
The protests were sparked by a steep increase in the price of fuel
and an ensuing security crackdown claimed a dozen lives – mainly from
gunfire – and the injury of hundreds.
More than 1,100 people have been arrested in the crackdown.
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