Monday, February 16, 2015

ZIMBABWE’S OWAMBE PARTY: For 91st Birthday Bash, Mugabe's Party Guests To Feast On Choice Game; Elephant, Lion, Buffaloes & Sables


President Robert Mugabe turns 91 on February 21, 2015 (Photo: Huffington Post)

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe celebrates his 91st birthday this month – and partygoers are set to dine on elephant.  At least 20,000 people are expected to attend the lavish celebrations just outside Victoria Falls on February 28.

Prominent farmer Tendai Musasa told the Zimbabwe Chronicle he has donated game meat and a lion trophy worth £78,000 towards the event. In total Musasa says he has supplied two buffaloes, two elephants, a lion, two sables and five impalas, according to Huffington Post. 

Describing the menagerie as “a perfect gesture”, he added the animals would be slaughtered a few days ahead of the big day with the meat being stored by a local hotel.

He dismissed complaints from other villagers who claimed the animals involved were part of their annual hunting quota and that the donation would deprive them on income, declaring them “enemies” of the president. 

A spokesman for the Zimbabwe Conservation Task Force told the Guardian: “I am not in favour of anyone donating wild animals for a celebration or for any other reason.

“They have been doing this for years now. Every time there is a celebration or on independence day, several elephants and buffalo are killed for the celebrations. This is totally unethical and should not be allowed.”

Mugabe’s birthday parties are traditionally sumptuous affairs in a country which suffers from severe economic problems.

Last year the £600,000 celebrations saw 90 balloons released into the air from a stadium and huge cakes displayed at a stadium east of Harare.

His 89th birthday saw the dictator presented with an 89kg cake and 89 cattle from the country’s central bank. Gold coins bearing his face were also minted for the party.

Zimbabwe, a once-prosperous nation of 13 million people in southern Africa, struggled after Mugabe's government began seizing white-owned farms in 2000.

Mugabe was accused of using widespread violence to win several disputed elections, according to human rights groups.
The country suffered hyperinflation until it abandoned its currency for the U.S. dollar in 2009.

This Dec. 19, 2008 photo shows a newly released ten billion Zimbabwean dollar bill in Harare. (AP Photo)

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