Video: Zimbabwe’s president survives assassination attempt

Zimbabwe’s President Emmerson Mnangagwa has survived a blast at a ruling ZANU-PF party election campaign rally in the city of Bulawayo, in an apparent attack which left one of his deputies injured.

The explosion on Saturday happened as the president, accompanied by other politicians, was walking off the stage at the White City stadium, where he had addressed thousands of supporters in advance of next month’s vote.

Mnangagwa, the 75-year-old leader of ZANU-PF, was not hurt and evacuated to Bulawayo state house, officials said.

The ZBC broadcaster later reported that Vice President Kembo Mohadi was injured in the leg and taken to a local hospital in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe’s second-biggest city.

Several others also suffered wounds, including the wife of fellow Vice President Constantino Chiwenga, a soldier and a number of ZANU-PF supporters.

In his first comments after the incident, Mnangagwa told the state broadcaster that an object “exploded a few inches away from me – but it is not my time”.

“I am used to these attempts,” he added. “I can assure you these are my normal enemies.”

In a message on Twitter, Mnangagwa called the explosion a “senseless act of violence”.

“The campaign has been conducted in a free and peaceful environment, and we will not allow this cowardly act to get in our way as we move towards elections,” he wrote.


Footage from the scene showed a cloud of smoke rising near the stage as medical staff rushed to treat those wounded.

State TV immediately cut its broadcast.

Witnesses said that the blast occurred as Mnangagwa, the leader of the ruling ZANU-PF party, was leaving the stage after finishing his speech.

“We are told several VIPs have been injured and other ZANU-PF supporters have also been injured,” Al Jazeera’s Haru Mutasa, reporting from Johannesburg in neighbouring South Africa, said.

“People on the ground say that people had to carry some of the injured in their cars to the local hospital in Bulawayo. Some of the injuries are in the legs and in the stomach – some are quite critical,” she added.

Mutasa said police set up several roadblocks in and out of the city of Bulawayo, an opposition stronghold, following the explosion.

The incident came hours after a blast struck a large rally by supporters of Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed in the capital, Addis Ababa, killing at least one person and wounding dozens of others.

Mnangagwa took power in November 2017 after longtime leader Robert Mugabe stepped down following a military intervention.

The July 30 vote is the first without Mugabe since independence in 1980.

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