Mnangagwa woos nationals to return and rebuild Zimbabwe

Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa delivers a speech during a rally with Zimbabwean businessmen and foreign investors at the Zimbabwean embassy in Pretoria, South Africa. PHOTO | STRINGER | AFP

What you need to know:

  • Emmerson Mnangagwa urged millions of Zimbabweans who fled economic decline and political turmoil to return home and help rebuild the nation.

PRETORIA

Zimbabwe's new leader on Thursday appealed to millions of nationals who fled economic decline and political turmoil to return home and help rebuild the nation following the fall of Robert Mugabe.

Emmerson Mnangagwa, 75, took over from the long-time leader who resigned on November 21 following a military takeover. Mugabe had ruled the southern African country for 37 years.

RETURN HOME

"You are so many here in the diaspora because of particular economic challenges that beset our country," said Mnangagwa during a speech in Pretoria in South Africa during his maiden foreign trip.

"I appeal to you to come to Zimbabwe," he said exactly a month after Mugabe tendered his resignation under popular pressure and as he faced impeachment.

"Zimbabwe is your home, you are welcome (back)," said Mnangagwa adding that the country needed the skills and experience Zimbabweans have acquired in the diaspora.

Millions of Zimbabweans have left the country over the past nearly two decades and the bulk of them are in neighbouring South Africa.

BUSINESS

"Whatever offence we committed to you please put that behind you...forgive.

"I wish to say may we together agree to let bygones be bygones and look in the future with hope.

"The country is ours together, it is not the country of (ruling) Zanu-PF, it is not the country of (opposition) MDC.

"From now on Zimbabwe is now open for business," he told Zimbabwean businesspeople who fled to South Africa.

The new president was a long-time ally of Mugabe, and his critics say he is also a hardliner from the ruling Zanu-PF party with a record of alleged graft and repression in Zimbabwe.

PROTESTS

As he spoke, a group of fewer than 20 protesters chanted outside the embassy building over Mnangagwa's role during the early 1980s killings of perceived political dissidents in a campaign known infamously as Gukurahundi.

An estimated 20,000 people were killed by an elite North Korean-trained military unit. At the time Mnangagwa was a security minister under Mugabe.

"How can we work with the killer?" shouted one protester.

Two others carried giant pictures of dead bodies with gruesome cuts and burns.

Another protester yelled: "There's no difference between Mugabe and Mnangagwa."

TRADE

Mnangagwa met South Africa's President Jacob Zuma and was also scheduled to meet ANC's newly elected leader Cyril Ramaphosa.

The South African presidency said Zuma and Mnangagwa "have undertaken to strengthen economic trade and cooperation between South Africa and Zimbabwe".

Mnangagwa said his government had reviewed investment laws that forced foreign companies to cede a majority stake to local investors and spooked investment.