A 23-YEAR-OLD NIGERIAN WOMAN IDENTIFIED AS OSARUGBE, HAS DIED IN LIBYA. AFRICAN BEAUTY PRODUCTS. (PHOTO).

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EXHUMATION OF PRESIDENT MUGABE'S REMAINS TAKES NEW TWIST AS COURT BLOCKS HIS GRAVE'S INSPECTION.(PHOTO).


 NO RESTING IN PEACE: Exhumation of President Mugabe's remains takes new twist as court blocks his grave's inspection


The ongoing saga surrounding the exhumation of former President Robert Mugabeā€™s remains took a dramatic turn last week at the Chinyoyi magistrate court.


Village headman Tinos Manongovereā€™s request for an inspection of the late presidentā€™s grave at his Zvimba homestead was blocked, creating further uncertainty in this already complex case.

The confusion stemmed from Manongovereā€™s application for an ā€œinspection in loco,ā€ a legal process allowing the court to physically examine a location relevant to a case. His lawyers, Madzingiria and Nhokwara, clearly stated their intention in a letter to the Chinhoyi clerk of court dated November 19th.


ā€œWe write to advise that we have been instructed to make an application for inspection in loco of the burial place of the late former president of the Republic of Zimbabwe, His Excellency Robert Gabriel Mugabe at Kutama Village,ā€ the letter read.

ā€œShould the honourable court grant our application, we wish to have the inspection in loco on the December 2, 2024 or any other date convenient to the court. May you make the necessary arrangement for logistics including transport and personnel for both the burial site visit inside the house and the usual family gravesite visit both situated at different sites at Kutama Village.ā€


However, Magistrate Kudzanai Mahaso clarified the scope of the inspection, stating it would be limited to the National Heroes Acre mausoleum ā€“ where Mugabe was initially intended to be buried ā€“ and the Zvimba family cemetery. This clarification followed earlier confusion about the intended location of the inspection.

ā€œWe seem to be going in circles, I think we agreed to go and inspect the place where former president Mugabe was to be buried at the Heroes Acre and the Zvimba family cemetery,ā€ Magistrate Mahaso explained, highlighting the discrepancy between the lawyersā€™ request and the courtā€™s understanding.


The former First Lady, Grace Mugabeā€™s lawyer, Kudzanai Gombiro, voiced objections to the inspection of Mugabeā€™s grave itself. This opposition adds another layer of complexity to the already contentious legal battle.

The caseā€™s history is deeply rooted in a traditional court ruling. Manongovere had initially taken Grace Mugabe to Chief Zvimbaā€™s traditional court, arguing that Mugabeā€™s burial at his Kutama homestead violated traditional practices. Chief Zvimba subsequently ordered the exhumation and reburial at the National Heroes Acre, a ruling later upheld by a magistrate court in September 2021, despite objections from Mugabeā€™s children who argued the chief acted beyond his jurisdiction. Grace Mugabe was fined five cows and two goats for the transgression.


The dispute over Mugabeā€™s final resting place began almost immediately after his death in Singapore in September 2019 at the age of 95. A nearly three-week stand-off ensued between the government, which strongly favoured burial at the National Heroes Acre, and the Mugabe family, who ultimately prevailed in having him interred at his homestead. The government had even constructed a mausoleum at the Heroes Acre in anticipation of his burial there.

The initial ruling granting the inspection in loco, reported last week, stated that the inspection would take place at both the Zvimba cemetery and the Heroes Acre.


This was confirmed by Grace Mugabeā€™s lawyer, Kudzanai Gombiro: ā€œYes, Manongovere requested to show the court places where Mugabe family members are buried in Zvimba and a place they wanted him buried at Heroes Acre and the request was granted by the magistrate. We are going to the two places tomorrow,ā€ he said.

However, the courtā€™s subsequent clarification significantly alters the scope of the inspection, limiting it to the sites where Mugabe was intended to be buried, not where he actually rests. This leaves the central question of the exhumation itself unresolved, with the case scheduled to resume on Tuesday. The legal battle continues, leaving the final resting place of Zimbabweā€™s former president shrouded in ongoing uncertainty.

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