Zimbabwe’s new leader had to flee for his life when Grace Mugabe tried to destroy him. His son reveals how he survived
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Mnangagwa, known as the “Crocodile”, had been Mugabe’s right-hand man for decades when he became vice-president in December 2014, putting him in pole position to succeed the nonagenarian head of state —
That was when the trouble started, his son Emmerson Jr, 33, recounted last week:
He said his father refused to believe that the Mugabes were out to get him — until he was given a vanilla ice-cream cone at a rally of the governing Zanu-PF party last August, and was violently ill.
She denied allegations of poisoning, but hurled accusations and insults at Mnangagwa, denouncing him as a “snake”.
Mnangagwa was frequently visited, however, by General Constantino Chiwenga, the head of the Zimbabwean military, who “would come and offer his shoulder to Dad”.
Overcoming Mnangagwa’s resistance — “Dad kept saying, ‘I’m not sick’” — they got a doctor to write a letter authorising the evacuation.
By then, however, the airport was swarming with police. The only escape route left was by road. Around midnight,
“Dad said, ‘I know only too well what this means,
In the commotion Mnangagwa fled with Collins to a mountain cave the old man knew from his war days.
Sean and Emmerson Jr escaped on foot before commandeering a taxi to Mutare, where they hid in “an old car wash” as the streets were crawling with
Emmerson Jr managed to link up with his father again, and they decided to try to reach Mozambique on foot. They secretly contacted local officers from military intelligence — which Mnangagwa used to run
Emmerson Jr managed to link up with his father again, and they decided to try to reach Mozambique on foot. They secretly contacted local officers from military intelligence — which Mnangagwa used to run
Around 10pm they set off, sneaking past Marymount Teachers’ College on the edge of Mutare. Father and son were still in the business suits and shoes they were wearing when they had fled Harare.
“He’s 76 this year, a man who had just been poisoned and didn’t have his medicines, he’s old, his blood pressure up, I was worried but I couldn’t keep up.”
“Dad looked at me said, ‘Give me 30 metres head start and try to see where I step.’ I thought, dude, these are landmines and it’s dark, how am I going to see?
There was more danger. Emmerson Jr had forgotten he had left his phone on and the flashing in his back pocket attracted attention.
They walked up and found a road. “We were so happy.” It was around 5am, so they stopped to rest.
They walked on to the nearest town, Manica.
By 6pm they were in Beira airport, only for immigration officers to disappear
Then the pilot, a young white South African, arrived.
On the plane, Emmerson Jr lay down to sleep, exhausted. “That’s when Dad says something very strange: ‘You wanna die in your sleep?’”
Maphosa was waiting with a phalanx of Afrikaner security guards in black Range Rovers with no numberplates which whisked Mnangagwa and his son to a one-bedroom flat in a Pretoria township.
Their guards told them a bounty of $10m (£7.4m) had been put on their heads and that 50 Zimbabwean intelligence agents had been sent to South Africa to search for them.
Three days later, November 21, Mugabe resigned and Mnangagwa was named president. The following day, he and his son flew home to be met by huge crowds.
*Episode 1: bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m0…
*Episode 2: bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m0…
*Episode 3: bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m0…
*Episode 4: bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m0…
Douglas Rogers' story of how Robert Mugabe fell from power in 2017. *Episode 5: bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m0…