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Who was Robert Mugabe? Assassination attempts, power grabs and tyranny

Robert Mugabe was the first prime minister and, later, first president of an independent Zimbabwe, formerly Rhodesia.

A qualified teacher and able negotiator, he was regarded on his assumption of power as the one man capable of healing the wounds left by years of civil war.

But his brutal suppression of a revolt by the Ndebele people of the south provided an early taste of the methods that would make Zimbabwe a byword for political repression and economic mismanagement.

In 1996 - four years after his first wife Sally died, aged 59 - Mr Mugabe married his former secretary, Grace Marufu, 40 years his junior, in a tribal ceremony. She became his mistress while they were both still married to other people and had two children with him before Sally's death and one after.

Mr Mugabe started his political career fighting against the white minority government of Ian Smith.

He was detained for 10 years until 1974 before leaving for Mozambique, where he helped dictate the Zimbabwe African National Union's (ZANU) role in guerrilla warfare.

When, in 1978, Mr Smith bowed to external pressure and agreed to representative elections, they were won by the rival UANC, the only black party to have renounced violence.

The UK and the US, however, refused to lift sanctions, and a conference of all parties was organised at Lancaster House in London.

Mr Mugabe, as leader of the ZANU, which drew support from the majority Shona people, attended the talks, with Margaret Thatcher, as effective prime minister-in-waiting.

In the ensuing elections, in March 1980, ZANU-PF (Zimbabwe African National Union - Patriotic Front) won 57 of 80 seats in the new parliament, where a further 20 seats were reserved for the country's white minority.

Mr Mugabe himself survived two assassination attempts during the campaign.

He became prime minister but the result also gave rise to an uneasy coalition with his Zimbabwe African People's Union (ZAPU) rivals, representing the Ndebele.

In 1983, he dismissed ZAPU's Joshua Nkomo from his cabinet, triggering an armed rebellion in Ndebele land.

This was put down with marked brutality by elements of the new Zimbabwe army, whose training had been conducted along North Korean lines.

Afterwards, in 1987, Mr Mugabe marked his assumption of unchallenged power by abolishing the office of prime minister and declaring himself executive president.

He was subsequently re-elected in 1990, 1996 and 2002, in elections where fairness was increasingly called into question.

Mr Mugabe styled himself as the "Grand Old Man" of African politics, with defenders saying his government achieved notable improvements in both health and education for the black majority.

But he was reviled in the West as an authoritarian who mishandled the economy and resorted to violence to maintain power.

The country's economy collapsed under his rule, and massive imports of foreign aid were needed simply to feed the people as hyperinflation hit from the late 1990s.

By 2009, Zimbabwe stopped printing its currency and in 2015 it announced plans to completely switch to using the US dollar.

Grace Mugabe's lavish lifestyle, earning her the nickname "Gucci Grace", failed to ingratiate her to the Zimbabwe people - as they struggled to buy basic necessities she would go on spending sprees, once reportedly splashing £75,000, and withdrawing more than £5m from the Central Bank of Zimbabwe in the years up to 2004.

She was also embroiled in corruption over real estate in Zimbabwe and Hong Kong, and has a reputation for violence, punching a Sunday Times photographer in the face outside a luxury hotel in Hong Kong - but was granted immunity by China because she was Mr Mugabe's wife.

Military intervention in the civil war in the neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo also proved a heavy financial burden for Mr Mugabe.

But it was the forced distribution of land that proved decisive, turning what had been an exporter of food into a country with five million people dependent on food aid.

When Mr Mugabe became prime minister, some 70% of arable land was owned by about 4,000 descendants of white settlers.

Favouring a "willing buyer, willing seller" plan for the gradual redistribution of land, little was achieved until Mr Mugabe began using force in 1999 and 2000.

Self-styled "war veterans" invaded white-owned farms, and the British public quickly became familiar with stories of beatings, rape and killings.

The farm invasions severely affected agricultural production, leaving much of the country's population lacking enough food to meet basic needs.

In 2002, the Commonwealth suspended Zimbabwe's membership. When this was extended 18 months later, Mr Mugabe pulled his country out.

The US, meanwhile, had imposed sanctions of its own, saying the situation in Zimbabwe endangered the entire southern African region.

In 2004, the African Union openly criticised Zimbabwe's open violation of human rights, citing the arrest and torture of lawyers, journalists and MPs.

Mr Mugabe has also been accused of using starvation as a conscious political weapon, by denying food aid to those areas supporting the opposition.

He was initially defeated in the presidential vote in 2008, with Morgan Tsvangirai winning by 47.9% to 43.2%.

But ahead of a run-off between the two as neither had secured 50% of the vote, a violent campaign against supporters of Mr Tsvangirai saw scores killed and thousands displaced.

Mr Tsvangirai pulled out of the run-off, and Mr Mugabe was re-inaugurated despite strong international condemnation of the election.

In the same year he had early prostate cancer and despite treatment being available in Zimbabwe, he travelled to Singapore - chartering Air Zimbabwe's only long-haul aircraft - to be treated in a hospital which he has regularly frequented for health check-ups paid for by Harare.

Mr Mugabe won another presidential election in 2013, but the ballots were widely not considered free or fair, with claims of vote rigging and fears over violence.

Last year, he sacked his first vice president - Emmerson Mnangagwa - with speculation he was about to appoint his wife Grace as his successor.

On 15 November 2017, the national army placed him under house arrest and days later he was sacked as leader of the ZANU-PF.

The party than issued an ultimatum calling for him to resign, and began impeachment proceedings when he refused. He later resigned, and negotiated a deal which exempted him from prosecution and protected his business interests.

Weeks after Mr Mugabe was forced to resign, in what he called a coup, he went for a medical check-up in Singapore, paid for with his pension which guarantees him foreign health care.

At least 20 aides accompanied him on each Singapore trip, claiming a day rate in foreign currency and accommodation in top hotels.

He would later return to the Singapore hospital, where Mr Mnangagwa said he was unable to walk, but would remain supported by the Zimbabwe government.

His death in Singapore was confirmed on 6 September 2019.

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