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Serious Old Fart Nigger Founding Father Dies In Singapore! Niggers And AMDKs Very Sad! Guess Who!!

JohnTan

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SINGAPORE — Former Zimbabwean leader Robert Mugabe has died aged 95, the country's President Emmerson Mnangagwa said on his official Twitter account.

Mugabe died in Singapore, where he has often received medical treatment in recent years, a source with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

"It is with the utmost sadness that I announce the passing on of Zimbabwe's founding father and former President, Cde Robert Mugabe," a post on Mr Mnangagwa's official presidential Twitter account said.

In November, Mr Mnangagwa said Mugabe was no longer able to walk when he had been admitted to a hospital in Singapore, without saying what treatment Mugabe had been undergoing.


Officials often said he was being treated for a cataract, denying frequent private media reports that he had prostate cancer.

Mugabe, who ruled the southern African nation for nearly four decades since independence from Britain in 1980, was forced to resign in November 2017 after an army coup.

He was feted as an African liberation hero and champion of racial reconciliation when he first came to power in a nation divided by nearly a century of white colonial rule. REUTERS

Read more at https://www.todayonline.com/singapore/zimbabwes-former-president-robert-mugabe-dies-singapore
 
Most valuable customer of Gleneagles Hospital. He will be sorely missed by the hospital's staff. :biggrin:

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Will the doctor get sued for over charging since the patient died?
 
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-49604152

Robert Mugabe, the Zimbabwean independence icon turned authoritarian leader, has died aged 95.
Mr Mugabe had been receiving treatment in a hospital in Singapore since April. He was ousted in a military coup in 2017 after 37 years in power.
The former president was praised for broadening access to health and education for the black majority.
But later years were marked by violent repression of his political opponents and Zimbabwe's economic ruin.
His successor, Emmerson Mnangagwa, expressed his "utmost sadness", calling Mr Mugabe "an icon of liberation".
Skip Twitter post by @edmnangagwa
It is with the utmost sadness that I announce the passing on of Zimbabwe's founding father and former President, Cde Robert Mugabe (1/2)​
— President of Zimbabwe (@edmnangagwa) September 6, 2019

Report

End of Twitter post by @edmnangagwa

Mr Mnangagwa had been Mr Mugabe's deputy before replacing him.
Singapore's foreign ministry said it was working with the Zimbabwean embassy there to have Mr Mugabe's body flown back to his home country.
Who was Robert Mugabe?
He was born on 21 February 1924 in what was then Rhodesia - a British colony, run by its white minority.
After criticising the government of Rhodesia in 1964 he was imprisoned for more than a decade without trial.
In 1973, while still in prison, he was chosen as president of the Zimbabwe African National Union (Zanu), of which he was a founding member.





Media captionZimbabwe's week of upheaval that saw Mugabe ousted
Once released, he headed to Mozambique, from where he directed guerrilla raids into Rhodesia but he was also seen as a skilled negotiator.
Political agreements to end the crisis resulted in the new independent Republic of Zimbabwe.
With his high profile in the independence movement, Mr Mugabe secured an overwhelming victory in the republic's first election in 1980.
But over his decades in power, international perceptions soured. Mr Mugabe assumed the reputation of a "strongman" leader - all-powerful, ruling by threats and violence but with a strong base of support. An increasing number of critics labelled him a dictator.
Shackled to one man

He died far from home, bitter, lonely, and humiliated - an epic life, with the shabbiest of endings.
Robert Mugabe embodied Africa's struggle against colonialism - in all its fury and its failings.
He was a courageous politician, imprisoned for daring to defy white-minority rule.





Media captionMugabe: From war hero to resignation
The country he finally led to independence was one of the continent's most promising, and for years Zimbabwe more or less flourished. But when the economy faltered, Mr Mugabe lost his nerve. He implemented a catastrophic land reform programme. Zimbabwe quickly slid into hyperinflation, isolation, and political chaos.
The security forces kept Mr Mugabe and his party, Zanu-PF, in power - mostly through terror. But eventually even the army turned against him, and pushed him out.
Few nations have ever been so bound, so shackled, to one man. For decades, Mugabe was Zimbabwe: a ruthless, bitter, sometimes charming man - who helped ruin the land he loved.
In 2000, he seized land from white owners, and in 2008, used violent militias to silence his political opponents during an election.
He famously declared that only God could remove him from office.
Image copyright Reuters Image caption Mr Mugabe's downfall came after suspicions that his wife Grace might succeed him
He was forced into sharing power in 2009 amid economic collapse, installing rival Morgan Tsvangirai as prime minister.
But in 2017, amid concerns that he was grooming his wife Grace as his successor, the army - his long-time ally - turned against the president and forced him to step down.
What has the reaction been?
Deputy Information Minister Energy Mutodi, of Mr Mugabe's Zanu-PF party, told the BBC the party was "very much saddened" by his death.
"He's a man who believed himself, he's a man who believed in what he did and he is a man who was very assertive in whatever he said. This was a good man," he said.
Not everyone agreed, however.
George Walden, one of the British negotiators at the Lancaster House Agreement in 1979 which ended white-minority rule, said Mr Mugabe was a "true monster".
The agreement "turned out rather well... and looked good for a while", but Mr Mugabe later became "a grossly corrupt, vicious dictator", he said.
Zimbabwean Senator David Coltart, once labelled "an enemy of the state" by Mr Mugabe, said his legacy had been marred by his adherence to violence as a political tool.

Image Copyright @DavidColtart @DavidColtart

Report

"He was always committed to violence, going all the way back to the 1960s... he was no Martin Luther King," he told the BBC World Service. "He never changed in that regard."
But he acknowledged that there was another side to Robert Mugabe, who had "had a great passion for education... [and] mellowed in his later years".
"There's a lot of affection towards him, because we must never forget that he was the person primarily responsible for ending oppressive white minority rule," the senator said.
South Africa's President Cyril Ramaphosa called Mr Mugabe a "champion of Africa's cause against colonialism" who inspired our own struggle against apartheid".
Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta said Mr Mugabe had "played a major role in shaping the interests of the African continent" and was "a man of courage who was never afraid to fight for what he believed in even when it was not popular".
Kenya will fly all its flags at half-mast this weekend in honour of Mr Mugabe, he said.

Mugabe in 1981 - just recently named prime minister of an independent Zimbabwe
Veronica Madgen and her husband ran one of the largest farms in Zimbabwe before it was invaded by Mr Mugabe's supporters, forcing the family to come to the UK.
Speaking to the BBC, she recalled: "The tractors [were] being burnt, the motorcycles [were] being burnt, stones [were being] thrown through the window… It was very difficult to actually come to terms with what was happening.
"I was sad for him and his family, because for the first 20 years he governed that country, he was a good leader, until that threat of losing that election got hold of him and he turned."
Yet Mr Mugabe is likely to be remembered for his early achievements, the BBC's Shingai Nyoka reports from the capital, Harare.
In his later years, people called him all sorts of names, but now is probably the time when Zimbabweans will think back to his 37 years in power, she says.
There's a local saying that whoever dies becomes a hero, and we're likely to see that now, our correspondent adds.

Which hospital ah? SG Doctors suck?
 
95 years is a pretty long life for a genocidal dictator.
 
Oppies should be thankful that our founding father, Ah Gong, left us with a prosperous Singapore. Look at what Mugabe left his niggers.
 
This is what Ah Gong left us. :biggrin:

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One of Ah Gong's best legacies was to build on our British foundations or to just leave them alone. Most AMDK colonies sought to demolish their AMDK institutions and civil service once they got independence in the name of wiping out 'national humiliation'.

Just look at Jiuhu. They replaced the British legal system with a dual system that included shariah. And since then, their ringgit has been depreciating and non-moslems live in fear not knowing when m&ds will vandalize their places of worship or forcibly convert their kids to islam. Look at the number of economic refugees that come across the Causeway each day looking for work in Singapore.
 
Mugabe is not going to hell. As a god-fearing religious catholic, he going to heaven!

Only people who reject Jesus go straight to hell, including fanatics of other religions.
 
So, he died in SINKapore. Is the PAP going to give him an honourable send off?
 
Tiagong he picked up his dictatorship tips and hard handling of opposition from LKY....
 
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