Susan, wife of Zimbabwe’s Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, was on Friday killed in a Harare car crash that left her husband slightly injured, according to reports.
Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) said the PM was not critically hurt in the collision with a lorry. He was taken to a clinic in the capital. The driver of his official vehicle was seriously injured. There was no word on the condition of the lorry driver.
The party said there was no immediate reason to believe the accident was suspicious, but it was awaiting full details.
Susan died before she reached hospital. The couple was married for 31 years and had six children. Mrs. Tsvangirai was widely respected in Zimbabwe as the antithesis of President Robert Mugabe’s extravagant and free-spending wife, Grace, who showed little concern for the plight of the many hungry and poor in her country.
Susan largely avoided the limelight but did speak out on women’s rights and HIV/AIDS. She was deeply religious.
Zimbabwe’s roads are notoriously dangerous, having deteriorated in recent years through lack of maintenance. Drivers are forced on to the wrong side to weave around potholes. Many vehicles drive without proper lights and brakes because of the difficulty and expense of obtaining spare parts.
Earlier today, security forces arrested a judge who granted bail to one of Tsvangirai’s most prominent and controversial aides, Roy Bennett, who has been chosen as deputy agriculture minister in the new power-sharing administration. Bennett was arrested three weeks ago on what the MDC says are trumped-up charges of conspiracy to overthrow Mugabe’s administration by force.
Livingstone Chipadze was detained and charged with abuse of power after issuing the release papers for Bennett in line with a high court order. As Bennett was about to leave jail clutching the papers, they were confiscated by prison officials. He remains locked up after prosecutors appealed to the supreme court and extended his detention.
Bennett has told visitors he believes he is being held hostage by hardliners at the top of the security forces who want the new administration to introduce a blanket amnesty for their crimes over the past 29 years, from the Matabeleland massacres in the 1980s to last year’s campaign of murder, torture and disappearances aimed at scaring voters into supporting Mugabe in the presidential election.
Leave Your Comments