Exiled Saviour Kasukuwere says he will be home in days to face the music. He has told The Sunday Times in an interview that he has found d...
Exiled Saviour Kasukuwere says he will be home in days to
face the music. He has told The Sunday Times in an interview that he has found
diaspora tough for the past six months.
He said :”I am returning home and if I did any crime, then
I must be brought before the courts and charged. I must answer to the charges
of the crimes that I did commit in the country.” Kasukuwere said he must have
the courage to face whatever has to come my way.”
Kasukuwere fled with other G40 bigwigs, Jonathan Moyo and
Patrick Zhuwao. But the trio has since fallen out. Kasukuwere declined to
comment on the fallout between Moyo and Zhuwao.
He said he had been forced to adapt to life in exile. “I
have had to adapt to the environment, live within my means and do away with
yesterday’s appetites. I can’t afford either the luxury or the pleasures of
things such as a holiday, all those things are no longer a priority. Where I used to drive around with lots of
security personnel, it’s gone. I have had to learn to take care of myself. I
always used to tell people to get ready for a ‘rainy day’ and to never get used
to having someone carrying your bags.”
But Kasukuwere said it was unfair to blame Mugabe for the
decay in Zimbabwe. He said the entire government was involved in collective
decision making and had also to shoulder responsibility.
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