'Who cares?' Mugabe turns 94 behind walls of his mansion

Zimbabwe's then-President Robert Mugabe eats cake at his 92nd birthday celebration in Masvingo, on February 27, 2016. /REUTERS
Zimbabwe's then-President Robert Mugabe eats cake at his 92nd birthday celebration in Masvingo, on February 27, 2016. /REUTERS

Zimbabwe's former ruler Robert

Mugabe

observed his 94th birthday in private behind the walls of his Harare mansion on Wednesday.

He did so without the lavish parties that marked the occasion during his nearly four-decade rule.

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Mugabe

was ousted in a defacto coup by the military last November, paving way for his former deputy and protege Emmerson Mnangagwa to become president.

An intelligence official who follows

Mugabe's movements said the former ruler was at his Blue Roof mansion with wife Grace and had no known plans to leave the compound.

During

Mugabe's rule, his birthday was marked by lavish fetes thrown by his ruling Zanu-PF party, where loyalists would feast on dishes ranging from elephant to buffalo meat.

Last year, Zanu-PF spent $2 million on

Mugabe's bash just outside the second biggest city Bulawayo. A local bakery donated a cake weighing 96 kg (211 pounds).

State companies and government departments traditionally marked the event by placing fawning advertisements in the country's state-controlled newspapers, while office staff would pamper

Mugabe

with presents.

Since

Mugabe

left power, the government has declared his birthday a public and bank holiday, Robert Gabriel

Mugabe

Youth Day. The man who ruled Zimbabwe from independence in 1980 has himself not been seen or spoken in public since stepping down.

"Who cares about

Mugabe

now?" said Tendekai Savanhu, a street vendor and avowed opposition supporter. "We don't want to know what he is doing, this country is better off without him."

On Monday

Mugabe

met the chairman of the African Union Commission, Moussa Faki, who later told reporters the former leader was happy with the way he was being treated by Mnangagwa's government.

"He told me that he had resigned for the sake of peace and development of the country and he agreed to go," said Moussa.

Mugabe

has defied media reports about his health and has outlived his longtime political nemesis Morgan Tsvangirai, who died last week after a long battle with cancer and was buried in his rural home of Buhera on Tuesday.

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