Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe returned home on Saturday after medical treatment in Singapore, the state broadcaster said, putting to rest speculation over the 93-year-old's whereabouts.
The Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation said Mugabe, who left for Singapore last Saturday, "had eye surgery in the Asian country a few years ago" and had returned for a "routine medical check-up".
Mugabe,
in power since Zimbabwe's independence from British colonial rule in
1980, is his party's presidential candidate for next year's elections
despite concerns over his age and fitness to rule.
ZBC
later reported that Mugabe's wife Grace was injured in a "freak car
accident" involving her motorcade at Harare airport as she returned with
the president.
"(She) suffered some soft tissue bruising on the right ankle as a result,"
ZBC said, adding that she did not suffer any major injury and was
discharged from hospital shortly after the incident. It is unclear
exactly how Grace's ankle was injured.
This week's trip there is Mugabe's third there this year.
Public
hospitals in Zimbabwe often suffer from chronic shortages of drugs and
staff as the economy has struggled to rebound following years of
mismanagement.
Mugabe's ZANU-PF party was
forced to postpone a rally on Friday at which he was due to address
supporters, triggering speculation about his whereabouts.
Early
in 2015, he tripped and fell as he left a podium after addressing
supporters who had gathered at Harare airport to welcome him back from a
foreign trip.
The same year he also read a speech to parliament apparently unaware that he had delivered the same speech before.
Mugabe's party is sharply divided over his succession. Vice-president Emmerson Mnangagwa and Mugabe's wife Grace are seen as likely contenders to take over in the event of his death or retirement.
Opposition parties have formed a coalition to fight Mugabe's party in next year's vote.
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