Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe railed against President Obama during
a recent campaign rally, arguing that the U.S. president wanted to
force Africa to "embrace homoséxuality."
The African leader
often criticizes homoséxuality or other perceived enemies to gin up
populist support, but the turn against Obama included a new comment.
"Then
we have this American president, Obama, born of an African father, who
is saying we will not give you aid if you don’t embrace homoséxuality,"
Mugabe said.
"We ask, was he born out of homosexuality? We need
continuity in our race, and that comes from the woman, and no to
homoséxuality. John and John, no. Maria and Maria, no."
He then
broke briefly into Shona, a native Zimbabwean language, before
concluding, it’s not clear about whom, “"f they don’t, we will cut their
heads off."
Mugabe also reiterated his oft-repeated comparison between homoséxuals and pigs.
"They
are worse than dogs and pigs, yes worse than dogs and pigs," he said.
"I keep pigs and the male pig knows the female one."
Parts of the speech, including some of the swipe at Obama, were independently reported in the Zimbabwean outlet NewsDay.
Mugabe
is facing reelection on July 31. It’s the country’s first presidential
vote since a violence-ridden 2008 election that was met with such
international outcry that Mugabe was forced to accept a power-sharing
arrangement with one of his rivals, though he has appeared to largely
maintain power.
Mugabe has run Zimbabwe since 1980 and is now 89 years old but shows no signs of ceding power willingly.
Attitudes
toward homoséxuality are negative in much of sub-Saharan Africa, where
homophobia is often used by populist leaders looking for an easy enemy
or a way to divert from tougher issues.
The Obama
administration’s plan to support gay rights in Africa has at times been
met with a backlash and a belief among some that the United States
wishes to impose homoséxuality on Africans. Just for good measure,
Mugabe also criticized Britain, which he called, in an almost
word-for-word reproduction of long-held North Korean propaganda tropes,
"a very cold, uninhabitable country with small houses."
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