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Zimbabwe's Mugabe Throws 'Africa's Biggest Party' For His 93rd Birthday

Zimbabwe's Mugabe Throws 'Africa's Biggest Party' For His 93rd Birthday
A picture taken on February 21, 2017 shows a cake bearing a portrait of Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe during a private ceremony to celebrate Mugabe's 93rd birthday in Harare. Mugabe, the world's oldest national ruler, turned 93, using a long and occasionally rambling interview to vow to remain in power despite growing signs of frailty. / AFP / Jekesai NJIKIZANA (Photo credit should read JEKESAI NJIKIZANA/AFP/Getty Images)
JEKESAI NJIKIZANA via Getty Images
A picture taken on February 21, 2017 shows a cake bearing a portrait of Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe during a private ceremony to celebrate Mugabe's 93rd birthday in Harare. Mugabe, the world's oldest national ruler, turned 93, using a long and occasionally rambling interview to vow to remain in power despite growing signs of frailty. / AFP / Jekesai NJIKIZANA (Photo credit should read JEKESAI NJIKIZANA/AFP/Getty Images)
A birthday cake bears a portrait of Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe.
JEKESAI NJIKIZANA via Getty Images
A birthday cake bears a portrait of Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe.

As millions of Zimbabweans grapple with food shortages and malnutrition, President Robert Mugabe is throwing himself an extravagant party on Saturday to celebrate his 93rd birthday.

Local media say at least 100,000 people are expected to attend the lavish event in the Bulawayo region, which has been ranked the “worst city in Africa.”

Organizers have promised the celebrations will be “Africa’s biggest party,” according to a BBC radio report. Some 150 cattle have been slaughtered as a feast for celebrants, and numerous cakes have been prepared. Some schools in the region have been shut down. Costs of the party have been estimated at near $1 million.

Just last year, the president declared a national state of emergency after an extreme drought left 5 million people ― half the country’s rural population ― enduring severe food shortages. The United Nations said Zimbabwe faced its worst malnutrition rates in 15 years.

A 13-year-old boy gathers food in the village of Nsezi in Matabeleland, southwestern Zimbabwe.
ZINIYANGE AUNTONY via Getty Images
A 13-year-old boy gathers food in the village of Nsezi in Matabeleland, southwestern Zimbabwe.

The ruling ZANU-PF party reportedly forced several schools and impoverished families in the area to provide donations for Mugabe’s grand party. Earlier in the month, ZANU-PF lawmaker Never Khanye was quoted saying that farmers who received a letters “must donate a beast each for this event, and those that will fail [to do so], we will take it [to mean] that they don’t appreciate what the president has done for them.”

A joint letter from three Zimbabwean civil society groups called the party’s actions a “disturbing if not unconstitutional” abuse of power.

People also are angry that the celebration is taking place near the graves of thousands of people killed by forces loyal to Mugabe in the early 1980s.

Regional security has been heightened to quash anti-Mugabe protests during the festivities.

The elderly leader, whose actual birthday was on Tuesday, has been in power since white-minority rule ended in 1980, and has vowed to stand for re-election next year despite growing concerns about this health.

Speculation has grown over who will replace him after his death, but Mugabe announced Saturday that his party will choose a successor when the time comes. He has also said that he wishes to live until he is 100 and rule for life.

Jesselyn covers world news for The Huffington Post. Follow her on Facebook and Twitter.

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