The department of international relations and cooperation said today that the objective of Mugabe’s visit was to “consult on issues of mutual interest, paying particular focus on bilateral and economic cooperation, including regional and continental matters”.
It said the visit “will further strengthen the historical, cultural and fraternal bonds that exist between South Africa and Zimbabwe”.
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President Robert Mugabe |
In 2014, South Africa’s exports to Zimbabwe amounted to R24.8bn, while Zimbabwe’s exports to South Africa reached R2bn, the department’s spokesperson, Clayson Monyela, said.
It isn’t Mugabe’s first visit to South Africa this year, as he has been attending meetings here – among others on Lesotho – in his capacity as Southern African Development Community chairperson.
His election in January as chairperson of the African Union has also seen some of the travel bans against him lifted.
Zimbabwe’s NewsDay recently reported that Mugabe has spent more than $10m since January on foreign trips, while the country was struggling to pay workers.
Among his other trips after returning in January from a month-long family holiday in the Far East were to attend the inauguration of the new president of Zambia, Edgar Lungu, to fetch his ill wife in the Far East where she was receiving treatment, and to Japan where he spent a week attending the United Nations world conference on disaster risk reduction.
He recently went to Algeria for a three-day state visit, and is also scheduled to travel to India, Ivory Coast and Singapore in the next few weeks on African Union business.
Last week he was in Arusha in Tanzania to attend a youth summit.
In June he will return to South Africa for an AU summit. News24.