Leslie Wayne
Summertime is travel time and no one is taking to the friendly skies more than Robert Mugabe, the Zimbabwean president who has brought nothing but poverty and pain to his country.
In July, he was in New York, even though sanctions imposed by the  United States do not allow him to enter the country.  The loophole?  The  87-year old Mugabe and an entourage that included his wife Grace, 46,  various government officials and a phalanx of body guards (twelve in  all) came to attend a youth conference at the United Nations. He was the  only head of state at an event that brought together young people to  discuss issues common to their age group. 
U.N.-sponsored events are fair game for Mugabe, as is anything at the  Vatican and in other countries -- mainly in Asia -- that have not  imposed the same travel sanctions that bar him from the U.S. and the  European Union.  This loophole is large enough to fly a 747 through and  that is exactly what Mugabe has been doing, courtesy of Air Zimbabwe. 
"He only comes on U.N. business,'' Nhamo Matambo, a spokesman for  Zimbabwe's mission to the U.N. told 100Reporters. "It was a high level  conference and people came to hear his views."  Matambo declined to say  where Mugabe stayed or what else he did in New York -- "it is not really  a concern of the public." 
Even so, it is hard to miss Mugabe. On the road, he likes to roll  with his pack:  His companions are often a 70-member delegation and his  tastes are extravagant. Mugabe's travel expenses are running around  $3 million a month and it's easy to see why.  He's a regular at the  "Langkawi Dialogue, '' a Malaysian conference where his stay in the  Presidential Suite at the posh Berjaya Langkawi Beach & Spa  --   which "embraces the emerald waters," according to its website  -- costs over $1200 a night. 
The Daily News, a Zimbabwe newspaper, reports  that Mugabe has spent more than $20 million on travel since January  alone and Zimbabwe government officials from the opposition MDC  (Movement for Democratic Change) party fear his travel expenses are on  track to reach $50 million by year's end. 
"The situation is out of hand,'' said  Tendai Biti, an MDC member and finance minister in the country's  divided government. "It's alarming. It's frightening. It's criminal."   Biti said these lavish travel bills mean "you can't put that money  either into health or education" and added that nothing tangible has  resulted from Mr. Mugabe's globe-trekking. 
While in New York, Mugabe used the U. N. conference as a chance to  continue his  portrayal of Zimbabwe as a victim of  "neo-colonial  machinations" through illegal sanctions and constant interference in the  country's domestic affairs, according to an account of his remarks on  the U.N. website. All that, he said, hurts the youth of his country.  
Zimbabwe is hemorrhaging money and Mugabe's jaunts cause it to bleed  even more.  The country has outstanding debt totaling $9 billion and  anticipates a budget shortfall this year of $700 million.  The Daily News article  that broke the travel story estimates Mugabe's 2011 travel budget could  pay for six months of AIDS treatment for 600,000 Zimbaweans.  
Mugabe traveled at least six times this year to Singapore -- at $3  million a pop.  In January, he was off to Singapore on holiday and for  an eye operation.  He returned in February to correct the operation and  needed a March visit, again, he said, because of his eyes. He has made  several other trips there since.   
He, Grace and a delegation, attended the Vatican beatification ceremonies last April for Pope John Paul II. Rome is popular on the Mugabe circuit: He attended the funeral of John Paul II in 2005 and any number of U.N. conferences in the Eternal City on such issues as food and agriculture -- both of which are in short supply in Zimbabwe, thanks to Mugabe's policies.
He, Grace and a delegation, attended the Vatican beatification ceremonies last April for Pope John Paul II. Rome is popular on the Mugabe circuit: He attended the funeral of John Paul II in 2005 and any number of U.N. conferences in the Eternal City on such issues as food and agriculture -- both of which are in short supply in Zimbabwe, thanks to Mugabe's policies.
The presence of his wife, Grace, raises hackles back in Harare.  Grace's penchant for extravagant shopping sprees in the world's capitals  has earned her such monikers as  "Dis-Grace," "First Shopper" and  "Grasping Grace."  University of Zimbabwe political science professor  John Makumbe saw the recent New York trip as a thinly-veiled opportunity  for Grace to go shopping. 
In an interview with SW Radio Africa, an independent radio station, Prof.  Makumbe  said Mugabe is always itching  to jet away to "facilitate shopping" for Grace and replenish their  supplies of luxury goods.  There have been widespread press accounts of  Grace's wholesale purchases of marble statues, handbags and gems and of  her aides paying for hotel rooms with bags of cash. 
Of course, as with all travel, not everything goes smoothly.  When  Mugabe was in New York last year for the U.N. General Assembly, he  decided to hit a decidedly down-scale Duane Reade drug store.  While  standing amid a display of blushers and lipsticks and looking intently, a  New Yorker with family in Zimbabwe recognized him.  According to an account in London's Daily Mail, the shopper began to shout at him: "Give the power to the people. Leave office gracefully. Do it for Zimbabwe." 
A dozen of Mugabe's bodyguards swooped down on the protester and  bundled him outside while Mugabe, after waiting for the coast to clear,  scurried into a waiting limousine. 
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/leslie-wayne/mugabe-travel-expenses_b_945523.html
 
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