This file photo taken on August 25, 2017 shows Zimbabwe's first lady
Grace Mugabe attending the opening of the annual agricultural fair in
Harare.
The University of Zimbabwe has published her PhD thesis, which is now
the subject of a fraud investigation. PHOTO | JEKESAI NJIKIZANA | AFP
Zimbabwe's leading university has published the thesis submitted
by former first lady Grace Mugabe, who was controversially awarded a
doctorate which is now the subject of a fraud investigation.
Grace,
whose apparent desire to succeed her 93-year-old husband prompted last
year's army takeover that eventually saw Robert Mugabe resign, was
awarded a PhD by the University of Zimbabwe in 2014 after just months of
study.
Doctorates typically require several years of full-time research and writing.
"We
saw the thesis on the website (late Wednesday)... the question is why
it took four years to publish," said Ashley Munetsi, secretary-general
of the Zimbabwe National Students' Union.
Zimbabwean anti-corruption investigators said last month they are probing whether Grace fraudulently obtained the degree.
"This
is an obvious cover-up and we are not going to rest until the matter is
settled. We are calling on the vice-chancellor to account for the
degree," said Munetsi.
"If it's found out that the degree was fraudulently awarded, it should be revoked to protect the integrity of the university."
AFP has seen a copy of the 226-page doctoral thesis, titled "The Changing Social Structure and Functions of the Family".
The
work, submitted under Grace's maiden name, was dedicated to "the
President of Zimbabwe Comrade Robert Gabriel Mugabe because of his
dedication and commitment to the well-being of Zimbabweans".
In the 80,000-word submission, Grace goes into detail about a children's home that bears her name.
"The
home was my brain child. The main objective was to provide care for the
abandoned, orphaned and vulnerable children," she wrote.
Robert Mugabe resigned as president on November 21, a few days after the military took control of the country.
President
Emmerson Mnangagwa was sworn in as president days later and both Robert
and Grace have kept low profiles since their spectacular reversal of
fortune.
During the height of the
upheaval, students at UZ boycotted their end of term exams to call for
Grace to be stripped of her PhD and Robert to be stripped of the
presidency.
Grace was routinely
accused of extravagant spending on luxury clothes and international
travel, and of involvement in corrupt land deals. She is popularly known
as "Gucci Grace", "The First Shopper" or even "DisGrace".
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