Mr Robert Mugabe accompanied by wife Grace at his inauguration ceremony in Harare on August 22, 2013. FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP
Zimbabwean police are
investigating former ruler Robert Mugabe's wife Grace, accused of
smuggling ivory worth millions to underground foreign markets, a state-owned weekly reported Sunday.
smuggling ivory worth millions to underground foreign markets, a state-owned weekly reported Sunday.
The Sunday Mail
said investigators from the parks and wildlife authority handed
documents to police showing that the former first lady "spirited large
consignments of ivory to China, the United Arab Emirates and the United
States among other destinations".
Police spokeswoman Charity Charamba confirmed receiving a report but declined to elaborate when questioned by AFP.
The Sunday Mail
said the report accused Grace Mugabe of ordering officials to grant her
permits to export the ivory as gifts to the leaders of various
countries.
Unnamed whistleblower
"Once
outside Zimbabwe, the 'gifts' would be pooled together with other
consignments of the product and routed to black markets," the Sunday Mail reported.
A
senior official in the presidency, Mr Christopher Mutsvangwa, told the
paper the government was tipped off by an unnamed whistleblower.
"Police and whistleblowers laid a trap for suppliers believed to be working for Grace Mugabe," Mr Mutsvangwa said.
"The
culprits were caught and that is how investigations started. When we
were confronted with so much evidence, there is no way we could ignore."
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The paper said police may question the former first lady soon.
Mrs
Grace Mugabe was tipped alongside the current President Emmerson
Mnangagwa to succeed Mugabe, who ruled Zimbabwe since independence from
British colonial rule in 1980 until he was forced to step down in
November 2017 following a military takeover.
She earned the sobriquet "Gucci Grace" for her lavish lifestyle.
Zimbabwe has suffered rampant poaching of elephants, targeted for their ivory tusks which are used for ornaments and medicines.
Cyanide poisoning
At
least 400 elephants died from cyanide poisoning in Hwange, Zimbabwe's
biggest national park in the northwest of the country, between 2013 and
2015.
But parks director-general Fulton Mangwanya said poaching had declined since Mugabe's ouster.
"Poaching levels have dropped sharply in Hwange because the market has been disturbed," the Sunday Mail quoted him as saying.
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