Mugabe ‘glowed’ with relief after he quit as Zimbabwe’s president, says priest who mediated exit
Robert Mugabe’s face “glowed” with relief when he agreed to step down as Zimbabwe’s president last week under pressure from the military and his party after 37 years in power, the priest who mediated his resignation said on Sunday.
Father Fidelis Mukonori, a Jesuit priest who is a close Mugabe friend, laughed off a report by the privately owned Standard newspaper that Mugabe cried and lamented the betrayal by close lieutenants when he agreed to resign.
“When he finished his signature his face just glowed, no weeping unless there were angels weeping somewhere,” Mukonori said after mass at the Chishawasha Catholic mission just outside the capital Harare.

He said Mugabe realised it was the end of the road two days before he resigned, when he saw 60,000 Zimbabweans protesting and demanding he quit at the Harare grounds where he was inaugurated as prime minister in 1980.
His signed resignation letter was read out on Tuesday, as parliament heard a motion to impeach him.
Sources have said Mugabe was defiant when he met army top brass on November 16 – which was the start of an extraordinary five-day stand-off between Mugabe and Zimbabwe’s supreme law on one side, and the military who had seized power, his party and Zimbabwe’s people on the other.