Zimbabwean University staffer suspended over Mugabe's cap mishap
For Zimbabwean leader Robert Mugabe, one size does not fit all.
A senior staffer at the University of Zimbabwe has
been suspended for allegedly procuring academic caps for Mugabe that
were too small for his head, according to court papers filed this week.
A
mortarboard that was offered to the longtime leader at a graduation
ceremony last year was rejected as too small, the papers said. But
Mugabe wore that same mortarboard without any problems at an Oct. 2
ceremony after the cap bought for this year was also rejected as tiny,
they said.
Mugabe appeared at the ceremonies in his role as chancellor of Zimbabwe's dozen-plus state universities.
Ngaatendwe
Takawira, an assistant registrar at the University of Zimbabwe, has
approached the labor court to try to stop disciplinary hearings against
her over the cap mishap.
The university alleges that this year's
graduation ceremony had to be delayed by 45 minutes while authorities
scrounged around for a cap that fit Mugabe.
Takawira,
however, has argued that, after efforts to get a replacement failed,
the 91-year-old leader wore a previously rejected cap that was just the
right size.
"It fit the Chancellor perfectly well," Takawira said in the papers, which were filed by her lawyer, Thabani Mpofu.
"The
cap sizes were obtained from the Chancellor's office and also, when he
was asked to fit the caps, his office indicated that he was busy," she
said.
Takawira, who said she
has been in charge of the university's graduation ceremonies since 1996,
wants the labor court to stop what she calls "biased" disciplinary
hearings against her and allow an independent committee to conduct the
proceedings.
The university has said there is no evidence of bias on the disciplinary committee handling Takawira's case.
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