Mugabe denied
that the country was in a fragile state. Zimbabwe is the most highly developed
country in Africa after South Africa, President Robert Mugabe has said.
"We have
over 14 universities and our literacy rate is over 90 [%] - the highest in
Africa," he said, adding that the economy was improving.
Zimbabwe has
been struggling to pay its civil servants recently and is ranked 24th on the
UNDP's Human Development Index for Africa.
"We have
more resources, perhaps more than the average country in the world." Mr
Mugabe said, during a panel discussion on fragile states at the World Economic
Forum on Africa in South Africa's costal city of Durban.
"We have
a bumper harvest, maize, tobacco, and other crops. We are not a poor
country," Mr Mugabe added, while acknowledging that Zimbabwe had problems.
Last year, more than four million people were in need of food aid in Zimbabwe
after rains failed. The country was once known as the breadbasket of southern
Africa.
The
opposition accuses Mr Mugabe, who has ruled since independence in 1980, of
ruining the economy.
Zimbabwe has
faced a severe cash shortage since last year and has introduced so-called bond
notes as a substitute for the US dollar, the main currency people use.
Hyperinflation
forced the government to abandon the Zimbabwean dollar in 2009.
After Mr
Mugabe came to power in 1980, he was widely praised for improving access to
education in the country and in the 1990s, it did have among the highest
literacy rates in Africa.
However,
schools have also been affected by the country's economic problems and rates
have now dropped back.
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