
VICTORIA FALLS, Zimbabwe — President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe marked his 91st birthday by speaking for more than an hour on his feet Saturday, delivering a characteristically defiant speech in which he threatened to take over land and animal sanctuaries in the hands of whites.
Mugabe’s robust performance during a party in the resort town of Victoria Falls seemed designed to dispel any speculation that old age was slowing him down after a recent fall at Harare’s main airport. Mugabe’s birthday was Feb. 21.
Thousands of people packed the grounds of a hotel to praise the man who has led Zimbabwe since its independence in 1980, and youth officials who organized the event encouraged Mugabe to rule until he dies. Mugabe won disputed elections in 2013. He will be 94 during the next elections in 2018.
In his speech, Mugabe said a recent audit showed whites still control vast tracts of Zimbabwean land despite an often violent land reform program that saw thousands of white farmers evicted to make way for blacks.
“Zimbabwe has lots of safaris, but very few are African. Most are white-owned. In our region, we have the most safaris and animals. But we are now going to invade those forests. Our people cannot keep suffering,” Mugabe said in the nationally televised address.
He said he will allow whites to own animal sanctuaries only if the United States removes sanctions imposed on him, his wife and some members of his inner circle. The West has long sparred with Mugabe over his human rights record.
“We can do things for ourselves. We don’t need the white man to continue to guide us,” Mugabe said.
The Commercial Farmers Union, which represents white farmers, says fewer than 300 out of 4,500 whites remain on land after a purge that started in 2000.



