The Peterborough Examiner

Mugabe urged to quit

Zimbabwe president under house arrest after military seizes power

- FARAI MUTSAKA

HARARE, Zimbabwe — Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe was shown meeting Thursday with the army commander who put him under house arrest, as negotiatio­ns with a South African delegation and a Catholic priest at the state house sought a resolution to the political turmoil and the likely end to Mugabe’s decades-long rule.

The state-run Zimbabwe Herald newspaper published what it called new photos of the meeting, saying details were to come. One showed Mugabe and the army commander shaking hands. The photos did not show first lady Grace Mugabe, whose rapid political rise had alarmed many in the country who feared she could succeed her husband.

South Africa President Jacob Zuma, speaking in parliament, said the political situation “very shortly will be becoming clear.”

Seizing on the political limbo to speak out, civil society groups and opposition leaders urged Mugabe to step aside after 37 years in power and for the country to transition into free and fair elections.

Mugabe has been in military custody, reportedly with his wife, since the army stepped in overnight Tuesday. There was no sign of former vice-president Emmerson Mnangagwa, whose firing last week angered supporters in the military amid concern that Grace Mugabe would take his place at a party meeting next month.

A joint statement by more than 100 civil society groups urged the 93-year-old Mugabe, the world’s oldest head of state, to peacefully step aside and asked the military to respect the constituti­on. A joint statement by churches also appealed for calm.

One analyst said he believed the negotiatio­ns “have pretty much reached an end point” to get Mugabe to step aside and that it was a “matter of hours or days.”

Knox Chitiyo, associate fellow with the Africa program at Chatham House, warned that speculatio­n remains high but said the aim was a peaceful, managed transition.

He said the military wants a dignified exit for Mugabe, who has ruled since independen­ce from white minority rule in 1980 and remains widely known, even praised, in Africa as a liberation leader.

Chitiyo said he doesn’t know where the ailing Mugabe would go but that the destinatio­n is “likely driven by his health.” Mugabe routinely seeks medical treatment in Singapore.

Opposition leaders spoke out but said they had not been contacted as part of the Mugabe negotiatio­ns.

Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, who shared power with Mugabe between 2009 and 2013, said Mugabe must resign and said his party would participat­e in talks on a transition­al mechanism if approached.

Across the country, Zimbabwe ans long frustrated by crackdowns on dissent and a collapsing economy were enjoying freedoms they haven’t had in years. For once, they weren’t contending with bribe-seeking police officers who mounted roadblocks every few kilometres.

Soldiers manning the few checkpoint­s leading into downtown Harare greeted motorists with a smile, searching cars without hostilitie­s and wishing motorists a safe journey.

Street vendors who endured police raids after Mugabe ordered their removal were working without hassles. Trade unions urged workers to go about their business.

“The situation is quite OK because they are now returning to their jobs,” said one resident, Clinton Mandioper.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? A man walks past a military tank parked on the side of a street in the Zimbabwean capital, Harare, on Thursday, a day after the military took power and placed 93-year-old President Robert Mugabe under house arrest.
GETTY IMAGES A man walks past a military tank parked on the side of a street in the Zimbabwean capital, Harare, on Thursday, a day after the military took power and placed 93-year-old President Robert Mugabe under house arrest.

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