The Province

Zimbabwean­s push for Mugabe to go as more exit talks planned

- Christophe­r Torchia and Farai Mutsaka

HARARE — Giddy with joy and finally free to speak out, vast throngs of demonstrat­ors turned Zimbabwe’s capital into a carnival ground on Saturday in a peaceful outpouring of disdain for President Robert Mugabe and calls for him to quit immediatel­y.

Still clinging to his now-powerless post, the longtime leader was scheduled on Sunday to discuss his expected exit with the military command that put him under house arrest.

People in Harare clambered onto tanks and other military vehicles moving slowly through the crowds, danced around soldiers walking in city streets and surged in the thousands toward the building where Mugabe held official functions, a symbol of the rule of the 93-year-old man who took power after independen­ce from white minority rule in 1980.

There, in a situation that could have become tense, the protesters instead showed deference to the small number of soldiers blocking their way and eventually dispersed.

It was a historic day when the old Zimbabwe, a once-promising African nation with a disintegra­ting economy and a mood of fear about the consequenc­es of challengin­g Mugabe, became something new, with a population united, at least temporaril­y, in its fervour for change and a joyful openness that would have seemed fanciful even a few days ago.

The euphoria, however, will eventually subside, and much depends on the behind-thescenes manoeuvrin­g to get Mugabe to officially resign, jump-start a new leadership that could seek to be inclusive and reduce perception­s that the military staged a coup against Mugabe.

The president was to meet military commanders on Sunday in a second round of talks, state broadcaste­r ZBC reported.

“The common enemy is Robert Mugabe. That’s for starters,” said 37-year-old Talent Mudzamiri, an opposition supporter who was born soon after Zimbabwe’s independen­ce.

He had a warning for whoever takes over Zimbabwe: “If the next leader does the same, we are going to come out again.”

Many Zimbabwean­s believe the most likely candidate will be Emmerson Mnangagwa, a former vice-president with close military ties whose dismissal by Mugabe triggered the interventi­on of the armed forces, which sent troops and tanks into the streets this week, effectivel­y taking over the country.

The increasing presidenti­al ambitions of Mugabe’s wife Grace, a polarizing figure who denounced Mnangagwa amid a factional battle within the ruling ZANUPF party, alarmed those who feared a dynastic succession.

“Leadership is not sexually transmitte­d,” read a poster at the Harare rallies. Other signs denounced “Gucci Grace,” a reference to the first lady’s record of high-end shopping expedition­s outside Zimbabwe, which suffered hyperinfla­tion in the past and is currently struggling with a cash shortage and massive unemployme­nt.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES ?? Demonstrat­ors demand the resignatio­n of Zimbabwe’s president outside the State House, the president’s residence, in Harare on Saturday.
— GETTY IMAGES Demonstrat­ors demand the resignatio­n of Zimbabwe’s president outside the State House, the president’s residence, in Harare on Saturday.

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