Fiji Sun

Mugabe ‘Resisting Calls to Resign’

- What’s happened to Grace Mugabe? BBC Feedback: jyotip@fijisun.com.fj

Zimbabwe’s long-time President Robert Mugabe is reportedly refusing to step down immediatel­y, despite growing calls for his resignatio­n. The 93-year-old was put under house arrest during a military takeover on Wednesday, amid a power struggle over who would succeed him.

There has been no official word on the outcome of talks he had with regional envoys and the army chief earlier.

But sources say he has so far refused to agree to move aside. Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai said earlier it was “in the interests of the people” that Mr Mugabe “resign... immediatel­y”. The army moved in after Mr Mugabe last week sacked VicePresid­ent Emmerson Mnangagwa, signalling that he favoured his wife Grace Mugabe to take over his Zanu-PF party and thus the presidency.

The BBC’s Andrew Harding, in Zimbabwe, says that if President Mugabe can be persuaded to step down officially it could help legitimise the military’s dramatic interventi­on.

On the streets, it is hard to find anyone who wants Mr Mugabe to stay on, our correspond­ent adds, but negotiatin­g the manner of his departure and some sort of transition­al agreement to follow could take some time.

So what’s going on in Harare now?

It’s very unclear.

Photos in the Zimbabwe Herald earlier showed Mr Mugabe meeting army chief General Constantin­o Chiwenga and the two envoys from the Southern African Developmen­t Community (Sadc) at State House in Harare. Alongside them was Father Fidelis Mukonori, a Roman Catholic priest known to Mr Mugabe for years, who has been brought in to mediate.

Sources close to the talks say Mr Mugabe - who has been in control of Zimbabwe since it threw off white minority rule in 1980 - is refusing to stand down voluntaril­y before next year’s planned elections.

“I think he is trying to buy time,” one source close to the army leadership told the AFP news agency. Some observers suggest that Mr Mugabe may be trying to seek guarantees of safety for himself and his family before stepping aside.

Zanu-PF officials had earlier suggested Mr Mugabe could remain nominally in power until the party congress in December, when Mr Mnangagwa would be formally installed as party and national leader. Early reports suggested Mrs Mugabe had fled to Namibia, but sources now say she is in the family compound in Harare, along with some of the youth wing of Zanu-PF who had backed her.

On Wednesday, one of her key allies Kudzai Chipanga, made a televised apology for criticisin­g the head of the army as a war of words raged prior to the military takeover.

Mr Chipanga is thought to be in army custody but insisted his statement was voluntary. Other senior members of the youth wing have also reportedly been detained.

 ?? Photo: Reuters ?? Soldiers stand beside military vehicles just outside Harare, Zimbabwe on November 14, 2017.
Photo: Reuters Soldiers stand beside military vehicles just outside Harare, Zimbabwe on November 14, 2017.
 ??  ?? Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe
Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe
 ??  ?? Grace Mugabe
Grace Mugabe

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