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STRONGMAN NICKNAMED ‘CROCODILE’ SET TO REPLACE DICTATOR MUGABE

Ruthless former vice-president’s record sparks fears that Zimbabwe may face even more upheaval if he takes control

- By Kimiko de Freytas-Tamura

The son of farmers, he was a hardened freedom fighter by 16, trained as a lawyer and rose to become chief of his new country’s fearsome intelligen­ce service. Known as the “Crocodile”, he once explained the nickname by saying: “It strikes at the appropriat­e time.”

Emmerson Mnangagwa, the vice-president of Zimbabwe until he was fired recently, now stands to become its new leader after the military took President Robert Mugabe into custody early on Wednesday and plunged the southern African nation into uncertaint­y.

What role Mr Mnangagwa, 75, played in what appears to have been a coup by his military allies is not yet known, but officials and observers of his rise to power say he shares some of Mr Mugabe’s traits: power-hungry, corrupt and a master of repression.

“His ruthlessne­ss is legion,” said Peter Fabricius, a South African journalist and one of many observers who fear that Zimbabwe is exchanging one strongman for another.

In firing Mr Mnangagwa, Mr Mugabe — Zimbabwe’s leader since independen­ce in 1980 and, at 93, the world’s oldest head of state — might have finally overreache­d, singling out an erstwhile ally with liberation war credential­s and a deep power base of his own.

The firing was widely seen as paving the way for Mr Mugabe’s wife, Grace, to succeed her husband as president, but Grace Mugabe — widely disliked for her volatile temper and expensive tastes — has almost no support among the military officers and intelligen­ce operatives who maintain a tight grip on the country.

By the time of Mr Mnangagwa’s dismissal, the enmity between the vice-president and Grace Mugabe had spilled into the open. He accused her of trying to kill him with poisoned ice cream from her dairy farm, an allegation she denied.

As the army negotiates with Robert Mugabe over a transition in which he would potentiall­y be allowed to go into exile, the mood in the country is subdued. Most Zimbabwean­s have rejoiced at the downfall of the Mugabes, whose political strangleho­ld all but ruined the economy and alienated much of the population.

But many see the takeover as a symptom of the infighting and generation­al divide roiling the governing party, Zanu-PF, rather than a genuine chance at multiparty democracy and economic reform. There is also fear about his associatio­n with some of the Mugabe era’s low points. Mr Mnangagwa was accused of orchestrat­ing a crackdown in the 1980s in which thousands of members of the Ndebele ethnic group were killed. He was an avid supporter of Mr Mugabe’s most controvers­ial economic policy — the expropriat­ion and redistribu­tion of land that had been controlled by white farmers since the era of colonialis­m. He was also accused of being behind deadly violence in 2008 a bid to rig polls in favour of Mr Mugabe, a claim he denies.

“There is a healthy dose of trepidatio­n because they know that the man who might take over is not Mr Democracy,” said Wilf Mbanga, editor of The Zimbabwean, an online newspaper. “His track record is not impressive. He’s got a messy past. Is he going to clean up his act? We don’t know.”

Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa was born on Sept 15, 1942, in Zvishavane, a mining town, the child of politicall­y active farmers.

His father was steeped in the resistance movement against white settlers, and his political activism forced the family to flee to present-day Zambia. “He was born into politics,” said Victor Matemadand­a, secretary-general of the Zimbabwe National Liberation War Associatio­n, who served under Mr Mnangagwa in the military.

Expelled from school for his activism, Mr Mnangagwa joined the movement to liberate what was then Rhodesia, a British colony, from white rule. He received military training in China and Egypt.

At 16, he was part of a plot to blow up a railway line. His accomplice­s were summarily executed, but a priest appealed to the British to spare him on account of his age. He was instead given a 10-year sentence in prison, where he devoted himself to study. After his release, he earned a law degree from the University of Zambia.

He soon left the legal practice to join the liberation movement in Mozambique, then a Portuguese colony, where he met Robert Mugabe and became his personal assistant and bodyguard. He was a commander during the war for independen­ce in the 1970s. He was at Mr Mugabe’s side when the white-led government entered into political negotiatio­ns that resulted in the birth of Zimbabwe in 1980.

Mr Mugabe rewarded Mr Mnangagwa’s loyalty by elevating him to different posts. At various points of his career, he was minister of justice and defence, minister for rural housing and speaker of parliament, among other positions.

While in charge of the Central Intelligen­ce Organisati­on in the mid-1980s, Mr Mnangagwa was accused of orchestrat­ing a brutal campaign known as Gukurahund­i — “the early rain that washes away the chaff before the spring rain” — in which thousands of political opponents and civilians from the Ndebele ethnic group were killed, a claim he has denied. He has been a central node in the web of relationsh­ips that connect the army, the intelligen­ce agencies and the governing party.

Like his nemesis Grace Mugabe, Mr Mnangagwa is deeply unpopular in parts of the country. He lost his parliament­ary seat at least twice, once after he was accused of firebombin­g his opponent’s house, according to Mbanga.

In recent years, Mr Mnangagwa has tried to reform his chequered past, styling himself an advocate of agricultur­al reform and a proponent of efforts to restore Zimbabwe’s relationsh­ip with outside investors and internatio­nal institutio­ns, including the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and the World Bank.

In 2014, when Mr Mugabe removed Joice Mujuru, then vice-president, in circumstan­ces similar to Mr Mnangagwa’s later dismissal, he defended the president’s decision. Ms Mujuru went on to form an opposition party.

“It is not for nothing that he is known as Ngwenya,” said Fabricius, the journalist, using the Xhosa word for crocodile.

“He didn’t ride off into the sunset to launch yet another opposition party, or just retire from politics to make even more money, as many had expected.”

The relationsh­ip with the Mugabes began to sour this year after Grace Mugabe began to make an increasing­ly open bid to succeed her husband. She accused him of plotting a coup, and he accused her of trying to kill him.

Although the latest military action was set off by Mr Mnangagwa’s firing, reports are emerging that it had been planned several weeks earlier, with senior military officers consulting South African and Chinese officials.

Mr Mnangagwa’s allies received assurances from South Africa that it would not intervene as long as the action did not spill over beyond its borders, according to Africa Confidenti­al, an online journal.

The origins of the nickname Crocodile are not clear. Some say it was Mr Mnangagwa’s nom de guerre during the liberation struggle; others say it is derived from his family name.

Mr Matemadand­a, the military veteran, elaborated on the nickname.

“A crocodile patiently waits for his target, pretending to be a rock,” he said. “At times you think he doesn’t react, or doesn’t have any solution to what is happening. He doesn’t show irritation until the optimal moment and then he strikes. And when he does, he doesn’t miss his target.

“Everyone who gets into politics knows that the moment you join you don’t join to be the last name, you join with the hope that you’ll come out first.”

Regarding the latest developmen­ts, he said Mr Mnangagwa has been patient for a very long time after a long career.

As his commander, Mr Matemadand­a said Mr Mnangagwa was “one of the most polite, tolerant, very down-to-earth persons that I have ever met”.

 ??  ?? UNCERTAINT­Y: People pass newspaper billboards in Harare on Thursday. President Robert Mugabe’s decades-long rule seems to be over after a military coup.
UNCERTAINT­Y: People pass newspaper billboards in Harare on Thursday. President Robert Mugabe’s decades-long rule seems to be over after a military coup.
 ??  ?? YELLOW PERIL: Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe and his wife Grace arrive for a Zimbabwe African National Union supporters’ solidarity rally in Harare this month.
YELLOW PERIL: Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe and his wife Grace arrive for a Zimbabwe African National Union supporters’ solidarity rally in Harare this month.
 ??  ?? RUTHLESS OPERATOR: Emmerson Mnangagwa, fired recently as vice-president, is viewed by his critics as power-hungry, corrupt and a master of repression.
RUTHLESS OPERATOR: Emmerson Mnangagwa, fired recently as vice-president, is viewed by his critics as power-hungry, corrupt and a master of repression.

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