The Daily Telegraph

How Mrs Mugabe slayed ‘the crocodile’

First Lady makes play for power as president fires his long-serving deputy for ‘disloyalty and deceit’

- By Peta Thornycrof­t

THE battle to succeed Robert Mugabe intensifie­d yesterday after the ageing Zimbabwean president fired a longservin­g deputy many saw as his heir apparent.

Emmerson Mnangagwa, who had served as vice president since 2014 and who was exiled alongside Mr Mugabe during the 1970s war against white minority rule, was fired yesterday for “disloyalty, disrespect, deceit and being unreliable,” the country’s informatio­n ministry said in a statement.

Mr Mnangagwa, 75, often referred to by his war-time name, Ngwenya, (crocodile) had long been tipped to succeed Mr Mugabe, 93, when he died or retired. The announceme­nt followed a weekend of public humiliatio­n for Mr Mnangagwa and was widely seen as a victory for Grace Mugabe, the Zimbabwean first lady and a potential rival for the succession.

Mrs Mugabe, 52, publicly mocked him when he was in the audience at a rally on Saturday. The following day, she told thousands of Apostolic Church members that Mr Mnangagwa tried to overthrow her husband from independen­ce onwards.

“In 1980 this person called Mnangagwa wanted to stage a coup. He wanted to wrestle power from the president. He was conspiring with whites. That man is a ravisher,” she said.

The comments provoked outrage from supporters of Mr Mnangagwa, a veteran of the war against white minority rule.

He was tortured in detention in Rhodesia avoiding the death penalty only because the judge believed he was under 21 when he was sentenced, and spent ten years in prison. On release he qualified as a lawyer after studying at the University of Zambia and the University of London. After Zimbabwean independen­ce in 1980 he acted as Mr Mugabe’s hatchet man against internal opposition, and has been accused of orchestrat­ing crackdowns which left thousands dead.

Mrs Mugabe said at the weekend she wanted to be a vice president and expects to be appointed to the post at the ruling Zanu PF’S congress next month.

Mr Mnangagwa enjoys the backing of senior members of the Zimbabwe National Army, while the police support the Mugabe clan. Mr Mugabe previously announced that he might retire senior military leaders.

Evan Tigere, 64, a veteran of the war against white rule in Rhodesia and now a street vendor in Harare’s streets, said: “This time Mugabe has pressed the wrong button.

“We now need to gather everyone in Zimbabwe to fight in the same corner to remove these idiots. How can we be run by husband and wife? Tell me which country has a husband and wife being president and vice at the same time?”

A civil servant working as a clerk within one of Harare’s main government buildings said she was shocked at the news.

Chinopiwa Murefu, 36, said Mr Mnangagwa’s departure from Zanu-pf presented an opportunit­y for the opposition Movement for Democratic Change to create an alliance with him at next year’s elections. “We could form a formidable party to save this country,” she said.

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 ??  ?? Grace Mugabe with supporters, top, wants to be her husband’s vice-president
Grace Mugabe with supporters, top, wants to be her husband’s vice-president

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