Albuquerque Journal

Zimbabwean­s wonder if their new leader will bring change

Mnangagwa’s message of inclusion wasn’t backed up by his actions

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JOHANNESBU­RG — Zimbabwe’s incoming leader Emmerson Mnangagwa, widely known as the Crocodile, is seen as a smart, ruthless politician, and many question if he will be able to bring the change the country craves.

“We are witnessing the beginning of a new, unfolding democracy,” the 75-year-old announced Wednesday upon his return to the country, two weeks after his firing by longtime mentor Robert Mugabe led to the president’s downfall.

Despite the message of inclusion, Zimbabwean­s noted that Mnangagwa made his first public remarks outside ruling ZANU-PF party headquarte­rs and, switching to the local Shona language, praised the party.

They ask whether Mnangagwa will be adequately independen­t from ZANU-PF to revive the battered economy and restore democracy with the backing of the opposition and others.

The ruling party has proven it protects its own. It assured Mugabe he would not be prosecuted if he stepped down, ZANUPF chief whip Lovemore Matuke said: “He is safe, his family is safe and his status as a hero of his country is assured.”

On Thursday, the opposition MDC-T party said it had not been invited to Mnangagwa’s inaugurati­on this morning at a 60,000seat stadium. That’s after the MDC joined the efforts to remove Mugabe, seconding the motion in Parliament to impeach him.

Mnangagwa’s remarkable rise to power — from being sacked as vice president and fleeing the country to being named Zimbabwe’s next leader — was largely thanks to the military, which put Mugabe under house arrest, and ruling party lawmakers who introduced the impeachmen­t proceeding­s.

It is widely expected that Mnangagwa will continue to rely on them.

“Can a crocodile change its scales? Everybody is asking that question. Certainly his first speech was a lost opportunit­y. He did not speak about the need for an inclusive government,” said Piers Pigou, southern Africa expert for the Internatio­nal Crisis Group. “He has a long past with ZANU-PF and the military and that past may stick to him like chewing gum on a shoe.”

Pigou said more will be known when Mnangagwa announces his new government and policies. “It will be difficult for him to escape his history,” he said. “But the door is open.”

 ?? BEN CURTIS/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Supporters of Emmerson Mnangagwa, known as “The Crocodile,” hold up a stuffed crocodile Wednesday while awaiting his arrival at the Zanu-PF party headquarte­rs in Harare, Zimbabwe.
BEN CURTIS/ASSOCIATED PRESS Supporters of Emmerson Mnangagwa, known as “The Crocodile,” hold up a stuffed crocodile Wednesday while awaiting his arrival at the Zanu-PF party headquarte­rs in Harare, Zimbabwe.

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