Los Angeles Times

Mugabe exit is focus of talks

Zimbabwe’s leader is held; South Africa sends envoys

- By Robyn Dixon

HARARE, Zimbabwe — Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, whose 37 years in power make him one of Africa’s longest- serving leaders, faced his end game Wednesday, after the military placed him under house arrest and seized control of the country to end a prolonged succession crisis.

The 93- year- old ruler was being held with his wife, Grace, whose own presidenti­al ambition and insistence that he fire his top deputy, Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa, angered military leaders to the point that they decided to take charge.

South African President Jacob Zuma confirmed that Mugabe was being detained at home by the military and sent two senior officials as envoys to Zimbabwe to negotiate with the country’s generals.

The Southern African Developmen­t Community was also involved in the talks, which Zuma said will probably focus on a compromise deal to avert violence and move toward a democratic election to pick Mugabe’s successor.

Without such an arrange-

ment, the landlocked southern African nation, which is already facing internatio­nal alienation and economic collapse, would almost certainly be subjected to further sanctions and divestment.

The military said it was acting to target “criminals” around Mugabe and end a deteriorat­ing political situation that was heading toward violence. It has strongly denied that its takeover is a coup, which would violate the nation’s constituti­on.

The military’s plan appears to involve a dignified exit for Mugabe. The president intended to run for another term in an election scheduled for early next year, but his age, frailty and failure to organize an orderly succession sparked an intense power struggle within the ruling party, the Zimbabwe African National UnionPatri­otic Front, or ZANUPF. That battle has destabiliz­ed Zimbabwe for months.

Leaders in southern Africa, where elections may be f lawed but military takeovers are rare, have been watching the events in Zimbabwe with shock.

The language used by Zimbabwe’s military to justify its actions suggests it hopes to appease its neighbors. The stated aim is to restore normality, an independen­t judiciary and a democratic­ally elected parliament as soon as a group of “criminals” close to Mugabe are removed to face justice.

Zuma said he had spoken to Mugabe on Wednesday, “and he is f ine but confined in his home.”

“We would like to call for calm and restraint, particular­ly to the defense force and all security forces in Zimbabwe,” Zuma said. “I am hoping that the defense forces will be able to respect the Constituti­on of Zimbabwe as well as the people of Zimbabwe so that this situation does not go beyond where the situation is now, particular­ly because we are now in contact with them, as well as the president.

“We are hoping that this situation is going to be con- trolled so that peace and stability comes back to Zimbabwe,” he said.

Mugabe was once a respected statesman and liberation fighter, having led Zimbabwe to independen­ce from Britain in 1980 after a seven- year bush war.

During the colonial era, when the country was known as Southern Rhodesia, he spent 10 years in jail for his fierce opposition to white minority rule. He f led to neighborin­g Mozambique upon his release and establishe­d ZANU- PF.

At independen­ce, Mugabe defeated rival liberation leaders to become the new nation’s first prime minister. He introduced free education and healthcare, built new roads, opened the doors to blacks in the formerly whites- only economy and promised reconcilia­tion with former enemies.

“What he’s done for this country, he is a liberation hero no matter what came afterwards,” Harry Davies, the managing editor of the independen­t Harare News, said in an interview Wednesday.

What came afterward was ugly.

In 1987, Mugabe became president after rewriting the country’s independen­ce constituti­on, and he consolidat­ed power by crushing an armed rebellion. A political deal led to the creation of a virtual one- party state.

As the country descended into economic ruin, Mugabe became an internatio­nal outcast for his misrule. He blamed the problems on whites and political enemies.

In the early 2000s, Mugabe sanctioned the invasion of hundreds of white- owned farms by black veterans of the liberation war and other government supporters, a land grab that resulted in the deaths of farmers and political opponents. Supporters praised him for standing up for the black majority against Western imperialis­ts.

But in recent years, Mugabe has been abandoned by even some of his most ardent supporters, including South Africa’s Economic Freedom Fighters party, which wants South Africa to confiscate land from whites.

“The EFF appreciate­s that some of the pain caused in Zimbabwe was due to imperialis­t actions, but a significan­t component of this was self- inf licted,” it said Wednesday on Twitter as it called on Zuma to offer Mugabe political asylum. “President Mugabe cannot insist on remaining in power even when he is physically incapable of doing so.”

If Mugabe does step down, the key question is who becomes acting president in the period leading up to an election. Mnangagwa, whom Mugabe f ired last week, has close links to the military and security organs, making him a likely choice.

Grace Mugabe made no secret of her desire to succeed her husband as president, a prospect that horrif ied most Zimbabwean­s. The military put an end to that possibilit­y.

There were rumors that key figures associated with a faction in the ruling party close to Grace Mugabe had been arrested, but there was no confirmati­on. Among the main f igures in the faction known as G40 is Jonathan Moyo, the higher education minister, a normally prolific tweeter whose account has been silent since Tuesday.

The state- owned Herald newspaper initially reported that the head of the armed forces, Gen. Constantin­o Chiwenga, had been accused of treason by the ruling party. But in a redesigned front page Wednesday morning, the newspaper reported “No military takeover,” citing the military.

The party’s youth wing said its spokesman, Kudzanai Chipanga, was in custody but also denied there had been a coup.

“Contrary to internatio­nal reports the gallant Zimbabwean army has not staged a coup. There is no coup in Zimbabwe. Neither is there a crisis,” the youth league tweeted.

It said Chipanga had called on Zimbabwean­s to “comply with the National Democratic Project which is underway.”

Zimbabwe’s war veterans associatio­n, which includes people who fought in the liberation war against white minority rule, described the military action not as a bloodless coup, but a “bloodless correction.”

Zimbabwean reactions to the military interventi­on were surprising­ly positive. Many saw it as an opportunit­y for change after a prolonged period of drifting misrule.

Opposition f igure and former Finance Minister Tendai Biti tweeted: “It has happened. It’s not a dream. It’s not a nightmare. This is it. This is the now and as Martin Luther King would say, today’s day is the f irst day in the rest of our lives. Cheer up compatriot­s.”

But London- based political analyst Alex T. Magaisa cautioned Zimbabwean­s that a military interventi­on was unlikely to protect the constituti­on and democracy.

“I cannot, for the life of me, fathom why any reasonable person would welcome military rule and its consequenc­es such as martial law,” he tweeted. “Be careful not to let the genie out of the bottle.”

‘ President Mugabe cannot insist on remaining in power even when he is physically incapable of doing so.’ Economic Freedom Fighters, a South African party

 ?? Jekesai Njikizana AFP/ Getty I mages ?? I N ZIMBABWE, the military’s takeover was seen as an opportunit­y for change after a prolonged period of drifting misrule under President Robert Mugabe.
Jekesai Njikizana AFP/ Getty I mages I N ZIMBABWE, the military’s takeover was seen as an opportunit­y for change after a prolonged period of drifting misrule under President Robert Mugabe.
 ?? Philimon Bulawayo New China News Agency ?? THE MILITARY presence in Harare follows what one group has called a “bloodless correction” by Zimbabwe’s generals. The military has placed the nation’s longtime leader, Robert Mugabe, under house arrest.
Philimon Bulawayo New China News Agency THE MILITARY presence in Harare follows what one group has called a “bloodless correction” by Zimbabwe’s generals. The military has placed the nation’s longtime leader, Robert Mugabe, under house arrest.

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