Los Angeles Times

Did Zimbabwe first lady’s ambitions topple Mugabe?

Army’s coup- like action may be response to her political maneuverin­g

- By Ann M. Simmons ann.simmons@latimes.com Twitter: @AMSimmons1

To supporters, she is a talented businesswo­man and philanthro­pist. Detractors consider her a shrewd and power- hungry opportunis­t.

Now it appears that the machinatio­ns of Grace Mugabe have unintentio­nally led to the downfall of her 93- year- old husband, Robert Mugabe, the president of Zimbabwe and one of Africa’s last independen­ce- era strongmen.

Tanks rolled through the streets of the capital, Harare, on Wednesday after the military seized state television and confined the president to his home.

An army spokesman said that it was not a coup and that Mugabe was safe. But there was no immediate word from the president.

So what led to this showdown?

Observers point to Grace Mugabe.

She and Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa were rivals to succeed Mugabe, and the fight between them fractured the ruling party, the Zimbabwe African National Union- Patriotic Front, known as ZANUPF.

Last week, the president dismissed Mnangagwa, a former defense minister and independen­ce war veteran, after Grace Mugabe accused his supporters of planning a coup.

The removal cleared the way for the 52- year- old first lady, Mugabe’s wife of two decades, to ascend to the top office — until the military intervened Wednesday and took control of the country.

Her fate, like that of her husband, remains unclear.

Their relationsh­ip began as an affair while she was working as a typist at the State House. At the time, she was married to an air force pilot, with whom she had a son. The president was also married.

As the story goes, Mugabe wooed his new bride- tobe — who was born in neighborin­g South Africa — over tea and scones.

“He came to me and started asking about my family,” Grace Mugabe reportedly told South African journalist Dali Tambo in 2013. “He just started talking to me, asking me about my life. ‘ Were you married before?’ Things like that. … I didn’t know it was leading somewhere. I was quite a shy person, very shy.”

His first wife, Sally, died from cancer in 1992, and four years later he married Grace, with whom he already had two children. The nuptials were so lavish the event was dubbed the “Wedding of the Century.” A third child arrived a year later.

The opulent wedding was an early indication of Grace’s extravagan­t tastes.

After the wedding, she reportedly rejected two official residences offered to the couple, opting instead to order the constructi­on of a new mansion. She has since reportedly overseen the constructi­on of two palaces, one costing at least $ 26 million.

Today, the Mugabes are said to own properties worth billions of dollars around the world, including in Malaysia and Hong Kong, as well as lucrative farmlands in Zimbabwe.

Grace Mugabe’s penchant for shopping sprees became legendary. On one extravagan­za in Paris she reportedly spent at least $ 100,000. Critics nicknamed her “Gucci Grace.”

The reproach has come as Zimbabwe’s economy lies in shambles because of mismanagem­ent, corruption and a controvers­ial land reform program that evicted white farmers from profitable farms they had run for generation­s. In recent years, severe drought has ravaged agricultur­e and driven up food prices.

More than 60% of the country’s 16 million people live in poverty. The national currency, the Zimbabwean dollar, is virtually worthless. At one point, inf lation hit 500 billion percent.

In 2002, the European Union imposed sanctions on dozens of members of Zimbabwe’s leadership, in retaliatio­n for being barred from observing the country’s presidenti­al election that year. The United States imposed similar restrictio­ns. The first lady was forced to cut back on overseas shopping trips.

Grace Mugabe’s supporters contend that she is misunderst­ood and is being unfairly treated. They admire her strong support of her husband. They praise her philanthro­py, her founding of an orphanage and what they describe as her skills as a businesswo­man.

She built a dairy farming empire on land formerly owned by white Zimbabwean­s. She has also run several mining businesses, although most are reported to have failed.

At rallies supporters serenade her as “mother of the nation.”

Her birthday has become a day of national celebratio­n, with gushing tributes splashed on the front page of pro- government publicatio­ns and on state television.

But for all her purported attributes, Grace Mugabe is feared and has shown herself to be ruthless.

“She has recently gained the reputation of being very arrogant, very autocratic in terms of the way in which she deals with people who question her and who question her husband,” said Edmond J. Keller, a political scientist and Africa expert at UCLA.

In August, the first lady was accused of assaulting a South African model with an electric extension cord after finding the woman in a hotel room with her sons. She failed to appear for a court hearing and was granted diplomatic immunity.

Earlier this month, Zimbabwean state media reported that four people were arrested after being accused of booing the first lady at a rally.

Her rise in the political arena gained significan­t traction with her 2014 appointmen­t as first secretary of the ruling party’s women’s league.

The position gave her a seat on the party’s powerful Politburo. Around the same time, the University of Zimbabwe awarded her a doctorate in sociology that seemed to boost her credential­s. But critics questioned the degree’s validity because she was registered at the school for only three months and never defended a dissertati­on, according to media reports.

She soon launched a series of rallies, where she shone as the primary sycophant for her husband. She started accusing the thenvice president, Joice Mujuru, of plotting to oust her husband. Mujuru was ultimately fired.

At one rally she was quoted as saying: “They want me to be president. Why not? Am I not a Zimbabwean?”

Days after Mugabe sacked his deputy, a rival of the first lady, the military seized state TV and has confined the president to his home. Officers deny it’s a coup.

 ?? Tsvangiray­i Mukwazhi Associated Press ?? GRACE MUGABE with her husband, Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe’s leader since 1980 whom she hopes to succeed. Supporters admire her staunch loyalty to him.
Tsvangiray­i Mukwazhi Associated Press GRACE MUGABE with her husband, Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe’s leader since 1980 whom she hopes to succeed. Supporters admire her staunch loyalty to him.

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