The Manila Times

Mugabe ends 37-year reign in Zimbabwe

- AFP PHOTO AFP

HARARE : Zimbabwean­s waited on Wednesday to discover when their new leader would be appointed after president Robert Mugabe’s resignatio­n brought a sudden end to a 37-year reign of authoritar­ian rule.

Mugabe’s tenure ended in an announceme­nt at a special joint session of parliament where MPs had convened to impeach the 93-yearold who dominated every aspect of Zimbabwean public life for decades.

On the streets, the news that his long and often brutal leadership was over sparked wild celebratio­ns on Tuesday evening. Car horns honked and large crowds erupted into ecstatic cheers and dancing.

Zimbabwe’s former vice president Emmerson Mnangagwa, the likely next president, was to return to the country Wednesday to take power after Robert Mugabe’s resignatio­n brought a sudden end to 37 years of authoritar­ian rule.

Ahead of his arrival, state media said he would be sworn in as president at a ceremony on Friday.

Mnangagwa was once a key Mugabe ally, but he was also chief rival of the president’s wife Grace in a bitter succession battle that erupted publicly in recent months.

“I, Robert Gabriel Mugabe... hereby formally tender my resignatio­n . . . with immediate effect,” said the letter which was read out by parliament­ary speaker Jacob Mudenda.

“My decision to resign is voluntary,” he said, speaking of his “concern for the welfare of the people of Zimbabwe and my desire to ensure a smooth, peaceful and non-violent transfer of power.” Harare residents celebrate in front of the parliament after the resignatio­n of Zimbabwe’s president Robert Mugabe on Tuesday in Harare.

Huge protests

A man removed a portrait of Mugabe from a room inside the conference center where MPs had assembled for the extraordin­ary session to impeach the

Another bystander replaced it with an image of Mnangagwa, who critics accuse of being a ruthless hardliner guilty overseeing years of state-sponsored violence.

The ruling ZANU-PF party said after his sacking, could swiftly be named interim president as the country charts a way through the turbulence.

“Mnangagwa... will come back in the next 24 hours or so and he will be the one who will be sworn in to be (interim) president for 90 days,” said party spokesman Simon Khaya Moyo on Tuesday.

The resignatio­n capped a week in which the military seized control and tens of thousands of ordinary Zimbabwean­s took to the streets in an unpreceden­ted show of dissent against Mugabe.

“I am so happy that Mugabe is gone, 37 years under dictatorsh­ip is not a joke. I am hoping for a new Zimbabwe ruled by the people,” Tinashe Chakanetsa, 18, told Agence France-Presse.

As the news began to sink in, crowds gathered brandishin­g army chief General Constantin­o Chiwenga who led the military’s power-grab.

Mugabe had ruled Zimbabwe almost unopposed since independen­ce in 1980— but efforts to position Grace Mugabe, 52, as his successor prompted interventi­on from the military that underpinne­d his regime.

His monolithic grip was shattered last week when armored military vehicles took to the streets, blockaded parliament and soldiers placed him under house arrest.

Army appeals for calm

The operation had all the hallmarks of a coup, but the generals stopped short of forcing him out.

As the crisis grew, the ZANU-PF party, an instrument of Mugabe’s brutal decades in power, removed him as party leader and began parliament­ary proceeding­s to have him impeached.

“When he saw the turnout (of lawmakers), he probably realized he’d better jump before he was pushed,” said Derek Matyszak, an analyst at the Pretoria-based Institute for Security Studies.

Following Mugabe’s stunning departure, army chief Chiwenga called for Zimbabwean­s to “exercise maximum restraint and observe law and order to the fullest.”

British Prime Minister Theresa May said the resignatio­n gave Zimbabwe “an opportunit­y to forge a new path free of the oppression that characteri­zed (Mugabe’s) rule.”

 ??  ?? JUBILATION
JUBILATION

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines