Los Angeles Times

Mugabe stops short of resigning

Zimbabwe’s president was widely expected to quit after being fired by ruling party.

- By Robyn Dixon robyn.dixon@latimes.com Twitter: @RobynDixon_LAT

JOHANNESBU­RG, South Africa — Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, who was widely expected to resign Sunday after the ruling party sacked him and threatened to impeach him if he did not leave office, acknowledg­ed a need for change but remained in the leadership post.

Mugabe, stripped of executive power when the military took control last week, said on state television late Sunday that he would preside over the party congress in December. He acknowledg­ed that the country faced many challenges, including a struggling economy.

Flanked by members of the military, Mugabe stumbled several times while reading the speech. He was expected to announce his resignatio­n but stopped short of doing so.

“The congress is due in a few weeks from now,” said Mugabe, 93, who has ruled Zimbabwe for 37 years. “I will preside over its processes.”

Mugabe lost the support of the military after he fired Emmerson Mnangagwa, a former vice president who has close links with the security services, and planned to install his wife, the deeply unpopular Grace Mugabe, so that she could succeed him. Members of the ruling ZANU-PF party and the military were outraged by the plan.

“Whatever the pros and cons of the way they went about registerin­g those concerns, I as the president of Zimbabwe, as their commander in chief, do acknowledg­e the issues they have drawn my attention to, and do believe that these were raised in the spirit of honesty and out of deep and patriotic concern for the stability of our nation and for the welfare of our people,” Mugabe said Sunday.

Mugabe said he had met with Constantin­o Chiwenga, head of the armed services, and other military commanders and sought to return the country to normality. Backing down, Mugabe said the military move had not breached the Zimbabwean Constituti­on or threatened him and had “remained respectful.”

“I’m happy that throughout the short period the pillars of state remained functional,” Mugabe said, referring to the current period of military control.

The ZANU-PF’s central committee had met earlier Sunday in Harare, the capital, and voted to remove Mugabe as party leader and replace him with Mnangagwa.

The ruling party’s decision to install Mnangagwa places him in a position to succeed Mugabe and lead ZANU-PF into elections.

At ZANU-PF’s central committee meeting, former Finance Minister Patrick Chinamasa suggested the government would have no need to work with the opposition in a transition­al government after Mugabe’s expected resignatio­n.

Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai has called for Mugabe’s resignatio­n and a government of national unity to be installed, including opposition members.

However, ZANU-PF appears intent on going into elections due next year with Mnangagwa as its leader, hoping to win at the ballot box and retain power.

Mugabe has been isolated and confined to his house since Wednesday, initially offering to resign before next year’s elections, a proposal rejected by the generals.

The military has denied its takeover of control is a coup, insisting Mugabe remains head of state and commander in chief of the armed forces. He cannot, however, exercise executive power or move around freely.

After Mugabe’s statement, Zimbabwean newspaper publisher Trevor Ncube said on Twitter that Mugabe presiding over the party congress was designed to offer him a dignified exit. An immediate Mugabe resignatio­n would leave the nation with no leader until the party congress.

But many observers say Mugabe’s refusal to clearly spell out his resignatio­n could see him impeached when parliament resumes Tuesday.

ZANU-PF has the twothirds majority required to impeach, but only if all of its lawmakers support the motion. Some Mugabe loyalists are expected to stay away or vote against impeachmen­t, in which case the government believes the opposition would support the impeachmen­t motion.

Dancing broke out at ZANU-PF headquarte­rs in Harare after the announceme­nt was made that Mugabe had been dismissed as party leader.

The party expelled Grace Mugabe, accusing her of preaching hatred and division.

Several of her close allies from a party faction known as G40 — including Higher Education Minister Jonathan Moyo, Finance Minister Ignatius Chombo, Mugabe’s nephew Patrick Zhuwao and Local Government Minister Saviour Kasukuwere — were also expelled.

Mugabe’s removal as party leader came after tens of thousands of Zimbabwean­s, including opposition and government members, rallied to call for him to go.

 ?? AFP/Getty Images ?? ZIMBABWEAN­S hold a prayer rally in Harare, the capital. Tens of thousands of Zimbabwean­s have called for President Robert Mugabe’s ouster, but he said he would preside over the ruling party congress in December.
AFP/Getty Images ZIMBABWEAN­S hold a prayer rally in Harare, the capital. Tens of thousands of Zimbabwean­s have called for President Robert Mugabe’s ouster, but he said he would preside over the ruling party congress in December.

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