Mugabe Ends 37-Year Zimbabwe Rule Under Impeachment Threat
Zimbabwe's Mugabe
Steps Down After 37-Year Rule
Robert Mugabe’s near
four-decade reign as the strongman of Zimbabwe ended on Tuesday, when he
submitted a letter of resignation to parliament, sparking scenes of celebration
across the capital, Harare.
Read also : Bye Bye Mugabe
House of Assembly
speaker Jacob Mudenda announced the resignation during a joint sitting of
lawmakers in Harare, the capital, called to vote on a motion of impeachment of
Mugabe, who at 93 was the world’s oldest-serving leader.
Cars honked their
horns and cheers erupted at Unity Square in the city center where earlier
thousands of people had gathered in Unity Square to hold an “impeachment
party.”
Mugabe’s resignation
came days after the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front party fired
him as its leader and ordered him to step down. Emmerson Mnangagwa, 75, who
Mugabe dismissed as vice president this month, will take over as interim leader
and be Zanu-PF’s presidential candidate in elections next year, the party said.
“We have fought the
lion and won,” Lovemore Matuke, Zanu-PF’s chief whip, said in an interview
after the announcement. A new interim president will take over in the next 48
hours, he said.
The ruling party’s
decision to dump the president came four days after the military placed him
under house arrest and detained several of his closest allies -- a move
triggered by Mnangagwa’s dismissal. Mugabe initially dug in his heels, missing
a party deadline to quit by noon on Monday or face impeachment,
before finally agreeing to go.
“It’s good the process
didn’t drag out,” said Brian Raftopoulos, the Cape Town-based director of
research at the Solidarity Peace Trust, a church-backed human rights group. “He
long overstayed his welcome. The stubborness with which he held on and the fact
the he tried to create a family dynasty was indicative of the fact that he
regarded the country as his personal dynasty.”
Economic Disarray
The moves against
Mugabe were the culmination of a battle for control of the ruling party between
a military-aligned faction that’s coalesced around Mnangagwa and another known
as the Generation-40, which wants the president’s wife, Grace Mugabe, to
succeed him. Mnangagwa emerged as the victor, with the party expelling Grace
and her allies.
“It was long overdue.
The president could no longer withstand the pressure,” said Takavira Zhou, a
lecturer at Great Zimbabwe University in the city of Masvingo. “However, the
key issue is when will we have a transitional government and how will it work
-- will Zanu-PF go it alone.”
Mugabe leaves behind
an economy in tatters. An estimated 95 percent of the workforce is unemployed,
public infrastructure is crumbling and there are widespread shortages of cash
and food. Many of the country’s woes are rooted in Mugabe’s support for the seizure
of white-owned farms, which slashed agricultural production, export earnings
and tax revenue.
The son of a carpenter
and a catechism teacher, Mugabe was born in Zvimba, a peasant-farming area west
of Harare, and trained as a primary-school teacher. He was introduced to
politics while studying at South Africa’s Fort Hare University, and went on to
help found the Zimbabwe African National Union party in 1963. He was jailed the
same year for calling for the violent overthrow of Ian Smith’s white-minority
government.
Matabeleland Massacres
During his 11-year
incarceration, Mugabe obtained degrees in economics, education and law. A year
after his release, he fled to Mozambique where he later became the leader of
the then exiled Zanu, which controlled the biggest of two guerrilla armies
fighting Rhodesia.
A U.K.-brokered peace
deal that ended the war brought Mugabe to power as the elected prime minister
in 1980. While he initially preached reconciliation, violence erupted in 1982
when Mugabe accused his coalition partner, Joshua Nkomo, of plotting to
overthrow him. He began a military crackdown that claimed about 20,000 lives in
the western region of Matabeleland, according to Genocidewatch.org.
After February 2000,
Mugabe allowed his supporters to take over white-owned land, disrupting farming
and creating food shortages in a country that had once been the biggest corn
exporter in southern Africa. And in 2005, he authorized a slum-clearance program
that left at least 750,000 people homeless, according to the Zimbabwe Human
Rights NGO Forum.
Electoral Wins
While Mugabe was the
clear winner of the first four post-independence elections, his victory in a
violence-marred 2008 vote was disputed and his party lost parliamentary
elections. Mugabe refused to step down and international mediators coaxed him
into a power-sharing deal with the main opposition. That lasted until 2013 when
Mugabe reclaimed outright power in an election the opposition said was neither
free nor fair.
Mugabe’s exit won’t
necessarily usher in a new era of democracy in Zimbabwe, with the country now
under the control of some of his hard-line former allies, who’d helped him
crush dissent.
Mnangagwa, who’s known
by his nomme de guerre Ngwena, or crocodile in the Shona language, played a
particularly pivotal role. He was the chief of intelligence when Mugabe ordered
the Matabeleland crackdown by North Korean-trained Fifth Brigade, and is a leading
securocrat within the ruling party. He’s previously served as the minister of
defense and of justice.
“This is a great
moment for the people of Zimbabwe,” said Nelson Chamisa, deputy leader of the
opposition Movement for Democratic Change. “We want to start a new beginning.”
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