Mugabe under house arrest as military takes control
Mugabe under house arrest as military
takes control
Harare: Zimbabwe's military was in control of the country
today as President Robert Mugabe said he was under house arrest, although
generals denied staging a coup.
Mugabe's decades-long grip on power appeared to be fading as
military vehicles blocked roads outside the parliament in Harare and senior
soldiers delivered a late-night television address to the nation.
"The president... and his family are safe and sound and
their security is guaranteed," Major General Sibusiso Moyo said, slowly
reading out a statement.
"We are only targeting criminals around him who are
committing crimes... As soon as we have accomplished our mission we expect that
the situation will return to normalcy."
Moyo said: "This is not a military takeover of
government".
But the generals' actions posed a major challenge to the
93-year-old Mugabe, who has ruled Zimbabwe since independence from Britain in
1980.
Neighbouring South Africa's President Jacob Zuma, one of
Mugabe's closest allies, said he had spoken to the veteran leader by telephone.
Mugabe "indicated that he was confined to his home but
said that he was fine," the South African government said in a statement
that called for calm and restraint.
Tensions between Mugabe and the military establishment,
which has long helped prop up his authoritarian rule, erupted in public over
recent weeks.
The ruling ZANU-PF party yesterday accused army chief
General Constantino Chiwenga of "treasonable conduct" after he
criticised Mugabe for sacking vice president Emmerson Mnangagwa.
Mnangagwa's dismissal left Mugabe's wife Grace, 52, in prime
position to succeed her husband as the next president -- a succession strongly
opposed by senior ranks in the military.
As the situation deteriorated overnight, prolonged gunfire
was heard near Mugabe's private residence.
Today, the TV state broadcaster played liberation struggle
songs, while many citizens in Harare shopped at markets, drove to work or
queued outside banks despite the turmoil.
The US embassy warned its citizens in the country to
"shelter in place" due to "ongoing political uncertainty".
South Africa urged Zimbabwe to resist any
"unconstitutional changes" of government, and said it was sending
envoys to Harare on behalf of the SADC bloc of southern African nations to help
resolve the impasse.
President Mugabe and Grace made no public comment and their
exact whereabouts was not known, while government and army spokesmen were not
available to comment.
"The government's silence on the military deployments
seem to confirm that President Mugabe has lost control of the situation,"
Robert Besseling, of the London-based EXX Africa risk consultancy, said.
Mugabe is the world's oldest head of state, but his poor
health has fuelled a bitter succession battle as potential replacements jockey
for position.
In speeches this year, Mugabe has often slurred his words,
mumbled and paused for long periods.
His lengthy rule has been marked by brutal repression of
dissent, mass emigration, vote-rigging and economic collapse since land reforms
in 2000.
Speculation has been rife in Harare that Mugabe had sought
to remove army chief Chiwenga, who is seen as an ally of ousted Mnangagwa.
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