(HARARE,
Zimbabwe) — Clinging to his now virtually powerless post, longtime
Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe was fired as ruling party chief to
cheers Sunday, and was set to discuss his expected exit with the army
commander who put the world's oldest head of state under house arrest
days ago.
A
day after huge crowds rallied peacefully in the capital, Harare, for
the 93-year-old Mugabe to go, members of the ruling party's Central
Committee stood, cheered and sang as Mugabe was recalled. Meeting chair
Obert Mpofu referred to him as "outgoing president."
The
meeting also replaced Mugabe as party chief with the vice president
whose firing nearly two weeks ago led the military to step in, and
recalled "forever" the unpopular first lady as head of the women's
league, party member Chris Mutsvangwa confirmed.
That
former vice president, Emmerson Mnangagwa, is expected to lead a new
government after his formal election as ruling party chief next month.
Without the military's intervention, first lady Grace Mugabe likely
would have replaced him as vice president and been in a position to
succeed her husband.
Impeaching the president is the next step when Parliament resumes Tuesday,
and lawmakers will "definitely" put the process in motion, the main
opposition's parliamentary chief whip told The Associated Press.
Innocent Gonese with the MDC-T party said they had been in discussions with the ruling ZANU-PF party to act jointly.
"If Mugabe is not gone by Tuesday, then as sure as the sun rises from the east, impeachment process will kick in," Gonese said.
Mugabe's
talks with army commander Constantino Chiwenga are the second round of
negotiations on an exit as the military tries to avoid accusations of a
coup.
Zimbabwean
officials have not revealed details of the talks, but the military
appears to favor a voluntary resignation by Mugabe to maintain a veneer
of legality in the political transition. Mugabe, in turn, could be using
whatever leverage he has left to try to preserve his legacy as one of
Africa's liberation leaders or even protect himself and his family from
possible prosecution.
Mutsvangwa,
head of the country's liberation war veterans, said he was concerned
that the military could end up opening fire to protect Mugabe from
protesters. He vowed to "bring back the crowd" if the president didn't
step aside.
"We
would expect that Mugabe would not have the prospect of the military
shooting at people, trying to defend him," Mutsvangwa said. "The choice
is his."
The negotiations come ahead of a key ruling party congress next month, as well as scheduled elections next year.
Sunday's
talks do not appear to include the South African government delegation
that took part in the first round. South Africa's president on Saturday said talks are in "early days." The southern African regional bloc will hold a four-country summit in Angola on Tuesday to discuss the Zimbabwe situation.
Mugabe
finds himself increasingly isolated under house arrest in his lavish
Blue Roof mansion, deserted by most of his allies, with others arrested.
On Saturday,
most of Harare's population of 1.6 million poured into the streets in
an anti-Mugabe demonstration that just days ago would have brought a
police crackdown.
They
clambered onto tanks moving slowly through the crowds, took selfies
with soldiers and surged in the thousands toward the State House
building where Mugabe held official functions, a symbol of the rule of
the man who took power after independence from white minority rule in
1980.
The
euphoria came after years of watching the once-prosperous African
nation fall into decay, with a collapsing economy, repression of free
speech, disputed elections and international sanctions.
Even
as concerns remained about who next would be in charge and what
freedoms might be available if the military lingers in power — or if
Mnangagwa succeeds his longtime ally Mugabe as leader — people reveled
in the rare chance to express themselves freely.
Let us have this moment, Zimbabweans said. If the next leader becomes trouble, they vowed to return to the streets again.
[TIME]
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