Yahoo – AFP,
Susan Njanji and Fanuel Jongwe, November 18, 2017
Harare (AFP) - Tens of thousands of overjoyed protesters flooded Zimbabwe's streets Saturday celebrating President Robert Mugabe's slipping power on the eve of crunch talks with the military to determine the veteran leader's fate.
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| There was a celebratory atmosphere across Zimbabwe as thousands turned out to voice their opposition to the decades-long autocratic rule of Presdient Robert Mugabe (AFP Photo/Jekesai NJIKIZANA) |
Harare (AFP) - Tens of thousands of overjoyed protesters flooded Zimbabwe's streets Saturday celebrating President Robert Mugabe's slipping power on the eve of crunch talks with the military to determine the veteran leader's fate.
In scenes
of public euphoria not seen since independence in 1980, huge crowds marched,
danced and sang their way through the capital Harare and other cities,
demanding that Mugabe, 93, finally step down.
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Following
the mass demonstrations, the catholic priest chairing talks between Mugabe and
the military who seized power from him told state TV that the president would
meet the generals for talks on Sunday.
The
protests' huge turnout came after an unprecedented week in which the military
seized power and put Mugabe under house arrest in response to his sacking of
vice president Emmerson Mnangagwa.
The marches
were peaceful, despite a tense stand-off as heavily armed soldiers barred
thousands of protesters from reaching Mugabe's official residence, the State
House, in central Harare.
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Such an
open display of disloyalty would have been unthinkable just a week
ago as
dissent was routinely crushed by security forces (AFP Photo)
|
'New life
after Mugabe'
The crowd
got within 200 metres (220 yards) of the gates to the complex that has been the
nerve centre of Mugabe's authoritarian rule before staging a sit-down protest.
The
demonstrations were called by independence war veterans and included citizens
of all ages, jubilant that Mugabe appeared to be on his way out.
"This
is the best day of my life. We are hoping for a new life after Mugabe,"
said 38-year-old Sam Sechete at the main rally in Highfield, a working-class
suburb of Harare.
A symbolic
location, Highfield was where Mugabe gave his rousing first speech after
returning from exile in Mozambique ahead of independence in 1980.
Demonstrators
roared, whistled and chanted, brandishing placards proclaiming: "Not coup
-- but cool" and "Mugabe must go!"
In central
Harare, a group of young men tore down a green metal street sign bearing Robert
Mugabe's name and smashed it repeatedly on the road before trampling it
underfoot.
Major
General Sibusiso Moyo, whose faltering delivery of an army statement on state
TV marked the completion of the take-over on Wednesday, told journalists at the
protests "the people of Zimbabwe are disciplined, orderly and they are
unified".
In
Bulawayo, the country's second-largest city, demonstrators sounded car horns,
whistled and blew vuvuzelas as they gathered outside City Hall before briefly
storming that city's State House. They were convinced to leave by troops.
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| Factfile on Zimbabwe. (AFP Photo/Gal ROMA) |
Unthinkable a week ago
Such an
open display of defiance would have been unthinkable just a week ago as dissent
was routinely crushed by security forces.
But in a
statement released on Friday, the army said it fully supported the protests.
The
majority of Zimbabweans have only known life under Mugabe's rule, which has
been defined by violent suppression, economic collapse and international
isolation.
"I
went to university but here I am selling bananas to earn a living. If it wasn't
for Mugabe, I would be doing something else," said one protester, street
vendor Abel Kapodogo, 34.
![]() |
Many in the
crowds were cheering the soldiers and stopping to shake their
hands (AFP
Photo/Jekesai NJIKIZANA)
|
'Mugabe
cornered'
Mugabe
enraged many Zimbabweans when he did not resign following talks with the army's
leaders on Thursday, with sources suggesting he was "buying time" to
negotiate a favourable end to his 37-year reign.
He appeared
publicly for the first time on Friday for a scheduled appearance at a
graduation ceremony in Harare, further stoking speculation about his talks with
General Constantino Chiwenga, who led the military power grab.
Nine of the
10 regional branches of Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF have now called for him to go.
A ZANU-PF
MP, and a national party official, who both declined to be named confirmed that
the party's executive committee would meet Sunday to seek to have Mugabe
removed as president and party leader.
It is
unclear whether the body has the power to force Mugabe out but a resolution
against him would be yet another serious blow to his authority.
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There was a
festive air in the streets (AFP Photo)
|
Clashing
with Grace
The army
seizure of power appeared to be the climax of a dispute over who would succeed
the ailing leader.
Before
being pushed out as vice president, Mnangagwa had clashed repeatedly with
Mugabe's wife Grace, 52.
Both had
been seen as leading contenders to replace Mugabe, but Mnangagwa had the tacit
support of the armed forces, which viewed Grace -- a political novice -- with derision.
ZANU-PF
will also discuss removing Grace as head of the party's women's league at the
Sunday summit.
The
international community including the African Union, Britain and the United
States has called for Zimbabwe's army to quickly relinquish power.
A small but
noisy protest in London Saturday called for Mugabe to go.
Crowds of overjoyed protesters flooded Zimbabwe's streets celebrating the crumbling of President Mugabe's regime https://t.co/xkaYdQiU3G pic.twitter.com/WErIg1yLKr— AFP news agency (@AFP) November 18, 2017






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