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Zimbabwe: Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF drawing up plans to sack him as President on Sunday, party source says

'There is no going back,' insider warns after military takes control of Harare to ensure peaceful transition of power

Ed Cropley
Friday 17 November 2017 02:58 EST
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Zimbabwe's 'military takeover' explained

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Leaders of Zimbabwe's ruling Zanu-PF party are meeting on Friday to draft a resolution to dismiss President Robert Mugabe at the weekend and lay the ground for his impeachment next week if he refuses to stand down, a senior party source said.

“There is no going back,” the source told Reuters. “If he becomes stubborn, we will arrange for him to be fired on Sunday. When that is done, it's impeachment on Tuesday.”

The unfolding drama in the capital, Harare, had been thrown into confusion when a smiling Mugabe was pictured on Thursday shaking hands with Zimbabwe's military chief, the man behind the coup, raising questions about whether or not the end of an era was near.

Mugabe unexpectedly drove on from his lavish “Blue Roof” compound yesterday, where he had been confined, to the State House, where official media pictured him meeting military boss Constantino Chiwenga and South African mediators.

The official Herald newspaper carried no reports of the meeting's outcome, leaving Zimbabwe's 13 million people in the dark about the situation.

The United States, a longtime critic of Mugabe over allegations of human rights abuses and election rigging, said it is seeking “a new era” for Zimbabwe, the State Department's top official for Africa said, an implicit call for the nonagenarian leader to quit.

Reuters

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