Mugabe makes first public

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Mr. Mugabe’s appearance at a graduation event appears to allow him to project the image of leadership, even as calls for his departure grow stronger.

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe attended a university graduation ceremony on November 17, making his first public appearance since military generals took control of the country earlier this week.

In a defiant display of his refusal to resign, Mr. Mugabe arrived at the ceremony in the capital Harare dressed in a blue academic gown and hat, an AFP photographer reported.

The appearance came during an extraordinary series of negotiations with regional leaders over Mr. Mugabe’s departure after 37 years in power. Zimbabwe’s military said it was making “significant progress” in the talks while it pursues and arrests some allies of the leader and his wife.

The military is taking pains to show respect for the 93-year-old leader, the world’s oldest head of state, by referring to him as the President and the commander-in-chief.

The November 17 graduation event appears to allow Mr. Mugabe to project the image of leadership, even as calls for his departure grow stronger. Some Zimbabweans worried that Mr. Mugabe, the only leader many have ever known, would somehow find a way to stay on.

The military statement reported by the state-run Herald newspaper and Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation said military leaders are “engaging with the Commander-in-Chief President Robert Mugabe on the way forward and will advise the nation of the outcome as soon as possible.”

 

President Robert Mugabe poses with General Constantino Chiwenga at State House in Harare, Zimbabwe, on Thursday.   | Photo Credit: Reuters

 

“Significant progress has been made in their operation to weed out criminals around President Mugabe,” the statement said, adding that the military had arrested some while others remained at large. Those sought had been “committing crimes that were causing social and economic suffering in Zimbabwe.

The military is seeking Cabinet Ministers and other top officials who had been associates of first lady Grace Mugabe, part of a clique dubbed the G40 because many were in their 40s and 50s. They are of a different generation from the one that fought for independence from white minority rule.

Army troops and armoured vehicles continued to patrol the capital, Harare, as Zimbabweans went about their daily business. Residents said they had feared at first when the military moved in but praised the current calm.

The ongoing negotiations appear to be trying to get Mr. Mugabe to agree to hand over to a new government. But difficulties could include the timing. The ruling party is set to meet next month, and Mr. Mugabe’s term ends next year. An election date has not been set.

In another striking image of the fluidity of the political situation, the Zimbabwe Herald on November 16 published photos of Mr. Mugabe jovially shaking hands with Army commander Constantino Chiwenga, the general who ordered the President’s arrest.

Others pictured in the first round of talks at State House, the President’s official residence, include Defence Minister Sydney Sekeramayi, Intelligence Minister Kembo Mohadi, South African Cabinet Ministers who are acting as mediators and a local Catholic priest, Fidelis Mukonori, whom Mr. Mugabe has used as a mediator before.

Ms. Grace Mugabe was not pictured. Her rapid political rise had alarmed many who feared she could succeed her husband after he fired his longtime deputy, Emmerson Mnangagwa, last week. That firing set off the military’s moves, and Mr. Mnangagwa is expected to lead any new government.

Mr. Mnangagwa has returned to the country, an aide told AFP on November 17. Mr. Mnangagwa flew back to Harare on November 16.

The military wants the process of establishing the new government to appear to be constitutional in order to maintain a veneer of legality and the approval of the 16-nation regional bloc, the Southern African Development Community, and the African Union.

As a landlocked country, regional sanctions by the bodies could be harmful to Zimbabwe’s already ailing economy.

A committee of SADC on Thursday has recommended an emergency summit of heads of state to discuss the Zimbabwe situation. It was not clear when that would take place.

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