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Thursday, April 25, 2024

Zimbabwe: Army General Who Forced Mugabe Out Of Power Named Vice President

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An army general who led the operation that forced Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe to resign last month is currently one of the country’s two vice presidents. Critics are calling President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s cabinet a “coupnet” thanks to the 3 army generals who have outstanding roles.

A day after President Mnangagwa appointed them as Zimbabwe’s vice presidents, retired general Constantino Chiwenga and Defense Minister Kembo Mohadi took their oaths of office Thursday before the country’s chief justice, Luke Malaba.

After that, General Chiwenga, who led the operation that forced President Robert Mugabe to resign, spoke to reporters about his new position.

“I feel because I have to work for my country,” he said. “Once we have been allotted the tasks to do, then we go on. What I can tell you is that: it will be teamwork and we will help his excellency, and we will deliver.”

Chiwenga becomes the third general in Mnangagwa’s 24-member Cabinet, raising fears that the army will try to influence Zimbabwe’s politics when elections are held in the middle of next year.

In an interview after the swearing in of Chiwenga, who retired from the army last week, Arnold Tsunga, who leads the International Commission of Jurists in Africa, said Mnangagwa’s government must try to assure citizens that the country is not under military rule.

“So that a government that arises out of the electoral process, it can be said it is a government that reflects the sovereign will of the people of Zimbabwe, exercised through a free and fair election,” he said.

Tsunga said there is no legal impediment to former generals serving in the cabinet, provided they give up their military positions.

“However, what is noticeable and very curious is that: the military leaders who proclaimed the removal of President Mugabe have now not only directly contributed to his removal from power but in fact gone ahead to be the direct beneficiaries [of] appointment to the leadership position in government. Certainly, it raises issues of credibility and trust,” he said.

In addition to Chiwenga, former generals with positions in Zimbabwe’s cabinet are Minister of Agriculture Perence Shiri and Minister of Foreign Affairs Sibusiso Moyo. It was Moyo who announced on state TV in November that the army had taken over state institutions, the act that forced Mugabe to resign.

via VOA

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