Coup: ‘No smoke without fire

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BY EVERSON MUSHAVA/MOSES MATENGA
THE unprecedented move by the country’s Security ministers to call a Press conference
to debunk “coup rumours”, on Wednesday, has exposed fissures and mistrust in President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government, political observers have said.

Home Affairs minister Kazembe Kazembe (pictured), flanked by Defence minister Oppah Muchinguri and service chiefs was at pains to assure the nation that a repeat of the November 2017 coup
was not going to happen.

Kazembe went on to implicate former Zanu PF national commissar Saviour Kasukuwere, MDC Alliance deputy national chairman Job Sikhala, churches, civil organisations and top government and
security officials as party to an alleged plot against Mnangagwa.

But analysts and Zanu PF sources yesterday confirmed the panic within government
over the possibility of a coup.

Political analyst Eldred Masunungure said the statement by Kazembe, flanked by key security personnel was clear indication that a coup was brewing.

“Rumours of an impending coup have been brewing for some time.

You remember the bomb blast in June 2018. I think things have reached tipping point.

It is naïve to deny the prospect of a coup” Masunungure said.

“But when a minister flanked by security chiefs holds a news conference, it indicates there is something brewing and this was just meant to preempt the coup or coup attempt.

“But I don’t think the Press conference
has cured the conditions giving rise to
the coup. Zimbabwe is flammable and
the ingredients of a coup exist.”
Mnangagwa, his two deputies and top
party officials survived a bomb blast during a campaign rally in Bulawayo ahead
of the June 2018 elections and his allies
have blamed the President’s colleagues
for wanting to kill him.
“I don’t think the rumour will go away,
even if it goes away, the plan may not
necessarily go away. It may be shelved,
but it will not go away. It is unusual for
security chiefs and ministers including
that of Defence to hold a Press briefing
like they did.”
Masunungure said implicating the opposition was a way of trying to justify a
planned clampdown on government
opponents.
Another analyst Rashweat Mukundu
said the statement showed signs of panic in Mnangagwa’s government over a
possible coup. He said the developments
were a reflection of internal instability in
Mnangagwa’s government.
“There is a clear lack of self-confidence
in this government. You cannot hold a
Press conference to dispel rumours of a
coup that is not known to the people but
is only known to themselves,” Mukundu
said.
Mukundu said mentioning a coup and
implicating civilians, including church
leaders and the opposition was only
a cover for justifying a clampdown on
Mnangagwa opponents.
Zanu PF sources said there was genuine fear in Mnangagwa’s camp that his
deputy Constantino Chiwenga’s allies
were plotting his ouster in cahoots with
former Zanu PF officials under the G40
banner.
Jealousy Mawarire, spokesperson of
opposition National Patriotic Front, said
it was Mnangagwa, through his Lacoste
faction, fronted by Kazembe, who held
the Press conference in front of mute, disinterested and tethered army generals, unhappy with the rampant looting of national resources by the First Family and their “criminal associates”.

He claimed that the generals were unhappy because Mnangagwa dispatched
Finance minister Mthuli Ncube to the
International Monetary Fund claiming
there could be a coup if the country did
not get funding.
Sources within the party revealed
things were turbulent in Zanu PF, coupled with gross indiscipline in military
camps as the economy continues to take
a toll on their earnings.
“In fact, the whole Press conference
was targeted at Chiwenga, that is why
Kazembe from nowhere tries to say the
President was in good books with his
deputies.

“Why mention Mnangagwa’s deputies
as if they had been accused of plotting a
coup? The statement all but exposed the
plot,” a party insider said yesterday.
According to the insider, there have
been growing tensions between the military and the civilian side of government.
Inside the party, most Mnangagwa loyalists were disgruntled by the level of corruption by the First Family while most
people who sacrificed their lives for him
were not protected.
“There is a feeling that it is only Mnangagwa and his family that have the right
to benefit. The level of corruption and impunity by Mnangagwa’s sons and top allies is a cause for concern,” he added.

Observers said the fact that Mnangagwa had failed to resuscitate the economy and end corruption reportedly manifesting even in his own family has angered the military and the international community who now see him as a liability.

Mnangagwa has been alive to a possible coup even before elections and told his central committee in the run up to the 2018 elections that some MPs in his party were working towards impeaching him.

Meanwhile, the MDC Alliance yesterday claimed it was under siege from
Mnangagwa who wanted to decimate it
and create “one-party rule.”

Party spokesperson Fadzai Mahere said the attack on party leaders and linking others to an “imminent” coup to oust Mnangagwa was a declaration of outright war to effectively silence the opposition. She said Mnangagwa was now “at war with citizens.”

“The Joint Operations Command’s statement strikes at the heart of democracy in Zimbabwe and is the latest in a series of co-ordinated and incessant attacks on the MDC Alliance,” Mahere said.

So far, more than 20 MDC Alliance leaders have been dragged to court on spurious allegations this year.

“The world must be on notice that, as the national crisis deepens; the State is at war with its citizens. The continued erosion of our rights and freedoms signals a clear intent to return the nation to a oneparty rule,” Mahere said.

Sikhala, who was implicated in the coup plot yesterday (Wednesday), said he was a democrat and linking him to a coup by the Zanu PF regime was “desperation.”

“It was surprising that Kazembe Kazembe in his lack of understanding of my persona threatened my person in the company of our national security service chiefs who are the people’s final line of
defence,” Sikhala said.

“He stated that myself and my exiled brother Saviour Kasukuwere peddle lies about an imminent coup in our country.

This statement is not only a lie but delusion of grandeur. I am grounded in the people and believe in people power, not any other force.”

He added: “It is cowardice to try and silence everyone into submission when our country is being looted dry right in our eyes.

“The resources in our country belong to every Zimbabwean. They are not there for the loot of the few. I represent that voice of a starving soul throughout Zimbabwe. Our people are suffering.

NEWSDAY

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