Zimbabwe's ousted vice president Emmerson Mnangagwa will be
sworn in as successor to Robert Mugabe at a ceremony on Friday, state
media said Wednesday, a day after the 93-year-old's shock resignation.
"The
former vice president, who had been out of the country after he was
sacked from both party and government, will... replace comrade Robert
Mugabe who resigned," the state-run ZBC news site said on Wednesday.
Mr
Mnangagwa is set to return to the country Wednesday to take power after
Mugabe's resignation brought a sudden end to 37 years of authoritarian
rule.
Mugabe's iron grip ended in a shock announcement
to parliament where MPs had convened to impeach the 93-year-old who
dominated every aspect of Zimbabwean public life for decades.
On
the streets, the news that his long and often brutal leadership was
over sparked wild celebrations which lasted late into the night, with
crowds dancing and cheering ecstatically amid a cacophony of car horns.
"Comrade
Mnangagwa is coming back today," senior aide Larry Mavhima, told AFP,
saying he was expected to brief the media after landing at a military
airport outside Harare.
Mnangagwa, 75, was sacked by the president on November 6 in a
move that pushed infuriated army chiefs to intervene, triggering a
series of events which led to Mugabe's ouster.
A
former key Mugabe ally, Mnangagwa fled the country after his dismissal,
saying he would not return without guarantees of his safety.
His
sacking was the result of an increasingly bitter succession battle with
Mugabe's wife Grace, who had been pushing to take over from the ageing
leader.
"My decision to resign is voluntary," Mugabe
wrote in his resignation letter, expressing his "desire to ensure a
smooth, peaceful and non-violent transfer of power".
Party hardliner
In
a highly symbolic scene shortly after his resignation, a man took down a
portrait of Mugabe from a wall inside the building where MPs had
assembled for the extraordinary session to impeach the defiant
president.
Another person replaced it with an image of Mnangagwa.
The
ruling ZANU-PF party said Mnangagwa could swiftly be named interim
president as the country charts a way through the turbulence.
"He will be the one who will be sworn in to be (interim) president for 90 days," said party spokesman Simon Khaya Moyo.
The elections are due to be held next year.
Mnangagwa
is a long-time party loyalist who has close ties with the military,
with critics describing him as a ruthless hardliner responsible for
years of state-sponsored violence.
'Deserved rest'
Mugabe's
resignation capped a week in which the military seized control and tens
of thousands of Zimbabweans took to the streets in an unprecedented
show of dissent against him.
Mugabe had ruled Zimbabwe
almost unopposed since independence in 1980 — but his efforts to
position his 52-year-old wife Grace as his successor prompted
intervention from the military that underpinned his regime.
Mugabe's
fate, and that of his wife, remain unknown, but ZANU-PF has said he
deserved to be treated with respect after leading the country for nearly
four decades.
"He deserves to rest and I believe every Zimbabwean agrees with this," said Moyo.
"He deserves to rest and I believe every Zimbabwean agrees with this," said Moyo.
"But I think he had overstayed the hospitality of the people of Zimbabwe."
Most
Zimbabweans have only known life under Mugabe, whose time in power was
defined by violent suppression, economic collapse and international
isolation.
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