Harare
Inside State House in
Harare, Robert Mugabe was in the tightest spot of his 37-year rule.
Tanks were on the streets and troops had occupied the state broadcaster,
from where the army had announced it had taken control of Zimbabwe.
Mugabe,
93 years old but still alert, remained defiant. The only leader the
country had known since independence was refusing to quit.
At
a tense meeting with his military top brass on Nov 16, the world’s
oldest head of state put his foot down: “Bring me the constitution and
tell me what it says,” he ordered military chief Constantino Chiwenga,
according to two sources present.
An aide brought a copy of the constitution, which lays out that the president is commander-in-chief of the armed forces.
Chiwenga,
dressed in camouflage fatigues, hesitated before replying that Zimbabwe
was facing a national crisis that demanded military intervention.
Mugabe retorted that the army was the problem, according to the
sources present. Then the beleaguered president indicated that perhaps
they could find a solution together.
The meeting marked the start of an extraordinary five-day
standoff between Mugabe and Zimbabwe’s supreme law on one side, and the
military, his party and Zimbabwe’s people on the other.
The
generals wanted Mugabe to go, but they also wanted a peaceful “coup,”
one that would not irreparably tarnish the administration aiming to take
over, according to multiple military and political sources.
The
president finally accepted defeat only after he was sacked by his own
ZANU-PF party and faced the ignominy of impeachment. He signed a short
letter of resignation to parliament speaker Jacob Mudenda that was read
out to lawmakers on Nov. 21.
Mugabe, who had run
Zimbabwe since 1980 and overseen its descent into economic ruin while
his wife shopped for luxury goods, was gone.
The
country erupted into ecstasy. Parliamentarians danced and people poured
onto the streets in their tens of thousands to celebrate a political
downfall that sent shockwaves across Africa and the world.
To many, the end of Mugabe had been unthinkable only one week before.
Reuters
has pieced together the events leading up to Mugabe’s removal, showing
that the army’s action was the culmination of months of planning that
stretched from Harare to Johannesburg to Beijing.
Zimbabwean Army Chief of Staff General Constantino Chiwenga walks during
the Inauguration ceremony of the newly sworn-in President at the
National Sport Stadium in Harare, on November 24, 2017. PHOTO | AFP
Bitter rivalry
Drawing
on a trove of intelligence documents from within Mugabe’s feared
Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO), Reuters reported in September
that the army was backing Emmerson Mnangagwa, then vice president, to
succeed Mugabe when the time came.
The report detailed
how Mnangagwa, a lifelong friend and former security chief of Mugabe,
might cooperate with Mugabe’s political foes in order to revive the
economy. It caused furore in Zimbabwe’s media and political circles.
Bitter
rivalry intensified between Mnangagwa and Grace, Mugabe’s 52-year-old
wife, who also hoped to take over as president and had the backing of a
ZANU-PF faction known as G40.
In early October,
Mnangagwa said he had been airlifted to hospital in South Africa after a
poisoning attempt in August. He pointed no fingers - but he didn’t need
to.
Grace’s swift response was to deny it and accuse
her rival of seeking sympathy; she belittled him as nothing but an
employee of her husband, according to a report in the state-run Herald
newspaper.
Mugabe’s spies, who permeated
every institution and section of society in Zimbabwe, were warning him
the military would not accept Grace as president.
“Mugabe
is very worried of a coup,” one intelligence report, dated Oct 23,
said. “Mugabe was openly told by senior CIOs that the military is not
going to easily accept the appointment of Grace. He was warned to be
ready for civil war.”
Reuters reviewed the document,
and hundreds of other intelligence reports dating back to 2009, before
the coup took place. The documents come from within the CIO, but Reuters
could not determine for whom they were written. The CIO is split into
factions, some pro- and some anti-Mugabe.
In late
October, Mugabe summoned Chiwenga to a showdown, according to another of
the documents, dated Oct 30. It said Mugabe confronted the army chief
about his ties to Mnangagwa and told him that going against Grace would
cost him his life.
“Chiwenga was warned by Mugabe that
it is high time for him to start following. He mentioned to Chiwenga
that those fighting his wife are bound to die a painful death,” the
intelligence report said.
At the same meeting, Mugabe also ordered Chiwenga to pledge allegiance to Grace. He refused.
“Chiwengwa refused to be intimidated. He stood his ground over his loyalty to Mnangagwa,” the report said.
Reuters
put questions about this exchange and other aspects of this article to
Mugabe’s spokesman, George Charamba. In an enigmatic text message dated
Nov 23, he replied: “Enjoy Reuters copy. Goodnight.”
Two spokesmen for Chiwenga declined to comment.
After
another tense meeting with Mugabe on Nov 5, Chiwenga left Harare on a
pre-arranged official trip and traveled to China, which wields
significant influence as a major investor in Zimbabwe.
A
day later, Mugabe sacked Mnangagwa as vice president and purged him
from ZANU-PF, the liberation movement that Mnangagwa had served since
his youth and for which, as a young militant caught bombing a train, he
had nearly been executed.
For the generals, Mugabe had
gone too far. The military immediately activated a “Code Red” alert, its
highest level of preparedness, a military source said.
New interim Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa receives the chain
and sash of office from the Chief judge of the Supreme Court, Chief
Justice Luke Malaba as he is officially sworn-in during a ceremony in
Harare on November 24, 2017. PHOTO | AFP
Assassination plot
Moments
after Mnangagwa was ousted on Nov 6, the security details assigned to
him and his house were withdrawn, according to a statement he issued
later. He was told his life was in danger.
“Security
personnel, who are friendly to me, warned me that plans were underfoot
to eliminate me once arrested and taken to a police station,” Mnangagwa
said in a Nov 21 statement. “It was in my security interest to leave the
country immediately.”
From Harare, he managed to
escape over the border into neighboring Mozambique, where he caught a
plane to China, according to one source familiar with his movements.
There he met up with Chiwenga, the source said.
Reuters
could not confirm the account; but an intelligence report from Nov. 13
indicates that Mugabe suspected some of his generals of preparing to
overthrow him from China.
“A number of generals are now
in China ready to plot Mugabe’s ouster with Mnangagwa,” the report
said. It was not clear which generals, and whether their travel to China
was authorized.
Mugabe’s spies suspected old allies
had turned against the aging president. An intelligence report, dated
Oct 30, said Beijing and Moscow both supported regime change out of
frustration at Zimbabwe’s economic implosion under Mugabe.
“China
and Russia are after change,” the report said. “They are after change
within ZANU-PF as they are sick and tired of Mugabe’s leadership.”
“The two countries are even ready to clandestinely supply arms of war to Mnangagwa to fight Mugabe.”
Neither
China’s Defence Ministry nor Foreign Ministry responded to a request
for comment. The Foreign Ministry had previously said Chiwenga’s visit
was “a normal military exchange mutually agreed upon by China and
Zimbabwe.”
Reuters sent written requests for comment to
the Kremlin, the Russian Defense Ministry and the Russian Foreign
Ministry. None of them responded.
China has long taken
an interest in Zimbabwe, having supported Mugabe’s forces during the
liberation struggle. After independence it developed connections there
in mining, security and construction.
Russia has also
had ties to Zimbabwe since the early 1980s, and in 2014 a Russian
consortium entered into a partnership to develop a $3 billion platinum
mining project in the country.
Chiwenga’s trip to China culminated in him meeting Chinese Defense Minister Chang Wanquan in Beijing on Nov 10.
Two
sources with knowledge of the talks told Reuters that Chiwenga asked if
China would agree not to interfere if he took temporary control in
Zimbabwe to remove Mugabe from power.
Chang assured
him Beijing would not get involved and the two also discussed tactics
that might be employed during the de facto coup, the sources said.
Reuters could not establish whether Mnangagwa met Chang.
Having
got wind of the talks in China, Mugabe summoned his still-loyal police
commissioner, Augustine Chihuri, and his deputy, Innocent Matibiri, to
detain Chiwenga on his return to Harare, government and security sources
said.
The pair assembled a squad of 100 police and
intelligence agents. But the plot leaked and Chiwenga supporters managed
to pull together a counter-team of several hundred special forces
soldiers and agents as their commander’s plane approached.
Some
were disguised as baggage handlers, their military fatigues and weapons
hidden beneath high-visibility jackets and overalls, one security
source said.
Realising they were outnumbered and
outgunned, Chihuri’s police team backed down, allowing Chiwenga to touch
down without incident, the security source said.
Mugabe’s spokesman did not comment on the incident.
People react as Zimbabwean new President Emmerson Mnangagwa is
officially sworn-in during a ceremony in Harare on November 24, 2017.
FILE PHOTO | AFP
'Very alarmed'
Two
days later, Chiwenga and a group of military commanders demanded a
meeting with Mugabe at his official State House residence in Harare, an
ornate colonial villa complete with stuffed leopards and thick red
carpets, according to a government source.
They said
they were “very alarmed” at the firing of Mnangagwa and told Mugabe to
rein in his wife and her G40 faction, whom they accused of trying to
divide the military, according to the government official, who was
present at the discussions.
“What do you think should be done?” Mugabe demanded of the soldiers as he sat slumped in an armchair.
The
generals asked him to give assurances that they too would not be
purged. Mugabe’s response was lukewarm, the government source said.
Chiwenga told Mugabe he would be making his concerns about the G40
faction public.
Hours later, Chiwenga summoned reporters to the military’s main barracks near Harare to issue a statement.
“We
must remind those behind the current treacherous shenanigans that, when
it comes to matters of protecting our revolution, the military will not
hesitate to step in,” he said, reading from a prepared text.
The
following afternoon, Reuters reported six armoured personnel carriers
heading towards the headquarters of Mugabe’s Presidential Guard on the
outskirts of Harare. It was unclear whose command they were under.
At the time, the city’s residents were on edge but still unsure what it all meant.
Line went dead
At
around 6 pm on Nov 14, Mugabe’s motorcade headed to his private “Blue
Roof” residence, a heavily fortified compound in the capital’s leafy
northern suburb of Borrowdale.
Meanwhile, social media
buzzed with pictures of armoured vehicles driving along roads to Harare,
sparking frenzied speculation about a coup.
Increasingly
concerned, Grace put in a call shortly after 7 pm to a cabinet minister
asking to get WhatsApp and Twitter shut down, according to one source
familiar with a recording of the conversation.
READ: Where is Grace Mugabe?
ALSO READ: Where will the Mugabes retire to?
The
minister, whose identity Reuters is withholding for safety reasons,
replied that such a move was the responsibility of state security
minister Kembo Mohadi.
“No-one will stand for a coup.
It cannot happen,” said Grace, commonly referred to as Amai, which means
Mother, according to a source who heard the recording.
Mugabe’s voice is then heard on the line: “As you have heard from Amai, is there anything that can be done?”
The minister gave the same response, about the responsibilities of state security, and the line went dead, the source said.
Mohadi declined to comment.
Two
hours later, two armoured vehicles rolled into the Pockets Hill
headquarters of the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC), according
to ZBC sources.
Dozens of soldiers sealed off the site
and stormed into the studios where they accosted staff, snatching their
phones and halting programmes.
State-owned ZBC, widely seen as a mouthpiece for Mugabe, switched to broadcasting pop music videos.
Mugabe’s
inner circle, nearly all of them G40 loyalists, had no idea what was
under way, according to four sources familiar with their conversations.
Information
Minister Simon Khaya Moyo called Defence Minister Sydney Sekeramayi to
ask if he had any information about a possible coup. Sekeramayi said no,
but tried to check with military chief Chiwenga.
Chiwenga told Sekeramayi he would get back to him. According to the sources, Chiwenga never did.
Moyo remains in hiding and was unavailable for comment. Sekeramayi declined to comment.
This file photo taken on November 18, 2017 shows supporters of Tajamuka
Sesijikisile SA, The African Democrats Opposition Party, the Zimbabwe
Communist Party, the Zimbabwe Diaspora Coalition and other groups waving
Zimbabwe's national flags and holding signs as they attend a rally at
the Union Buildings in Pretoria, South Africa, to call for the
resignation of Zimbabwe's President. FILE PHOTO | AFP
Security detail
As ministers in the G40 faction tried frantically to work out what was going on, Chiwenga’s men closed in on Mugabe’s compound.
According
to a source briefed on the situation, Albert Ngulube, a CIO director
and head of Mugabe’s security detail, was driving home around 9.30 pm
after visiting Mugabe. He met an armoured car on Borrowdale Brooke, a
side road leading to Mugabe’s house.
When Ngulube
confronted the soldiers and threatened to shoot them, they beat him up
and detained him, the source said. Ngulube was later released, but had
suffered head and facial injuries, the source added.
Spokesmen for Chiwenga and Mnangagwa declined to comment. Reuters was unable to contact Ngulube.
Other
G40 ministers were also picked up by soldiers. Finance minister
Ignatius Chombo was found hiding in a toilet at his house and beaten
before being detained at an undisclosed location for more than a week.
On
his release on Nov 24, he was hospitalised with injuries to his hands,
legs and back, his lawyer told Reuters, describing the army’s behaviour
as “brutal and draconian.”
Soldiers used explosives to
blow the front door off the house of Jonathan Moyo, the main brains
behind G40, according to video footage of the house seen by Reuters.
Others burst through the front gates of the residence of local
government minister Saviour Kasukuwere, another key Grace supporter.
Both
men managed to escape to Mugabe’s residence. Contacted by Reuters
shortly after midnight in the early hours of Nov 15, Kasukuwere was
audibly stressed. “I can’t talk. I‘m in a meeting,” he said, before
hanging up.
For another week, Mugabe clung on to the
presidency as Chiwenga and his forces tried to engineer a peaceful, and
quasi-legal, exit for the long-serving leader.
But as parliament began impeachment proceedings on Nov 21, Mugabe finally gave up.
READ: Mugabe finally resigns
After
37 years in control, during which much of his country fell into
poverty, his letter of resignation said he was stepping down out of
“concern for the welfare of the people of Zimbabwe.”
Zimbabwean new interim President Emmerson Mnangagwa (L) sits with his
wife, First-lady Auxillia after he was officially sworn-in during a
ceremony in Harare on November 24, 2017. PHOTO |AFP
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