Zimbabwe's Mugabe 'under house arrest' after army takeover
Zimbabwe's
military has placed President Robert Mugabe under house arrest in the capital
Harare, South African President Jacob Zuma says.
Mr Mugabe
told Mr Zuma in a phone call that he was fine, the South African leader's
office said.
Troops are
patrolling the capital, Harare, after they seized state TV and said they were
targeting "criminals".
The move may
be a bid to replace Mr Mugabe with his sacked deputy, Emmerson Mnangagwa, BBC
correspondents say.
Mr
Mnangagwa's dismissal last week left Mr Mugabe's wife Grace as the president's
likely successor.
Mr Mugabe,
93, has dominated the country's political scene since it gained independence
from the UK in 1980.
After days
of tension and rumour, soldiers seized the state broadcaster ZBC late on
Tuesday.
A Zimbabwean
army officer, Major General Sibusiso Moyo, went on air and denied there was a
coup, but said the military was targeting "criminals" around
President Mugabe.
Maj Gen Moyo
also said Mr Mugabe and his family were "safe and sound and their security
is guaranteed". It is not clear who is leading the military action.
Since then
military vehicles have been out on the streets of Harare, while gunfire has
been heard from northern suburbs where Mr Mugabe and a number of government
officials live.
In a
statement, Mr Zuma's office said: "President Zuma spoke to President
Robert Mugabe earlier today who indicated that he was confined to his home but
said that he was fine."
At heart is
a power struggle over who succeeds Mr Mugabe. The rivalry between his wife
Grace and Mr Mnangagwa has split the governing Zanu-PF.
Following a
call from Mrs Mugabe, Mr Mnangagwa was removed from the vice-presidency earlier
this month.
But on
Monday, army chief Gen Constantino Chiwenga said the army was prepared to act
to end purges within Zanu-PF.
Gen Chiwenga
is a close ally of Mr Mnangagwa and both are veterans of the 1970s war which
ended white minority rule.
One of the
leading members of the Zanu-PF faction led by Grace Mugabe, Finance Minister
Ignatius Chombo, is being detained, a government source told Reuters.
These are,
of course, unpredictable times for Zimbabwe and yet there is a chance that the
army's extraordinary overnight gamble will pay off, and that President Robert
Mugabe, humiliated and powerless, will nonetheless be allowed to retire with at
least the pretence of dignity.
It is
important to remember that Mr Mugabe is not being challenged by the Western
governments he has warned against for decades, or by Zimbabwe's political
opposition, or by a mass uprising against economic hardship.
This is,
fundamentally, an internal power struggle within Zanu-PF and whoever emerges
victorious can expect a newly purged party to fall obediently into line.
Mr Mugabe's
mistake, at 93, was to assume he was still powerful enough to build a dynasty
to back his wife, Grace, to succeed him.
Instead, his
once loyal deputy, Emerson Mnangagwa, may be poised to take control. If so,
many foreign governments are likely to give him the benefit of the doubt and
hope he can rescue Zimbabwe from years of misrule.
In his
statement Maj Gen Moyo said "this is not a military takeover of
government".
But despite
the Zimbabwean military's denials, to many observers their actions bore many of
the hallmarks of a coup.
There has
been no direct comment from President Mugabe, nor his wife Grace, whose
whereabouts are unclear.
Key regional
blocs the African Union (AU) and the Southern African Development Community
(SADC) do not look favourably on unconstitutional changes of power, which might
explain the Zimbabwean military's wording.
In Harare,
some were delighted. "We are going to have a good life, we are looking
forward to Christmas, because of what has happened," one woman told BBC
News.
"I want
to thank the general for removing this tyrant," said a man. "He was
ruling the country as if it belonged to his family."
The leader
of the war veterans, Chris Mutsvangwa, told Reuters: "It's the end of a
very painful and sad chapter in the history of a young nation, in which a
dictator, as he became old, surrendered his court to a gang of thieves around
his wife."
Both the UK
Foreign Office and US embassy in Harare has advised its citizens to remain
indoors until the situation becomes clearer.\
China,
Zimbabwe's biggest trading partner, says it is closely watching the situation
and hopes that the relevant parties can properly handle their internal affairs.
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