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Zimbabwe youth denounce Mugabe at ZANU-PF meeting

Zimbabwe youth denounce Mugabe at ZANU-PF meeting

Zimbabwe

Robert Mugabe’s fall from favour in Zimbabwe appeared complete on Wednesday when youth from his party, the ruling ZANU-PF, chanted slogans denouncing him, in an unthinkable prospect before the November de facto coup that ended his near four-decade rule.

In public, new President Emmerson Mnangagwa has continued to refer to 94-year-old Mugabe as an “icon” for leading Zimbabwe’s independence war, but news this week that Mugabe is backing a new political party has soured relations between him and his ex-comrades.

‘‘We will only take a position when issues are known and are factual. But we are not happy with what we are hearing in the media,’‘ Mnangagwa told a youth gathering.

At a meeting with Mnangagwa at the ruling party headquarters in Harare, ZANU-PF youth took turns to denounce Mugabe while hailing the leadership of Mnangagwa, who was flanked by senior party officials.

The youths chanted “Down with Robert Mugabe,” a slogan the former ruler had previously used against rivals since the country won independence from Britain in 1980.

#Zimbabwe “Pasi naRobert Mugabe” , “Down with Robert Mugabe” video credit cyrusnhara_4787 pic.twitter.com/AoPV6J4Zqa

— harumutasa/aljazeera (harumutasa) March 7, 2018

Young party members and party officials have so far refrained from condemning Mugabe, instead denouncing his allies.

But the signs of his fall from favour across society are growing. The state-owned Herald newspaper, which had previously referred to Mugabe as “Comrade” after his resignation, on Wednesday began refer to him as “Mr”, a title usually reserved for opposition rivals.

The New Patriotic Front, a new party headed by former army general and Mugabe loyalist Ambrose Mutinhiri, said it has Mugabe’s support and will challenge Mnangagwa at polls expected in a few months.

Mnangagwa told the youths gathered at the party headquarters that ZANU-PF was set for a landslide victory in the presidential, parliamentary and council elections due by Aug 21.

Since his fall from power, Mugabe has stayed at his Harare mansion with his wife Grace, but on Wednesday he left to visit South Africa for unknown reasons.

Am on the same flight on Air Zimbabwe to Johannesburg with former President Robert Mugabe this morning. The times have changed. Really changed ?

— Ray Ndlovu (@ray_ndlovu) March 7, 2018

REUTERS

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