Mugabe intensifies regime coup-proofing

Source: Mugabe intensifies regime coup-proofing – The Zimbabwe Independent July 8, 2016

We are grateful to war veterans and the military for playing their role. We extended their contracts when they had reached retirement so that they could assist us in fighting the opposition, hence we came out good.

PRESIDENT Robert Mugabe is coup-proofing his regime by giving security forces preferential treatment ahead of other civil servants in the face of worsening economic conditions in the country. Besides the special treatment on salaries, the military has been getting constant promotions and huge perks to keep them quiet.

By Elias Mambo

Since controversially winning the 2013 elections, which were marred by allegations of vote-rigging through the deliberate disenfranchisement of voters and the use of an Israeli security company Nikuv to run the electoral show, sources in the military say Mugabe has been on a systematic military appeasement drive to coup-roof his regime and maintain his grip on power.

One of the methods Mugabe has used is a series of promotions within the military, while also ensuring that senior officials are afforded luxuries such as top-of-the- range vehicles and other opulent perks.

“The large scale promotions are being done at a rate which has never been seen before in the history of the Zimbabwe National Army,” said an official.

Investigations by the Zimbabwe Independent show that Mugabe has since January this year promoted 56 senior army officers in a move which is largely viewed as a way of pacifying the military. This followed his outburst at the Zanu PF conference in December where he accused security service chiefs of meddling in the succession wrangle in Zanu PF.

Documents seen by this paper show that Mugabe promoted 37 majors in March to the position of lieutenant-colonel compared to the seven he promoted in 2014. Mugabe also promoted 19 lieutenant- colonels to the position of colonel.

In addition, the president also promoted three colonels to the rank of brigadier-general this year adding to the 10 brigadier-generals he appointed last year.

The army, and other security forces are also getting preferential treatment from the cash-strapped government when it comes to payment of salaries.

Last month, for example, the government staggered pay dates for civil servants, with the army receiving salaries on June 27. Members of the police, intelligence and prison services were also paid before month-end, part of Mugabe’s coup-proofing strategy.

Teachers, who form the bulk of the civil service, were only paid yesterday, while the government has moved the pay dates for the health sector to today to halt a strike. Health workers were initially supposed to be paid on July 14, but their decision to down tools forced government to shift dates.

The rest of the civil service will be paid on July 14.

“The army gets preferential treatment because they control the instruments of coercion,” said a senior government official.

As reported by this paper last week army bosses, in a desperate move to forestall potential unrest by soldiers, approached banks to set up facilities at army barracks around the country so that military personnel have access to their full salaries.

The military has over the years helped Mugabe and Zanu PF maintain their grip on power.

In 2008 for example, the military made a violent intervention to rescue Mugabe who had lost the first round of elections to MDC-T leader Morgan Tsvangirai. The army took over the Zanu PF campaign ahead of the June 27 presidential election runoff before unleashing violence leading to Tsvangirai pulling out of the election in which Mugabe subsequently claimed victory unopposed.

The MDC-T says over 200 of its supporters were killed during the period, while thousands of people were displaced.
Mugabe at a war veterans meeting in April publicly admitted for the first time the military always plays a critical role in elections in support of Zanu PF and him.

Mugabe asked Zimbabwe Defence Forces commander General Constantine Chiwenga to stand up and thanked him for the role played by service chiefs to prop up Zanu PF. He revealed that he extended the service chiefs contracts ahead of the 2013 elections so that they could assist to ensure Zanu PF records victory.

“Totenda mawar veterans, the military also, they played their role. Ndosaka takachengetedza varume ava vanga vasvika paku-retire kuti tirwe hondo neopposition, tikabva tabuda shudhu (We are grateful to war veterans and the military for playing their role. We extended their contracts when they had reached retirement so that they could assist us in fighting the opposition, hence we came out good),” Mugabe told war veterans.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 8
  • comment-avatar
    tonyme 8 years ago

    Why use soldiers to maintain control instead of being democratic and leave the army alone. President must be insecure to feel that he has to be in power for life. Why does he feel he is the only one capable of leading Zimbabwe? So far he has destroyed all life in this country. Things were much more available before he became the leader. It’s a fact Smith’s regime looked out for the country. Even with sanctions from Britain in 1964, we had food,electricity and water.

  • comment-avatar
    IAN SMITH 8 years ago

    BRIBERY
    Bribery is the act of giving money, goods or other forms of recompense to a recipient in exchange for an alteration of their behavior (to the benefit/interest of the giver) that the recipient would otherwise not alter.

    DESPERATE times call for desperate measure. Like a child needs the stick when it misbehaves, 92% SENILE mugabe
    IT’S TIME TO GIVE THE STICK and the boot.

    Both the briber and the bribed will soon feel the heat not long now.
    No secrets in the world of social media.

  • comment-avatar
    Michael 8 years ago

    Mugabe cannot afford to give up power. If he does a new Government may just insist that all the billions he stole and stashed away in foreign bank accounts be returned to the country. That would be enough to settle all the debts of the Zim Government.

  • comment-avatar
    Fallenz 8 years ago

    i like to think Michael is correct. just imagine all the mal-maintained infrastructure that could be repaired, the bush roads graded and maintained, potholed roads rebuilt, legitimate business loans for process and manufacturing and agriculture, resulting in employment for the nation. all of that currently resides in personal off-shore accounts… stolen from Zim. minority rule is never best, but zanu-pf has taken far more, and returned far less, than Ian Smith ever thought about.

    also, with mugabe out of power, he and his band of murderous thieves could be subject to arrest and trial for their atrocities… and that includes the military, police, and intelligence. once a cut-throat takes atrocities past a certain level, they find their hold onto power is like holding a tiger by the tail… they dare not let go.

  • comment-avatar
    Thabo 8 years ago

    guys there is only one thing to say MUGABE MUST STEP DOWN…TELL ME DOESN’T IT COME TO 5 SENSES SOMETIMES THAT HE SHOULD JUST GO AND REST….Sorry to say this but….when Nelson Mandela passed away every man was sad cause he stood proudly a real man.now when Mugabe leaves us i myself will rejoice infact i will have a party…infact wat would be there to worry about,it will be a party.Read that CIO’s and zanu pf supporters…

  • comment-avatar
    Trebor Ebagum 8 years ago

    Good. I hope lives to 200. Keep that little fecal-pit of a country dirt-poor, stupid, racist, & backward. Somalia-south.

    • comment-avatar

      Trebor, nothing lasts forever… Shame on you…. I guess you are just as senile as he is dillusional…

  • comment-avatar
    Hokoti 8 years ago

    Waste of to me and energy only one answer relinquish power