#mugabe successor: Battle rages on

via Mugabe successor: Battle rages on – DailyNews Live by Lloyd Mbiba 18 MAY 2014

Since President Robert Mugabe was last year re-elected for another five-year term, Zanu PF politics has been dominated by explosive succession battles, some of which have been fought publicly while others, involving back stabbing and deadly rumour mongering, have been quietly simmering.

The battle to succeed the 90-year-old has heightened in the last few months and with the veteran leader travelling to Singapore for an eye check-up last week, Mugabe’s succession puzzle has become more intricate.

Mugabe has indicated no intention of stepping down, and ruled out his two leading succession contenders — his deputy Joice Mujuru and Justice minister Emmerson Mnangagwa from taking over from him.

Mugabe’s statement that Mujuru and Mnangagwa are not the automatic choices has left the door wide open for other members to fight for the top post, analysts say.

Whatever else can be said about Mugabe’s 34-year reign as president of Zimbabwe, no other chief executive in the southern hemisphere has managed a brand the way Mugabe has.

He has ruled virtually unchallenged since taking office in 1980. Along the way, he shaped his so-called empowerment revolution for “21st-Century socialism” into a durable political arrangement at home.

That is also what makes Mugabe’s  eventual absence a riddle and, potentially, a ticking time bomb, analysts warn.

Re-elected last July for a seventh five-year mandate, Mugabe never prepared a political successor.

His continued stonewalling on leadership succession as the party gears up for an elective congress in December could create chaos, uncertainty and insecurity, analysts warn.

The presidential succession promises more of the same, but without the consummate Mugabe to keep the peace — ever maintaining rivals at dagger point and yet somehow toeing the official line — all bets on his future are off.

Although Zanu PF officials have sworn loyalty and comradeship to Mugabe, behind-the-scenes they are upping the ante for a place on the high table — the presidium.

In recent months, the party’s members have openly challenged each other and threw all sorts of accusations around.

Just last weekend, Zanu PF Women’s League chairperson Oppah Muchinguri said some senior party officials were trooping to see prophets and traditional healers as they try to get charms ahead of the congress.

Piers Pigou, International Crisis Group’s southern Africa project director,  said the lack of a clear succession plan in Zanu PF will fuel speculation and uncertainty.

“The absence of clarity is likely to feed into the politics of speculation,” Pigou told the Daily News on Sunday.

“As with Kremlinologists in the 1970’s and 1980’s who tried to work out the changing lines of influence in the Soviet politburo, so the varying interpretations of utterances and silences are likely to continue.

“And on occasion, Mugabe is likely to generically slap down any pretenders, which will be echoed by a coterie of praise singers. Nothing is new about this. What is concerning, of course, is that it feeds a sense of uncertainty and insecurity, precisely what Zimbabwe does not need at this juncture.”

University of Zimbabwe political science lecturer, Eldred Masunungure said no one was in charge to steer the country away from the “precipitous fall which it is about to plunge into.”

Masunungure said Zanu PF officials were “either too selfish or too timid” to tell Mugabe to step aside.

Africa Confidential, a newsletter covering politics and economics in Africa, warns that Zanu PF risks wading into chaos as it approaches the elective congress.

The newsletter further states that the proxies used by factional leaders,  Mujuru and Mnangagwa are already strategically positioning themselves.

“President Mugabe’s continued stonewalling on the leadership succession threatens chaos as increasing numbers of politicians from Zanu PF throw their hats into the ring,” the report says.

“The established rival senior factions, those of Mujuru and Mnangagwa, are unable to operate openly and have to rely on proxies to gain advantage before the Zanu PF elective congress in December.

“As a result, some have spotted an opportunity and are setting out their stalls for the 2018 election in the hope that the leadership will skip a generation.

“Mugabe has not been able to endorse any of his lieutenants as having the requisite leadership potential to succeed him.

“This dismissal of the talents of Mujuru and Mnangagwa is another factor that encourages other heads to appear above the parapet,” the report says.

Maxwell Saungweme, a political analyst, said the elective congress is important as it will help position either faction for takeover once Mugabe is gone.

“The party in one way or the other has to have the elective congress. However, a lot of factional fights will come up.

“Factions would want to be better positioned to field a candidate when Mugabe is gone, so this congress if very important to all in Zanu PF,” Saungweme said.

He said the main contest at the congress will be for the second vice president as no one will challenge Mugabe.

“About the biggest issue of replacing Mugabe, forget it,” Saungweme said.

“I don’t think this party in its current form can handle this issue.

“It failed to handle it in over 30 years. They can deal with issues of VPs but the one at the helm will die in power.”

 

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 11
  • comment-avatar
    Chaka 10 years ago

    No comment. Watching as spectator

  • comment-avatar
    Matake 10 years ago

    Zimbabwe full of learned fools.

    • comment-avatar
      Promise 10 years ago

      “Learned’ … but the learning is based on the wrong curriculum. There are fundamental flaws in the curriculum & we cannot even start to dissect it now. Let us leave it to time to tell.

  • comment-avatar
    roving ambassador. 10 years ago

    Yyyyyyaaaaaaaaaawwwwwwwwnnnnnnnnnnnnn!!!!!!!

  • comment-avatar

    The congress won’t make any difference.. mugabe refuses to step down, and a big part of that is to make sure there is no clear successor. he has been playing this cat and mouse game with his would be successors, with zanu pf and with the nations since 1990….

  • comment-avatar
    Zvichapera 10 years ago

    Speculate all you like……always speculating

  • comment-avatar
    Cde Chooks 10 years ago

    Vultures fighting over a carcass that has already been stripped clean by the jackals…

  • comment-avatar
    Jono Austin 10 years ago

    When Mugabe goes, the successor will want to be friends with the world and make all the ‘right’ noises. A new dispensaton.

  • comment-avatar
    BAMBANANI SIZWESAKITHI 10 years ago

    mugabe successor: Battle rages on
    Where is the battle Lloyd Mbiba? At least it’s not there in your story. Juicy, selling headline, but empty story. Come on journalists!

  • comment-avatar
    Saddened 10 years ago

    If ZPF was ‘truly’ a party for the people they wouldn’t have allowed themselves to be cowered by Mugabe for nearly 40 years. Even the lowliest soldier aspires to be the commander-in-chief but apparently not in ZPF! Even the Nationalist party of RSA who were on par with ZPF got rid of P.W.Botha which ushered in a new political era in that country that ultimately led to democracy for all.

  • comment-avatar
    Godonga 10 years ago

    Cry thy beloved Party. Its a shame how (probably) Africa’s best liberation movement got strangled by a person suffering from Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD). There s no doubt in my mind about Mugabe s heroism and exceptionalism, but to die on the Throne is no heroism but self inflicted abuse of the elderly ( Prof Jonathan Moyo cals it shooting ur own foot!).

    When a father dies without leaving a will, who s to blame but the foolishness of the father if a succession bloodbath ensures on his grave! Cry thy beloved Party, Nyongolo must be restless in his grave too coz no one heed his warning that Tribalism wil destroy the nation.

    This factionalism is a tribal beast that Mugabe rode in 1980 and now he cant dismount it. Not only did tribalism destroy the concept of nationhood but it is threatening to choke the life out of Zanu PF. Zezuru, karanga, manyika,ndebele- the fault lines in this factious party are vissible. Look how long it is taking to confirm SK Moyo on the second V.P post reserved for Ndebeles as per 1987 Unity Accord!

    Something must give in @ the December elective conference or else Zanu PF risks being buried with the ” bambazonke” leader!

    Bayete Mzilikazi!