A portrait of Zimbabwe`s President Mugabe hangs in the ZANU-PF hall where delegates are sitting for a special ZANU-PF party Central Committee at the party`s headquarters on November 19 , 2017 in Harare. Mugabe faced the imminent collapse of his 37-year regime, with the once-loyal ZANU-PF party set to sack him as its leader and army generals piling pressure on him to resign. / AFP PHOTO / ZINYANGE AUNTONY (Photo credit should read ZINYANGE AUNTONY/AFP/Getty Images)
Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe may be facing the last days of his 37 years in power as lawmakers prepare to start proceedings to impeach him.
The ruling Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front says it will work with the opposition to ensure it has the votes in parliament to oust Mugabe, 93, on Wednesday after he missed Monday’s ruling-party deadline to resign.
Mugabe was widely expected to use a televised address on Sunday to announce his retirement so that Emmerson Mnangagwa, whom he fired as vice president this month, could take over. Instead, he delivered a rambling speech and pledged to preside over a December congress of the governing party that had dumped him as leader earlier in the day. Three senior party officials who spoke on condition of anonymity said Mugabe deviated from an agreed-upon text.
The moves against Mugabe are the climax of a power struggle in the ruling party between a military-aligned faction that’s coalesced around Mnangagwa, 75, and another known as the Generation-40, which wants the president’s wife, Grace Mugabe, 52, to succeed him. Mnangagwa, who’s one of the pillars of the security establishment that has helped keep Mugabe in power since white minority rule ended in 1980, emerged as the victor, with the party expelling Grace and her allies.
‘End Game’
The political crisis comes as the economy is in free-fall, with more than nine out of 10 working-age people out of a job, public infrastructure crumbling and about 3 million Zimbabweans in exile.
See key images from Mugabe’s 37 years in power
“This is the end game,” said Eldred Masunugure, a professor of political science at the University of Zimbabwe. “He has exhausted all his usable cards. All the pillars of power have crumbled.”
Mugabe has been in contact with Mnangagwa, who Zanu-PF has named as the party’s new leader, armed forces commander Constantino Chiwenga, who led the military action dubbed Operation Restore Legacy,” told reporters on Monday.
Mnangagwa, who said he fled Zimbabwe after his dismissal because of threats to him and his family, plans to return “as soon as the right conditions for security and stability prevail,” he said Tuesday in a statement. He confirmed Mugabe had contacted him and urged the president to resign “so the country can move forward and preserve his legacy.”
Read more on how Mugabe lost power in Zimbabwe
Impeaching the president requires backing from two-thirds of lawmakers. Zanu-PF held a caucus meeting in Harare, the capital, Monday and all 230 of its lawmakers who attended favored firing Mugabe, five short of the threshold, Lovemore Matuke, the party’s chief whip in the House of Assembly, told reporters.
The Movement for Democratic Change, the main opposition, will support the impeachment proposal, Douglas Mwonzora, the party’s secretary for legal affairs, said by phone on Monday. “They are certain conditions which we have discussed,” he said, while refusing to disclose what they were.
While there are no documented procedures for impeaching a president, including whether he should be granted a right of reply, the process can probably be concluded within three to four days, according to John Makamure, executive director of the Southern African Parliamentary Support Trust.
Zimbabwe’s main stock index has fallen 27 percent and seen almost $5 billion wiped off its market capitalization since the military seized power on Nov. The drop is a sign of confidence returning to the southern African nation’s financial system, according to Exotix Capital. That’s because investors were previously piling into equities to hedge against inflation driven by the government’s printing of money to combat a cash shortage.
A group of regional leaders including South African President Jacob Zuma is scheduled to discuss the Zimbabwe crisis at a meeting Tuesday in the Angolan capital, Luanda.
“We are saying Mugabe go, go now,” Chris Mutsvangwa, the head of the Zimbabwe War Veterans Association, which has been at the forefront of the campaign to remove Mugabe, told reporters in Harare on Monday. “If he can’t, we will bring the people of Zimbabwe into the streets.”
— With assistance by Michael Cohen, and Paul Wallace.
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