Posted on 06/05/2008 1:17:34 PM PDT by blam
Zimbabwean generals have 'taken Robert Mugabe's power'
By David Blair, Diplomatic Editor
Last Updated: 9:03PM BST 05/06/2008
Zimbabwe's generals have mounted a "military coup by stealth", reducing President Robert Mugabe to a "figurehead", a senior western diplomat said.
The tight circle of "securocrats", who sit on the Joint Operations Command (JOC) committee, are now believed to be in day-to-day charge of Zimbabwe's government.
They ensured Mr Mugabe did not step down after his defeat in the presidential election's first round in March and are now masterminding a campaign of terror to suppress the opposition Movement for Democratic Change and guarantee victory for Mr Mugabe in the June 27 run-off.
The government indefinitely suspended all work by aid groups and non-governmental organisations, accusing them of breaching their terms of registration.
Mr Mugabe is a useful figurehead who still commands the deference of other African leaders, notably President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa.
But the western diplomat said Mr Mugabe's power had ebbed away and Zimbabwe was now run by a "junta".
"This is a military coup by stealth," he said. "There are no tanks on people's lawns, but the Joint Operations Command runs this country."
The most powerful figures on the JOC are Gen Constantine Chiwenga, the overall military chief; Augustine Chihuri, the national police commissioner, and Gen Paradzai Zimondi, the commander of the prison service.
Air Marshal Perence Shiri, the commander of the air force, who masterminded a brutal military campaign against Zimbabwe's minority Ndebele people in the 1980s, is also part of the circle, although believed to be less influential.
All four fought in Mr Mugabe's guerrilla army during the war against white rule in the 1970s. Each has publicly proclaimed their support for the ruling Zanu-PF party.
They have also benefited from Mr Mugabe's seizure of white-owned land, with farms and business concessions falling into their hands, allowing them to amass considerable wealth.
The diplomat said after the first round of the election on March 29, Mr Mugabe, 84, "almost went" when it became clear that Morgan Tsvangirai, the opposition leader, had won significantly more votes.
But a pivotal meeting of the JOC on March 30 convinced him to stay.
"The generals didn't let him go," said the diplomat. From that moment, Mr Mugabe was "beholden to his senior generals to hold office".
Another source inside Zimbabwe confirmed: "He [Mugabe] was prepared to concede but the generals, whose positions would become uncertain with his departure, prevented that from happening," he said.
Other observers backed the diplomat's view that Zimbabwean politics had fundamentally changed.
Tiseke Kasambala, a Zimbabwe specialist at Human Rights Watch, said there was an "increasing militarisation of the state".
"The evidence points to an increasing role by the army in state affairs," she said.
"The army is no longer just in barracks, waiting to protect the country. The army is out there, taking a role in the day-to-day government of the country."
Mr Mugabe does not fear his generals will actually overthrow him they still need him as the regime's titular leader or he would not have travelled to Rome for the United Nations food summit this week.
However, observers believe Mr Mugabe's age and his new dependence on the generals means he is no longer the sole arbiter of Zimbabwe's fate.
I expect no less from an Obama administration...
It will be far worse than Carter's administration, and that is probably why Carter endorsed him --- hoping to be removed as most incompetent and destructive president in the Republic's history.
Rhodesia has been utterly dead for many years now
Replying to you from your comment in the locked post
Thought you’d be interest in this blog post I saw last month. Not well sourced, but it does kind of fill in the obvious blanks.
http://www.zimbabwetoday.co.uk/2008/04/are-chinese-tro.html
I am not buying any of this all supplied by unnamed sources.
They are trying to say the see it not really his fault. Big BS.
I think it’s Myanmar.
I fear that Southern Rhodesia could become a blueprint for Obama-nation, should we not rise up and send him skulking back to the Chicago ghettos.
> Rhodesia has been utterly dead for many years now
Alas ‘tis true, in the same sense that Burma is also dead. But I refuse ty buy into the new regime, and that includes accepting their name change.
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