Special Report: Meet the force behind
Zimbabwe's 'Crocodile' president
Send a link to a friend
[January 16, 2018]
By Ed Cropley
HARARE (Reuters) - His wife is a beauty
queen, his troops unseated Zimbabwean leader Robert Mugabe, and his
motorcade is fit for a president. General Constantino Chiwenga, head of
the armed forces until earlier this month, is on a roll.
On Dec. 15 his 10-vehicle convoy, complete with soldiers toting AK-47
assault rifles, roared into a congress of the ruling ZANU-PF party. It
was one of several displays of power by Zimbabwe's generals since they
helped oust Mugabe, the southern African nation's ruler of 37 years, on
Nov. 21.
Ostensibly Chiwenga, 61, is subordinate to the veteran politician who
replaced Mugabe as president: Emmerson Mnangagwa, nicknamed the
Crocodile. Mnangagwa, 75, was sworn in on Nov. 24 and promised to hold
elections in 2018.
But since Mugabe was deposed and Mnangagwa installed, moves by senior
military men have suggested the president is the junior partner in an
army-dominated administration. Following a month of speculation about
his role in Mnangagwa's government, Chiwenga was named vice president on
Dec. 23. He was also appointed defense minister on Dec. 29, so retaining
control of the military.
That perception of Mnangagwa's disempowerment is buttressed by reports
seen by Reuters from inside Zimbabwe's Central Intelligence Organisation
(CIO). "The generals have tasted power and they are not willing to let
it go," reads one intelligence report, dated Nov. 29. "They want to
enjoy the fruits of removing Mugabe from power."
Another report, from Nov. 22, described the backroom negotiations to
form a post-Mugabe government. "Chiwenga is the one going to have final
say as power is in his hands. He is now the most feared man in
government and party as well as the whole country," it said.
The documents reviewed by Reuters are the latest installments in a
series of hundreds of intelligence reports the news agency has seen from
inside the CIO dating back to 2009. Reuters has not been able to
determine their intended audience, but the documents cover every aspect
of Zimbabwean political life over the last eight years - Mugabe, the top
echelons of his ZANU-PF party, the military, opposition parties and the
white business community.
In the dying days of Mugabe's regime, the CIO – the principal organ of
Mugabe's police state – split into two factions. One served the
interests of Mnangagwa, the other those of his main political rival,
Grace Mugabe, the president's 52-year-old wife, according to several
Zimbabwean intelligence sources.
Much of the content of the CIO reports has turned out to be correct,
including an intelligence finding reported by Reuters in September that
the army was backing then vice-president Mnangagwa to take over from
Mugabe.
Army spokesman Overson Mugwisi did not respond to requests for comment
on behalf of Chiwenga. However, a senior general appointed to
Mnangagwa's post-Mugabe cabinet, Air Force chief Perrance Shiri, said
there was nothing wrong in having military men in government.
"Who says military people should never be politicians?" he told
reporters at a lunch to celebrate the cabinet's inauguration on Dec. 4.
"I am a Zimbabwean. I've got every right to participate in the country's
politics."
Mnangagwa did not reply to an interview request for this article and his
spokesman, George Charamba, did not respond to a request for comment.
Mnangagwa's lawyer, Edwin Manikai, said the president wanted to "work
with anybody who adds value to the economy," in line with the new
leader's stated desire to halt Zimbabwe's precipitous economic decline
under Mugabe.
"DEMOCRATIC CORRECTION"
Mugabe's removal started with soldiers entering Harare on Nov. 14 and
announcing in the early hours of Nov. 15 that they had taken control.
Military vehicles took to the streets and gunfire and explosions were
heard in parts of the capital. "It is not a military takeover of
government," said General Sibusiso Moyo, reading a statement on TV.
The generals dubbed their project "Operation Restore Legacy." They
called the move a "democratic correction" against a 93-year-old leader
whose decisions, they alleged, were being manipulated by an ambitious
wife half his age. Reuters was unable to contact Grace Mugabe for
comment.
Since his appointment, Mnangagwa has promised to rebuild relations with
the West, to protect foreign investors and to hold elections.
"I intend, nay, am required, to serve our country as the president of
all citizens, regardless of color, creed, religion, tribe or political
affiliation," he said after being sworn in. The voice of the people was
the "voice of God."
But for many Zimbabweans, actions speak louder than words.
On Dec. 4, Mnangagwa appointed Shiri, the Air Force chief, to the post
of minister of agriculture. Moyo, the general who had announced the
military's intervention, became foreign minister.
"Mnangagwa has got the reins but he cannot operate outside the generals
that put him in office," said Martin Rupiya, a Zimbabwean professor at
the University of South Africa in Pretoria and an expert on the Zimbabwe
military.
On Dec. 6, Foreign Minister Moyo publicly overruled Finance Minister
Patrick Chinamasa, a civilian lawyer, as he outlined the financial terms
of a Chinese loan for Harare airport.
"You should tell the reporters not to include the terms," Moyo told
Chinamasa, wagging his finger at him and the reporters gathered at the
finance ministry for the announcement.
Chinamasa said the incident was the result of a misunderstanding and did
not reflect military muscle-flexing. Moyo did not respond to a request
for comment.
Ever since a guerrilla war against colonial Britain and white-minority
rule in the 1960s and 1970s, Zimbabweans have been used to the army and
intelligence services playing a covert role in politics. But to many
Zimbabweans, the appointment of military men to the cabinet was a shock.
The opposition Movement for Democratic Change reminded the ruling party
in a statement on Dec. 18 that "members of the security services are
bound by the Constitution not to operate as political activists of any
political party."
Tendai Biti, finance minister in a 2009-2013 unity government, expressed
concern at "the obvious militarization" of the Zimbabwean state. "You
cannot make a direct transition from the barracks to public office. We
believe citizens should have that right to choose their
representatives," he said.
International Crisis Group analyst Piers Pigou said the "deployment of
serving senior military officers removes the last pretence of
non-military bias in Zimbabwe's politics. This is vintage wine in a
camouflage decanter."
[to top of second column]
|
A child looks on as Emmerson Mnangagwa arrives to be sworn in as
Zimbabwe's President in Harare, Zimbabwe, November 24, 2017.
REUTERS/Philimon Bulawayo/File Photo
AMERICA AND CHINA
If there were overt military rule, it could complicate Mnangagwa's
efforts to get Zimbabwe's economy back on its feet, some Western
diplomats say. Since the seizure by the Mugabe regime of thousands
of white-owned commercial farms after 2000, Zimbabwe's GDP has
almost halved and the banking system has endured a meltdown that saw
inflation top out at 500 billion percent in 2008. To kick-start
growth, Mnangagwa will need to clear $1.8 billion of arrears with
multilateral lenders such as the World Bank. He will also have to
attract private investors.
"These things don't happen overnight, and they have to really show
they will implement what they say they will do. That is key," said
Christian Beddes, the Zimbabwe representative of the International
Monetary Fund.
Britain's foreign secretary, Boris Johnson, told Reuters on Nov. 29
that Britain could extend a bridging loan to help Zimbabwe clear
World Bank and African Development Bank arrears, but such support
would depend on "democratic progress."
U.S. Ambassador Harry Thomas avoided the term "coup" to describe
Mugabe's overthrow, referring to it as a "military intervention."
Thomas said Mnangagwa's administration should be judged by its
performance - most notably whether it manages to hold credible
elections next year. He was speaking on Dec. 6, two days after the
cabinet was sworn in.
China too is an interested party. It has significant investments and
loans outstanding in Zimbabwe and long ties to Mugabe, Mnangagwa and
Chiwenga.
In early November, after Mugabe had sacked Mnangagwa for plotting
against him, Mnangagwa met Chiwenga in China, said two sources
familiar with the general's movements. Chiwenga also met Chinese
Defence Minister Chang Wanquan, and the pair even discussed tactics
to be used in the coup, according to two sources familiar with the
talks. Beijing did not respond to a request for comment. Its Foreign
Ministry has previously described Chiwenga's visit as a "normal
military exchange mutually agreed upon by China and Zimbabwe."
Speaking at a signing ceremony for the Harare airport loan in
December, Chinese ambassador Huang Ping said China's government
would "continue to support the Zimbabwean government in their
economic development."
GOLFING GENERAL
For Chiwenga, quitting as armed forces chief on Dec. 18 was the
first time he had stepped out of uniform in more than four decades.
An ethnic Karanga like Mnangagwa, Chiwenga joined Mugabe's
Chinese-backed ZANLA guerrilla army in the early 1970s. He received
his training in Mozambique, where he learned Portuguese, as well as
in Tanzania and China. As part of Mugabe's close-protection unit in
Mozambique, Chiwenga had regular exposure to Zimbabwe's fiercely
intellectual future leader, from whom the soldier acquired a respect
for education and a keen nose for politics, according to a senior
regional intelligence source who knows Chiwenga.
After independence in 1980, Chiwenga managed to thrive in the
dangerous world of Zimbabwe's security forces.
According to a 2014 domestic media report of his divorce settlement
with his first wife, Jocelyn, he owned, among other things,
properties in Harare’s exclusive Borrowdale Brooke neighborhood, an
apartment in Malaysia, a safari company, a fleet of luxury vehicles
and a jewelry collection that included 40 gold watches, 45 sets of
diamond earrings and a tiara. Chjiwenga has not commented on the
report, which Reuters was unable to verify independently, and an
army spokesman did not respond to a request for comment. Asked about
the report, Chiwenga's ex-wife Jocelyn said, "You seem to have all
the information already so what more do you want?"
Chiwenga's name has been linked to several of the darkest chapters
of Zimbabwe's history. In 2003 he, Mnangagwa and Mugabe were among
77 Zimbabweans sanctioned by the United States for allegedly
undermining "democratic processes" and causing "politically
motivated violence" in elections the previous year. Mugabe's
administration denied committing human rights violations and
rejected the sanctions as an example of international bias against
his rule.
Chiwenga was also a senior figure in the western region of
Matabeleland in 1983 during the so-called Gukurahundi massacres, in
which the army's North Korean-trained 5 Brigade cracked down on
supporters of Mugabe's liberation war era rival, Joshua Nkomo. An
estimated 20,000 ethnic Ndebele, including women and children, were
killed. Chiwenga was not directly involved, but as commander of 1
Brigade in the city of Bulawayo, he provided "logistical support" to
the operation, according to the 2017 book Kingdom, Power, Glory by
Australian researcher Stuart Doran that draws on recently
declassified diplomatic and defense archives. Shiri, now minister of
land and agriculture, was 5 Brigade's commander at the time;
Mnangagwa was minister of state security.
In a 2016 interview with Britain's New Statesman magazine, Mnangagwa
dismissed allegations he was a Gukurahundi "enforcer," saying these
were smears peddled by political opponents. An army spokesman did
not respond to a request for comment by Chiwenga or Shiri about
their role in Gukurahundi. As career military officers, they have
rarely given interviews and are not known to have commented on the
massacres.
Chiwenga was head of the army in 2008 when troops removed thousands
of artisanal miners from the Chiadzwa diamond fields in the eastern
district of Marange. Before the army moved in, Marange had been open
to small-scale local operators. According to Human Rights Watch, at
least 200 people were killed, and the army then went on to use
forced child labor and torture in running the fields for its own
benefit. An army spokesman did not respond to a request for comment.
In Mnangagwa, most of whose career has also been spent in security
or intelligence, Chiwenga has a formidable rival. But - at 14 years
Mnangagwa's junior – Chiwenga has time to play the long game for
himself and his comrades in arms.
"The generals want Mnangagwa to run for one or two terms before
handing over to Chiwenga," the Nov. 29 intelligence report reads.
"They want Chiwenga to be in power for two terms before handing over
to the next general to be announced."
(Reporting by Ed Cropley; Additional reporting by Emelia Sithole and
Alfonce Mbizwo in Harare and Joe Bavier in Abidjan; editing by Janet
McBride, Sara Ledwith and Richard Woods)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |