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Zimbabweans march as Mugabe's future in the balance

Last Updated 18 November 2017, 11:05 IST

Thousands of protesters flooded Zimbabwe's streets demanding Robert Mugabe's resignation on Saturday in a movement organised by independence war veterans and backed by ruling party barons and the army.

The mass turnout came after an unprecedented week which saw the army's top brass seizing power and putting Mugabe under house arrest in response to his sacking of vice president Emmerson Mnangagwa.

It was a stunning turnaround for Mugabe who has ruled Zimbabwe with an iron fist since 1980.

Veterans of the liberation war, who had previously supported Mugabe, had called for the gathering which saw marchers rallying in Highfield, a working-class suburb of Harare, with another demonstration staged in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second city.

"This is the best day of my life. We are hoping for a new life after Mugabe," said 38-year-old Sam Sechete who was marching with a crutch.

A symbolic location, Highfield was where Mugabe gave his first speech after returning from exile in Mozambique ahead of independence in 1980.

Demonstrators, who began arriving around midnight, roared, whistled and danced, brandishing placards proclaiming: "Not coup but cool" and "Mugabe must go!"

 Such an open display of disloyalty would have been unthinkable just a week ago as dissent was routinely crushed by security forces.

In a statement released on Friday, the army said it fully supported the protests.

"Today is independence, we are suffering too much," said 14-year-old marcher Grace Kazhanje.

Emma Muchenje, a 37-year-old market worker, said she had skipped work to be at the march. "This day took too long to come," she told AFP.

There was an atmosphere of celebration among the crowds with protesters cheering the soldiers and stopping to shake their hands.

 Mugabe enraged many Zimbabweans when he failed to resign following talks with the army's top brass on Thursday, with sources suggesting the veteran leader was "buying time" to negotiate an end to his 37-year reign.

He appeared publicly for the first time on Friday at a pre-planned graduation ceremony in Harare, further stoking speculation about his talks with General Constantino Chiwenga, who led the military power grab.

Later on Friday, eight of the 10 regional branches of Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF took to state television to call for him to go - yet another a serious blow to the embattled leader.

"The game is up," said Chris Mutsvangwa, chairman of the independence war veterans' association which organised the Highfield protest.

"It's done, it's finished... The generals have done a fantastic job," he said.

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(Published 18 November 2017, 11:00 IST)

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