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Zimbabwe army enters political fray
Jason
Moyo, Mail and Guardian (SA)
May 10, 2012
http://mg.co.za/article/2012-05-10-zimbabwe-army-enters-political-fray
Zimbabwean military
officials want a more prominent role in and outside Zanu-PF and
openly back the party.
President Robert
Mugabe's military men, long the silent power behind his throne,
are now stepping out of the shadows to play a more open role in
Zanu-PF.
They are trying
to quell the factional fighting in the party that has torn apart
its grassroots structures and disrupted district elections.
This week a
senior officer told his troops that the army could no longer be
expected to distance itself from politics and it would not apologise
for backing Zanu-PF.
The party's
commissariat, which runs its internal polls and election campaigns,
is now also led by senior security men, Air Vice-Marshall Henry
Muchena and former intelligence chief Sydney Nyanungo.
Army personnel
are also demanding a more influential role in Zanu-PF's constitutional
reform team, which is under increasing pressure from party hardliners
for
agreeing to a draft constitution that would make far-reaching
reforms.
Power struggles
The influence
of the military chiefs over Zanu-PF has been increasing in recent
years, although they have largely remained in the background. But
the chaos in the party's districts has been an opportunity
for the military to come out into the open.
While Zanu-PF
provincial leaders were meeting in Mutare to try to end the factional
fights that led to the suspension of district elections, a group
of top army officers turned up at the venue and demanded that the
politicians sort out the crisis, which could lose Mugabe the election.
According to
party officials, the army men felt let down by the power struggles
among the politicians and were stepping in to end the fighting.
Incumbent Zanu-PF
MPs are also facing opposition from serving and retired military
and intelligence officers who want to stand in Zanu-PF primaries.
Army chief of
staff Major General Martin Chedondo has told troops that the army
could no longer refrain from politics. "A national defence
force the world over is there to protect the national politics,
national integrity, the executive and other systems that form part
of the government. By virtue of this, defence forces automatically
become a political animal," he said. "As soldiers, we
will never be apologetic for supporting Zanu-PF, because it is the
only political party that has national interests at heart."
Limit
the president's power
The military
is opposed to attempts by the Movement for Democratic Change to
reform the security forces. A draft
constitution published recently proposes to limit the president's
power to appoint security chiefs by forcing him to share that responsibility
with Parliament
and a commission. It has drawn strong opposition from Zanu-PF hawks
and angered the military.
Under the power-sharing
agreement, a new constitution is required before new elections are
held, but Mugabe's lieutenants say the process has been hijacked
by their enemies in the West. The proposed constitution would make
it illegal for Mugabe to stand in new elections, because it bars
anyone who has been president for a total of 10 years from standing
again. Zanu-PF is also angry about a clause that could open the
door to prosecute Mugabe. The draft allows "civil proceedings"
against a former leader for crimes committed "before he or
she became president [or] in his or her personal capacity while
he or she was president".
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