Zimbabwe's Emmerson Mnangagwa returns — What's next?

Former Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa is poised to take over Zimbabwe's presidency on Friday, after arriving back in the capital on Wednesday. He was accompanied by cheering crowds and honking cars as he made his his way to ZANU-PF party headquarters. 

He came out of hiding in South Africa earlier this week and met with South African President Jacob Zuma on Wednesday before returning to Harare.



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Former Vice-President of the Republic of Zimbabwe, Honourable Mr Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa, paid a courtesy call on President Jacob Zuma before heading back to Harare, Zimbabwe today, 22 November 2017.
It is a dramatic turnaround for the politician who fled to neighboring South Africa earlier this month, in fear for his life. His dismissal as vice president, a move calculated to secure former First Lady Grace Mugabe's position as her husband's successor, triggered a coup d'etat and brought a sudden end to Robert Mugabe's 37 years in power.
Jacob Mudenda, Zimbabwe's parliamentary speaker, confirmed on Wednesday that preparations are already underway for Mnangagwa's swearing-in ceremony.
"We have notified the chief secretary to the president and cabinet, Misheck Sibanda, so that he can make arrangements," said Mudenda.
The ruling ZANU-PF party also took to Twitter to welcome Mnangagwa to his new position.
It has been announced that Mnangagwa will be sworn in Friday at 10:30 a.m. at the 60,000-seat National Sports Stadium on the outskirts of Harare.
A fresh start for Zimbabwe?
Zimbabweans have celebrated the end of the Mugabe era with emotional scenes that could be compared to the fall of the Berlin Wall in Germany, or the Arab spring. After decades of being ruled with an iron fist, watching their once prosperous country fall into decline and economic ruin, people are talking about a new future.
"I think this change of government is like a new breath of fresh air right across the country," said Harare resident Patrick Musira. "Everyone was engulfed with excitement and they are looking for a better future, a brighter future with work."
"Everyone is happy; it's a new future," Francis, a domestic servant in his 60s, told dpa news agency on Wednesday.
Yet the man set to take over, who has long held the position as Mugabe's strongman, is known for his involvement in the ZANU-PF party's brutal repression of any opposition in the country. He is famous for his part in the genocide of the Ndebele people in the early 1980s, known as "Gukurahundi,” as well as the more recent violent crackdown on the opposition in 2008. His ruthlessness and cunning earned him the nickname, "The Crocodile.”
But in recent days, Mnangagwa has spoken about moving forward as a united country.
In a statement issued from South Africa on Tuesday, he said: "My desire is to join all Zimbabweans in a new era, where corruption, incompetence, dereliction of duty and laziness, social and cultural decadence is not tolerated. In that new Zimbabwe, it is important for everyone to join hands so that we rebuild this nation to its full glory. This is not a job for ZANU-PF alone but for all people of Zimbabwe."
A portrait of Zimbabwe opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, raising his hand and addressing a crowd.
Opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai
It is not clear what this could mean for the opposition party, Movement for Democratic Change, led by Morgan Tsvangirai. 
ZANU-PF's difficult track record
Former Zimbabwe Finance Minister, and member of the opposition party MDC-T, Tendai Biti, spoke with DW about his concerns for his country's future. "He (Mugabe) did not do these atrocities on his own. There is still the machinery that he presided over. It was essentially a militarized state. The challenge is where do we move from here?”
But Zimbabwe expert James Hamill from the University of Leicester remains skeptical about there being any real change in Zimbabwe.
"I think most people will judge Emerson Mnangagwa on his record, rather than on any of the rhetoric that has accompanied this coup d'etat. And Mnangagwa's record is not an encouraging one. He has been with Mugabe every step of the way over the last 37 years during the misrule and dysfunctional governance," he said.
Any appearance of opening up a role for the opposition would be merely a token gesture – based on the previous modus operandi of ZANU-PF, Hamill believes.
"It will be largely a device to retain power, whilst appearing to broaden its base. The trick will be bringing other parties in, but without ceding any significant control," he said.
A tank and soldiers have stopped cars on a street in Harare, Zimbabwe.
The military took over and put Mugabe under house arrest, but claimed it was not a 'coup'
Biti disagrees with this. "If the opposition is not involved, then it is an illegitimate government born out of a coup — and we'll fight it. We are good at that."
It has also been pointed out that, while the army is enjoying a surge in popularity after liberating the country from a dictator, any real change in Zimbabwe would necessarily have to involve a restructuring of the military's role.
"The military has also been acting, for many decades, as effectively the armed wing of ZANU-PF. It is not a neutral state body. It does not see its role as the custodian of the constitution. It is interwoven with ZANU-PF. And to move towards a genuine democracy that would somehow have to be unpicked," Hamill said.
The concern is that, with the military's involvement in wide-reaching and corrupt patronage networks, it is unlikely to have any interest in real institutional reform.
A glimmer of hope?
Having run the country into the ground, and stolen billions of dollars, Mugabe's economic disaster may turn out to be Zimbabwe's saving grace. With ZANU-PF now facing the task of having to rebuild the economy, the international community may be able to use financial carrots to push for real democratic change.
A graph comparing the GDP of Zimbabwe, Ghana and Kenya.
Mugabe oversaw Zimbabwe's economic ruin
"Mnangagwa, and the government he heads, are in a deep financial crisism," Hamill told DW.
He believes that if the international community were to insist on wide-ranging structural reform such as an independent electoral commission, the right to freely campaign, for political parties to have equal access to the media and for a neutral judiciary and security force, then there could be a real chance for Zimbabwe.
For Tendai Biti, this must start at a regional level. "The South African Development Community (SADC) has been asleep. Jacob Zuma and the new Angolan president have been asleep. They have to provide leadership. But they are asleep, waiting for another coup. Shame on them," he told DW.πηγη

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