Robert Mugabe finally resign
Robert Mugabe resigns as
Zimbabwe's president
NEWS / ZIMBABWE
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Robert Mugabe led Zimbabwe for 37 years [File:
Charles Platiau/Reuters]
Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe
has submitted his resignation after
nearly four decades as the country's
leader.
Mugabe defied demands to step down
for almost a week after a military
takeover and expulsion from his own
ruling ZANU-PF party but stepped down
on Tuesday, hours after parliament
started an impeachment process.
Cheers broke out in the parliament
after speaker Jacob Mudenda read out
Mugabe's resignation letter.
"I Robert Gabriel Mugabe in terms of
section 96 of the constitution of
Zimbabwe hereby formally tender my
resignation ... with immediate effect,"
said Mudenda, reading the letter.
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Harare residents celebrate after Mugabe's
resignation [Mike Hutchings/Reuters]
The news also sparked scenes of
jubilation in the capital, Harare, as
large crowds cheered, danced and sang
to celebrate Mugabe's departure.
"People are
coming out onto
the streets, they
are calling this
day
Independence
Day," Al Jazeera's Haru Mutasa,
reporting from Harare, said.
"It's getting chaotic," she added. "Some
people still can't believe this has
happened. People say they are really
excited and hoping for a better future."
At Harare's Rainbow Towers, crowds
cheered as a picture of Mugabe - hung
in most public business premises - was
taken down.
Celebrations also erupted in central
Johannesburg, in neighbouring South
Africa, as Zimbabweans there also took
to the streets to cheer on the news.
Mugabe's resignation brought an end to
the impeachment process initiated by
ZANU-PF after its Central Committee
voted to dismiss him as party leader.
The letter read at parliament did not
specify who will succeed Mugabe. The
most likely successor is ex-Vice
President Emmerson Mnangagwa,
whose sacking on November 6 triggered
the turmoil.
Mudenda, the speaker, said parliament
would now ensure the "proper legal
processes are put in
place so that the country can proceed
forward" and elect a new president.
New era
Mugabe, 93, led Zimbabwe's fight for
independence in the 1970s.
He came to power in 1980 and his 37-
year rule was criticised for repression
of dissent, election rigging, and for
causing the country's economic
collapse.
"Any person who is going to rule
Zimbabwe now will have learned a
lesson and will not repeat the same
things," Anthony Mutambirwa, a Harare
resident, told Al Jazeera after news of
Mugabe's resignation spread.
Mugabe's resignation letter capped the
end of a historic week which saw the
military seizing power and tens of
thousands of people taking to the
streets to demand he stepped down.
Zimbabweans celebrate outside the parliament
building in Harare [Ben Curtis/The Associated
Press]
The surprise military takeover on
November 15 was triggered by
Mugabe's decision to sack, who had
been First Lady Grace Mugabe's main
opponent to succeed the veteran leader.
In a rare sign of
solidarity
between the
people and the
army, which has
often been a
pillar of support
for Mugabe's
near 40-year
rule, tens of thousands of Zimbabweans
on Saturday took to the streets to
express support for the military's
operation.
"Over the years, the army has been
accused of being implicit with Mugabe,"
said Al Jazeera's Mutasa.
"People wanted Mugabe to go, so the
only way to do this was to work with
the military."
Victor Chifodya, a former Harare
councillor, said he was "overjoyed at
the news".
"Mugabe was a very divisive man but
now people from all political parties
have come together to make him
resign," he told Al Jazeera.
"I'm so glad - now we can start a new
Zimbabwe," added Chifodya.
With reporting from Tendai Marima in
Harare. Follow her on Twitter: @i_amten
Soldiers and civilias pose for pictures outside
the ZANU-PF headquarters [Tendai Marima/Al
Jazeera] [Al Jazeera]
Victor Chifodya, with his friend Justin
Mwanambu, dance in celebration [Tendai
Marima/Al Jazeera]
Cheering crowds outside the Rainbow Towers
hotel in Harare Tendai Marima/Al Jazeera
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