Zimbabwe crisis
Zimbabweans call for Mugabe's
resignation at rally
NEWS / AFRICA
ZIMBABWE CRISIS
Mugabe sacks pro-army Vice President
Emmerson Mnangagwa on November 6
Army seizes state TV and puts Mugabe
under house arrest on November 15
Mugabe appears in public on November
17, but no official statement
Thousands gather to demand Mugabe
resignation on November 18
READ MORE
Zimbabwe: What's
happening?
READ MORE
Zimbabwe war veterans
rally to demand Mugabe
step down
WATCH: Zimbabwe's
street starts discussing
life after Mugabe (1:41)
Zimbabwe Africa Robert Mugabe
Grace Mugabe
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Protesters gather calling for Zimbabwe President
Robert Mugabe to step down [Tendai Marima/Al
Jazeera]
Harare, Zimbabwe - More than 10,000
Zimbabweans are marching to demand
President Robert Mugabe 's resignation,
a rare show of public defiance.
Saturday's rally in Harare, the capital, is
backed by the army, which seized
power on Wednesday.
The mood at Zimbabwe Grounds was
celebratory.
The site is symbolic. In 1980, around
200,000 people gathered at Zimbabwe
Grounds to welcome Mugabe from exile
after the liberation war from white-
minority rule.
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Crowds there on Saturday cheered:
"Chiwenga, lead the war to remove
Mugabe", referring to General
Constantino Chiwenga, who had warned
of military intervention before the
takeover.
A demonstration
is also taking
place at City Hall
in Bulawayo, the
second city.
Florence Mguni, a 59-year-old who
went to train in Mozambique as a
liberation fighter at the age of 15,
travelled overnight from Bulawayo in
the hope of witnessing Mugabe's
departure.
She told Al Jazeera that as a war
veteran, she demands Mugabe's
immediate resignation because his
leadership has done little for her.
"We went to fight in the war, I was
taught how to hold a gun as a young
girl, but today Zimbabwe is free and I
am poor. I'm a widow and my children
aren't in school because I can't always
afford to pay their fees," she said.
Mobile networks
were jammed
because of the
large crowds as
demonstrators
raised banners
with slogans
such as: "Go, go, our general!", "Enough
is enough - Mugabe must go" and
"Leadership is not sexually transmitted"
- a reference to First Lady Grace
Mugabe, who is widely believed to be
eyeing the vice presidency.
Thousands turned out to join Saturday's rally,
which was called for by
the Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans
Association
backed by the army [Tendai Marima/Al Jazeera]
Some protesters hugged and cheered
soldiers, as helicopters circled above
the capital.
Tapiwa Magidi, a 32-year-old geologist,
said Mugabe should resign because the
93-year-old leader was not serving
young people.
"We are a lost generation. Most of the
young people in this country were born
after independence, but we are now
grown and we don't have much,"We can't get jobs, we
have to live at home with our parents
and we can't even afford to get
married."
Tapiwa Tavaziva, a 32-year-old financial
adviser who had left Zimbabwe for the
US, said: "I spent 12 years out of this
country because of Mugabe and the
situation in this country. He's been
responsible for so many things that
have happened to people in their
personal lives, he broken up so many
homes, family structures are broken
and we don't have what we used to
because he (Mugabe) loves power.
"He has to go."
'A show of people's force'
Zimbabwe has been in turmoil since
early Wednesday, when the armed
forces seized power and placed Mugabe
- who leads the Zanu-PF party, under
house arrest.
March organiser Chris Mutsvangwa,
head of the Zimbabwe National
Liberation War Veterans Association,
said the protest against the president is
not a Zanu-PF affair, but "a show of
people's force" against Mugabe's 37-
year rule.
William Gerald
Lumumba
Mutumanje -
popularly known
as Acie
Lumumba, an
activist who was
expelled as the
Zanu-PF youth
leader, said the rally was a "send-off"
for Mugabe as he encouraged people to
march.
Activist pastor Evan Mawarire
described the event as "a momentous
occasion" and an opportunity for a
"fresh start" to advance democratic
change.
Mawarire has previously faced charges
of undermining the president and
trying to overthrow an elected
government by calling on Zimbabweans
to protest against spiralling economic
and political problems.
Marches have also been called for in
parts of South Africa, the UK and the US
- countries that millions of
Zimbabweans migrated to in search of
safety and better living, as various
economic and political crises at home
have left more than 70 percent living
below the national poverty line.
Mugabe has 'lost control'
All 10 of ZANU-PF's provincial
structures have passed a motion of no-
confidence against Mugabe and called
on him to step down as the ruling
party's first secretary.
Zanu PF's 10 Provincial Coordinating
Committees (PCC) said the leader had
"lost control of the party and
government business due to
incapacitation stemming from his
advanced age".
The provincial branches' move was
carried by Zimbabwe's state
broadcaster, ZBC, which was seized by
the army as part of its takeover on
Wednesday.
If Mugabe fails to resign on Saturday,
the party says it will convene a special
committee meeting on Sunday in which
the Zanu-PF Central Committee will
consider the provincial resolutions to
recall Mugabe.
Newspaper billboards are seen in Harare on
Saturday [Philimon Bulawayo/Reuters]
The Zimbabwean president appeared in
public on Friday - the first time since
the army's takeover on Wednesday -
attending a university graduation
ceremony in Harare.
Zimbabwe's military has said it was
engaging in talks with Mugabe,
promising an outcome soon.
"[Mugabe] knows this not a game,"
independent parliamentarian.
As a legislator, he said he would start
the process to put forward a motion to
pass a vote of no confidence.
"If he refuses to leave we will start a
motion to pass a vote of no confidence
in his presidency when parliament sits
again on Tuesday."
Regional dignitaries from the Southern
African Development Community
(SADC) are expected to meet on Sunday
in an extraordinary session to discuss
the Zimbabwe situation in
neighbouring Botswana, where the
SADC headquarters is located.
While the region's leaders have been
silent on Mugabe's fate, Botswana's
President Ian Khama has openly called
for the elderly veteran to step down.
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