• Home
  • About

#Shutdown Zim2016

Aggregated news, videos, opinion and more

  • News Articles
  • NGO Statements
  • Video & Audio
  • People Speak
  • Opinion / Analysis
  • Get Involved
You are here: Home / Get Involved / AFP / Coup talk as Zimbabwe crumbles

Coup talk as Zimbabwe crumbles

July 11, 2016

Source: AFP

Original article URL

Nothing short of major political and economic reforms will halt the deepening of the crisis in Zimbabwe, say commentators.

“There is no capacity to address the crisis,” said Ibbo Mandaza, head of think-tank Southern Africa Political and Economic Series.

“It will continue like this until the end comes,” he said at the weekend.

A coup or some other form of political intervention was becoming “increasingly likely”, said Robert Besseling, head of EXX Africa risk intelligence agency.

“Security forces have reacted heavy-handedly to protests, including beating and arbitrarily detaining activists,” said Besseling.

After a week of turmoil, with protests in Harare and Bulawayo, it seems that opposition to President Robert Mugabe is building towards boiling point.

Public shows of dissent have been rare during Mugabe’s almost 30-year-long rule but have erupted frequently in recent months as the battered economy has ground to a virtual halt.

Banks have run short of cash, government workers’ salaries have been delayed and many basic imports have been banned at a time when the country is enduring a severe drought that has left millions hungry.

With the 92-year-old president’s health increasingly uncertain and the ruling Zanu-PF party riven by a succession battle, Zimbabwe could be heading for a long-awaited new chapter.

“People are beginning to ask who is the source of their problems. The anger is mounting,” said Rushweat Mukundu, a political analyst with the Zimbabwe Democracy Institute, in Harare.

“The spontaneous acts we’re seeing now might turn into mass uprisings.”

The riots revealed the long-bubbling frustration normally kept under strict control by Mugabe’s ruthless security forces in a country in which 90% of the population is not in formal employment.

“Civil servants who were loyal to the government because they were getting salaries or using state infrastructure to engage in petty corruption are now among the discontented,” said Mukundu.

Zimbabwe, which abandoned its own currency in favour of the US dollar in 2009 to end hyperinflation, spends more than 80% of its revenue on state workers’ wages and is rated among the most corrupt nations worldwide.

Source: AFP

Filed Under: AFP, News Articles Tagged With: economy

Search

Inspiring Quotations

"The determined efforts, and spirited focus by Zimbabweans from all paths and circles of life against authoritarianism as epitomised by #Tajamuka, #ThisFlag, churches, political parties, individuals etc just transmits a 'zing' of confidence, hope and dawn of a new dispensation from my skull nerves to my balls right to the tip of my foot. Authoritarianism and the despotic dispensation are under electrocution."
- Adolf, Kubatana subscriber in reply to our question asking what keeps people inspired during these tough times
" It was good and permissible when the flag since 1980 was carried by every Harry and Tom to Rufaro Stadium or National Sports Stadium to support Zimbabwe's national team the Warriors. It is good and permissible when the flag is carried about by women and children flocking to the airport to routinely receive the President from his many foreign travels. It is good and permissible if the flag is mutilated and redesigned on the party regalia of the country's self-acclaimed LIFE RULING SINGLE PARTY. It is now bad and not permissible when it is carried by those who demand that the sacrifices of those who lost their lives and years in the liberation struggle be respected by those in power through fighting corruption; practising good governance; public accountability by bringing to book those who are responsible for the missing $15 billion diamond revenues; fiscal austerity by cutting down on the many annual trips the President embarks on; by cutting on extravagance through avoiding the purchase of expensive Range Rovers when the govt is very broke to the point of asking for financial help from those it says are destabilising the economy and country."
- Zvakwana Taneta
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
Email: info [at] kubatana [dot] net
WhatsApp: +263 772 452201
Twitter feed is not available at the moment.

Follow

@263Chat // @ali_naka // @all africa // @BBCAfrica // @ConcernedZimCit// @crisiscoalition // @DavidColtart // @DougColtart // @wamagaisa // @dewamavhinga// @fuzzy_goo // @guardian // @hararenews // @HealZim // @joeblackzw // @KalabashMedia // @KudakwasheChits// @LanceGuma // @lsmakani // @mailandguardian // @MurunguMutema // @NewsDayZimbabwe // @PastorEvanLive // @ZiFMStereo // @ZLHRLawyers

If you’re not Outraged, you’re not paying Attention