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Zimbabwe's Mugabe Says Deputy Planned to Unseat Him

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FILE - Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe addresses supporters outside ZANU-PF headquarters.
FILE - Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe addresses supporters outside ZANU-PF headquarters.

Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe has accused “a woman” in his party of a plot to unseat him and work with the opposition in a coalition government, state media reported on Wednesday, in comments seen as directed at his embattled deputy, Joice Mujuru.

Mujuru, a battle-hardened guerrilla nicknamed “Spill Blood,” has faced accusations from Mugabe's wife, Grace, and state-owned media of corruption and plotting to kill Mugabe in what analysts say is a smear campaign to end her immediate political career.

FILE - Zimbabwean Deputy President Joice Mujuru.
FILE - Zimbabwean Deputy President Joice Mujuru.

Mugabe, 90, has ruled the southern African country since independence from Britain in 1980 and accuses the West, especially London and Washington, of funding the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) to remove him from power.

Mugabe on Tuesday told a meeting of military commanders and veterans of Zimbabwe's 1970s liberation war that jostling for power in his ruling ZANU-PF had reached unprecedented levels.

“We are experiencing it for the first time in ZANU-PF, and for that matter it's a woman who is saying, ‘I want to take over that seat,’ ” Mugabe said in remarks carried by the government mouthpiece, The Herald.

“We know the discussions that have been done. 'Oh, we will link up with the MDC and America and Britain will pour lots of money.'

"You know, that's simplistic thinking,” Mugabe added, questioning whether Mujuru could handle the pressures of his job.

Denies plot accusation

Mujuru, who leads a ZANU-PF group that is viewed as moderate and pro-business, has denied plotting against Mugabe.

Mugabe was forced to form a unity government after disputed elections in 2008, but his party won a landslide in last year's vote, which the opposition said was fraudulent.

The veteran leader told the meeting he felt humiliated to work with the MDC, which he berated as stooges of the West.

He said Mujuru opposed holding elections last year, seeking to continue in the coalition government that is credited with ending a decade of economic collapse and hyperinflation.

ZANU-PF started its five-year congress, which meets once every five years, on Tuesday and Mugabe is under pressure from ZANU-PF, young people and women to drop Mujuru.

Mujuru did not attend Wednesday's ZANU-PF meeting, further confirming speculation that her political career is now on the rocks.

By Thursday, the party's central committee is expected to have endorsed proposed constitutional changes that would allow Mugabe to select his own deputy and the entire leadership of ZANU-PF.

First lady Grace Mugabe will likely be confirmed as leader of the party’s powerful women’s wing, putting her in position to eventually succeed her husband.

VOA's Sebastian Mhofu contributed to this story from Harare.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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