Kasukuwere to run for Zimbabwe president ‘due to popular demand’


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He and Moyo were the leaders of the G40 faction in ZANU-PF, which was fronted by Grace Mugabe. Two months before the coup, Mugabe publicly challenged Kasukuwere to drop his leadership ambitions.

He told a rally at the Chipadze Stadium in Bindura in September 2017: “It [G40] was started by Kasukuwere after the election of Barack Obama as the American president. Obama was in his 40s and Kasukuwere said we also want a leader in his 40s, and they called themselves G40.

“But now Obama is gone, that should end. We have a history and processes to follow.”

ZANU-PF commissar Victor Matematanda said this week that Kasukuwere was “all foam and no beer”.

But in an interview last week with the state-controlled Chronicle newspaper, he claimed Kasukuwere and his team had held a series of meetings to discuss how they could end Mnangagwa’s leadership.

The ruling party’s spokesperson, Simon Khaya, appeared to take the campaign backing Kasukuwere more seriously, describing it as a threat to national security.

Professor Philani Moyo, director of the Institute for Social and Economic Research at the University of Fort Hare in South Africa, said it was understandable that voters wanted a fresh start that did not involve ZANU-PF or the opposition MDC Alliance, but Kasukuwere was not the man to provide it.

“Had his faction in ZANU-PF won the internal power struggle, he would have been one of those to continue with Mugabe’s bad legacy,” he said.

“Now that he’s in the cold he has an affinity for power again, so the only way for him and his allies is to try to charm the masses. But that won’t work.”

ZANU-PF sources admitted fissures in the party had at times left Mnangagwa at odds with Vice-President Constantino Chiwenga, who is related to Kasukuwere. But a leadership challenge would unite them.

“The President and his deputy are brought together by a brotherhood. They might rub each other the wrong way from time to time but power is their bond,” said one source.

“If there’s a threat … they will come together like they did against Mugabe.”

The MDC Alliance said it had never had a “working” relationship with Kasukuwere.- Sunday Times

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Charles Rukuni
The Insider is a political and business bulletin about Zimbabwe, edited by Charles Rukuni. Founded in 1990, it was a printed 12-page subscription only newsletter until 2003 when Zimbabwe's hyper-inflation made it impossible to continue printing.

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