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Zimbabwe: Army chief accused of 'treasonable conduct' | Zimbabwe: Army chief accused of 'treasonable conduct' |
(35 minutes later) | |
Zimbabwe's ruling party has accused the country's army chief of "treasonable conduct" after he warned of a possible military intervention in politics. | Zimbabwe's ruling party has accused the country's army chief of "treasonable conduct" after he warned of a possible military intervention in politics. |
General Constantino Chiwenga had challenged President Robert Mugabe after he sacked the vice-president. | |
Gen Chiwenga said the army was prepared to act to end purges within Mr Mugabe's Zanu-PF party. | |
The party said the general's comments were "calculated to disturb national peace... [and] incite insurrection". | |
In a statement, the party said it would never succumb to military threats, and that it "reaffirms the primacy of politics over the gun". | |
Mr Mugabe sacked Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa last week, amid a row over the 93-year-old president's successor. | |
Earlier, BBC correspondents in the capital, Harare, reported that a few armoured vehicles had been seen on a main public road outside the city having left one of the country's main military barracks, Inkomo. | |
It is not clear where they were heading but they were not seen on the streets of Harare. One of the vehicles had broken down on the side of the road. | |
Gen Chiwenga's warning of possible military intervention came on Monday at a news conference at the army's headquarters. | |
He said the "purging" within Zanu-PF was "clearly targeting members of the party with a liberation background", referring to the country's struggle for independence. | |
"We must remind those behind the current treacherous shenanigans that when it comes to matters of protecting our revolution, the military will not hesitate to step in," he said. | |
Mr Mnangagwa is one such veteran of the 1970s war which led to independence. | |
Gen Chiwenga gave his address surrounded by 90 senior army officers. | |
But the leader of Zanu-PF's youth wing, Kudzai Chipanga, said the general did not have the full support of the entire military. | |
"We will not sit and fold hands while threats are made against a legitimately-elected government," he warned. | |
The youth wing supports President Mugabe's wife, Grace, as his successor - something which the former vice president had opposed. | |
Mr Mnangagwa had told Mr Mugabe that Zanu-PF is "not personal property for you and your wife to do as you please" before he was forced into exile. |