BBC News, Harare

The long convoy of the armor staff passing through the Harare neighborhood was concerned that the military coup began in Zimbabwe in Zimbabwe.
“What is happening in Zimbabwe?” One person posted on social media. Another person said, “There was a coup when it happened last.”
A government spokesman Nick Mangwana quickly made the public’s fear quickly, and the tank explained that “there was no need to worry” as part of the planned movement to test equipment in mid -February.
But the chatter and speculation continued, revealing a lot about the state of the country.
Ahead of everyday military training, President Emmerson Mcnangagwa has faced a harsh criticism of his leadership within the Zanu-PF Party for the first time since he became president in 2017.
This accusation aroused the lead -ups of the coup, which broke down his old leader, Robert Mugabe.
In 1980 he took power as a revolutionary hero who finished the white minority rules for decades. But when the war warriors of the Independence War in the 1970s withdrew their support for him, his death was foreseen.
He was also a war veteran and senior Zanu-PF member called Bested Geza, also known as “BOMBShell”, which began an oral offensive against Mnangagwa.
He was angry when a part of the party began to promote the law of the state so that the president could save the three semesters.
He often laid a rough lie at a press conference depicted and demanded repeatedly going or removing his face to the 82 -year -old president at a series of press conferences.
At a press conference, in a press conference on social media, nicknamed “Crocodile,” GEZA said, “We must apologize for bringing him to the office.”
“Every place [Mnangagwa] He had a taste of power, enlarged corruption, forgot people, and remembered only his family. “
“Mnangagwa also surrendered the power of his wife and children. We are sad to see history repeated. We can’t do so.”

Zanu -PF was angry by his “insufficient” remarks.
He wants the police to undermine the president’s authority and cause public violence on four charges, including theft.
MHLANGA Blessing, a reporter who first interviewed the bomb in November It was also arrested for delivering a message that caused violence..
Last year, the problem with Mnangagwa’s ambitions began to be brewed in Zanu-PF Rallies. The president is currently the second and last term to expire in 2028.
The slogan, “2030 he will still be a leader,” despite his restrictions on the president’s term to five years, he began to speak by his supporters.
They insisted that he had to stay in the office to complete his “Agenda 2030” development program.
Unanimously adopted at the Zanu-PF meeting in December, he did not explicitly speak of the third term, but he tried to expand the existing period of Mnangagwa by 2030.
Despite Mnangagwa’s recent guarantee, I tried to step down in three years, but influential Roman Catholics were involved.
In last week’s pastoral letter, Zimbabwe’s Catholic Bishops warned that the debate was truly important in 2030 -business closures, high unemployment, widespread corruption, and the costs of ordinary Zimbabwaxes.
A spokesman for President George Charamba expressed his disappointment of the clergy’s declaration, saying that this problem was “dead and buried.”
Nevertheless, Bombshell’s message seems to have landed. It was purified in the Zanu-PF, with the deportation of Geza and his allies.
But political analyst Takura Zhangazha said that the explosion is unlikely to have the crowds in his cause.

Nowadays, people are less interested in such political glasses, and he said, unlike Mugabe’s downfall when the Zimbabwegers, including opposition supporters, thanked them to a large number of soldiers and war veterans to support the coup.
“Even attempts to talk about corruption and workers’ trouble are not people in trouble, organizing, or mobilizing. There is no more capacity or interest,” the BBC says.
“You can promise that you can’t repeat 2017 before 2028,” he said. “The Zimbabwegers felt that they were used to ouster Mugabe and would not come back from the streets for the interior battle of Zanu-PF.
This is also because there is a division in the political environment, including weak opposing.
Zhangazha said that even war veterans would not represent the united front.
GEZA previously expressed its previous support in the succession debate against Vice President Constantine Chiwenga, a former 68 -year -old former army president, but other war veterans are known to support the 2030 agenda.
Political analysts Alexander Rusero says it’s important to understand the influential role of war veterans in Zimbabwe and Zanu-PF.
“Because they see themselves as a caregiver, you don’t want to get rid of their feelings,” the BBC says.
But he believes that current dissatisfaction, such as Bombshell, is more stimulated by self than the public interest.
“They feel as if they were excluded from the cake,” the BBC says.
Zhangazha agrees that people who are loyal within the ruling party are likely to benefit from those such as bidding, government contracts, housing, land and fertilizers and seeds.
Jameson Timba, the leader of major opposition party, CCC (Citizens Coalition for Change) (CCC), all summarizes the political state of Zimbabwe.
“You have a country where the economic situation is getting worse. People can’t eat more than once a day,” the BBC said.
“We literally have a major supermarket chain that is closed,” he said.
Zhangazha recently seemed to be much terrible for predictions on the economy that was broken thanks to the recent fall of USAID stops.

TIMBA still recovers from a five -month prison and sits most of the imprison on the concrete floor and shares the cells with the cells with 80 people.
He was arrested in June with more than 70 others and hosted a “illegal meeting” when he held a barbecue to mark the international day of African children in his private residence.
He told the BBC that his treatment and his fellow prisoners’ treatment reflected how opposition politics was being offensive.
“The state is facing a challenge. All leaders or governments with his salt value will actually demand initial elections, and they still determine and decide if they are obliged for people,” he said.
“Opposing is essentially a joke [when] You are talking about extending the office. “
But there is little possibility of initial voting.
At this time, the bomb is hiding and the election has passed for a few years, but the succession debate will continue to cook.
For more information about the BBC’s Zimbabwe:
