Robert Mugabe's party plans to impeach him today

Decision after Mugabe misses his deadline to resign.

Update: 2017-11-20 19:31 GMT
University of Zimbabwe's students take part in a demonstration on Monday in Harare to demand the withdrawal of Grace Mugabe's doctorate and refused to sit their exams as pressure builds on Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe to resign.

Zimbabwe’s ruling ZANU-PF party will launch the parliamentary process on Tuesday for impeaching President Robert Mugabe, a government lawmaker has said. The decision on Monday came after Mugabe missed a deadline to resign given to him by his party over the weekend.

Once a simple majority of parliamentarians vote for impeachment, an investigative committee is formed by lawmakers, who report back to both houses of parliament. Each house must then vote by a two-thirds majority for him to be stripped of office. “We are expecting the motion to be over (on Tuesday),” ZANU- PF lawmaker Paul Mangwana said, referring to the initial procedure to commence impeachment proceedings.

He added that ZANU-PF had approached the main opposition Movement for Democratic Change party to seek their cooperation to pass the necessary parliamentary votes. In a televised address late on Sunday, the 93-year-old veteran leader defied expectations he would quit, pitching the country into a second week of political crisis. The speech provoked anger and disbelief among many Zimbabweans, fuelling concerns that Mugabe could face a violent backlash.

Meanwhile, Robert Mugabe has “lost the support of the people and of his party”, Britain said on Monday after the Zimbabwean president insisted he still holds power despite a military takeover and demands to quit. “As Sunday’s events showed, we don’t yet know how developments in Zimbabwe are going to play out,” Prime Minister Theresa May’s official spokesman said.

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