Mugabe, 90, was
elected chairman of the African Union and is set to celebrate his 91st birthday
on 21 February (AP)
|
Heads have started rolling as the fallout over
President Robert Mugabe’s embarrassing fall at Harare International Airport on
Wednesday begins.
Sources said up to 27
members of the presidential security and advance team who seemed immobilized as
Mugabe tripped and tumbled after addressing hundreds of Zanu PF supporters who
had been bussed to welcome him on his return from the African Union summit,
have been suspended, Zimbabwe's Standard reports.
According to the sources,
the guards were handed their suspension letters on Friday.
Officials at Munhumutapa
government building said an investigation was launched on the night that Mugabe
fell at the airport on his return from Ethiopia where he had just taken charge
as the new chairperson of the African Union.
But Presidential
spokesperson George Charamba yesterday dismissed the reports of a shakeup in
President Mugabe’s security team as a fallacy.
“There is only one hand
that shakes up and that hand has not shaken up [anything]. What is there to
shake up? The last time you heard about a shakeup it was from us and not from
media reports,” Charamba said.
But sources insisted a
shakeup had indeed taken place and there were indications that some officials
could be fired.
At the State House on
Friday afternoon where President Mugabe was meeting newly-elected Zambian
leader Edgar Lungu, new faces could be seen on his security team.
After the meeting that
took almost five hours, Mugabe escorted Lungu outside the State House with both
hands in his pockets. The two did not address journalists who had gathered.
When Lungu was departing
in his motorcade, Mugabe stood for a few minutes outside before walking back
into his office at State House.
Another official said
although some people were taking the fall lightly, it was a serious matter that
had to be dealt with thoroughly.
“There are many
departments that are being investigated, from Air Zimbabwe, the advance team
and the security. I doubt if some of them will come back,” said the official
close to the developments.
“The issue here is
simple. The security team was caught napping.
They were taking things
for granted and failed to adhere to basics. It is protocol that the immediate
proximity is, at most, three metres from the President. These are the bullet
takers and in cases where he falls they are supposed to hold him either by the
arm or by the shoulder and should never take their eyes off him.”
The official added: “He
went on to touch the ground on all fours. That should never happen.
What if someone pulled a gun? The immediate proximity team should have helped
him up because those are the people that are allowed to touch him before anyone
else.”
Information gathered
revealed that the immediate proximity team was also there to prevent members of
the public getting dangerously close to the President as happened when British
gay rights activist Peter Thatchell attempted a citizen’s arrest on Mugabe in
1999.
He said the security
failed to follow Rule Number 3 of their training manual which outlined the
distance they should keep from the President.
The official, however said
most of the suspensions could just be decoys by the secret service chiefs who
wanted to appear as if they were doing something about the embarrassing
incident.
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