Succession Concerns: Mugabe reshuffles Cabinet, Nephew gets Empowerment

Cabinet reshuffles are nothing new, President Jacob Zuma uses this card in South Africa generally when something goes wrong, while Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe has just initiated his third one this year. The problem is not so much in the reshuffle but rather those changing the cards. Ultimately it’s like a game of chess and the pawns are just draw cards that distract from those playing the game. So to expect anything different would scream madness. Mugabe is however playing his cards close to his heart as one of his new recruits is his nephew, who’s driving yet more empowerment. – Stuart Lowman

Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe (L) gestures as South Africa's President Jacob Zuma looks on at the end of a press briefing at the Union building in Pretoria, April 8, 2015. Mugabe is on a two-day state visit to South Africa. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe (L) gestures as South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma looks on at the end of a press briefing at the Union building in Pretoria, April 8, 2015. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko

HARARE, Sept 11 (Reuters) – Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe announced his third cabinet reshuffle in less than a year on Friday, appointing his nephew as minister in charge of a government push to give blacks greater control of the economy.

Patrick Zhuwawo takes over as Minister of Youth, Indigenisation and Economic Empowerment in place of Christopher Mushohwe, who assumes the information portfolio.

Zhuwawo becomes the third person to lead the empowerment ministry since Mugabe and his party won elections in 2013, heading up the drive to force foreign-owned firms, including mines, to sell at least 51 percent of their shares to locals.

Mugabe rarely reshuffles his cabinet, preferring to stick to close allies, especially those who fought alongside him during Zimbabwe’s 1970s independence war against white-minority rule.

Last December, the 91-year-old fired his deputy of 10 years, Joice Mujuru, and several ministers aligned to her in what political analysts said was meant to quell simmering tensions over his future successor.

However, Mujuru’s ejection has not ended tensions within the ruling ZANU-PF party over who will eventually take over from Mugabe, Zimbabwe’s only ruler since independence from Britain in 1980.

Friday’s cabinet changes saw Mugabe bringing in the ZANU-PF chief whip of 20 years, Joram Gumbo, to the transport ministry, replacing Obert Mpofu, who becomes investment minister.

Mugabe also named 10 new deputy ministers, some of them close allies of Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa, who is now seen as Mugabe’s most likely successor.

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