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Chinese Special Forces seemingly stationed in Zimbabwe.
China is reportedly planning to station an elite special force from it's army in Zimbabwe, as Beijing moves to crystalize military cooperation with Harare, amid growing fears that the Asian powerhouse has formally approved plans to commence construction of an underground military base in the country, Spotlight Zimbabwe reported echoed by Itai Mushekwe/Mary-Kate Kahari on Bulawayo 24 News.
Chinese special forces (Picture source: en.people.cn)
The Telescope News first broke the story about China's planned secret state of the art underground base in the diamond-rich Marange fields in eastern Zimbabwe in December 2014, which was going to be equipped with advanced radar systems, an operational control tower and other world-class aviation technology facilities. The disclosures resulted in a United States panel on Africa interrogating the matter during a hearing on Zimbabwe by the Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights and International Organizations in 2015, thus raising alarm in Washington which was worried about China's growing influence in Africa.
California Congresswoman, Karen Bass, went on to seek clarification on the issue from then U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, Dr Shannon Smith, who had returned from a visit in Harare, but she was not provided with a direct answer.
The new mystery of Chinese special force stationed in Zimbabwe comes barely a year later when Spotlight Zimbabwe reported that China has reportedly deployed and installed a dreaded new generation of surface-to-air missiles (SAM) in the country. Experts say the SAM technology is similar to the one which Beijing deployed to the South China Sea on Woody Island, comprising of her latest HQ-9 missiles. It is thought that the Chinese special force is primarily concerned with protecting China's new military base in Zimbabwe, her huge diamond claims and gold mines across the country, where some of the SAM technology is believed to be installed.
According to a former minister with a security-related portfolio in one of ex-leader President Robert Mugabe's administrations, whose story has been corroborated by Asian diplomatic sources in South Africa, China has been working on sending her special force to Zimbabwe since 2014 "to offer technical assistance and support" to the Zimbabwe National Army (ZNA), and an agreement was finally reached the following year between the two countries through their defence ministries and army leadership, but Mugabe called it off on the eleventh hour, after accusing the Chinese of corruption, and the plunder of diamonds in Marange.
Mugabe, it is also now coming to light, had become suspicion of his then deputy, President Emmerson Mnangagwa's relationship with China, and that he was courting their support to replace him under the guise of war games and military exchanges with the red army: "They (China) have been itching to set a permanent military presence in this country, to protect their vast economic interests here but Mugabe was resisting the overtures," said the former cabinet minister. "Although the cover argument was around offering technical assistance and support to our armed forces, it later became clear that Mnangagwa had his own agreement and arrangements with China. This infuriated Mugabe, and it was also during the same period Mnangagwa had first travelled to China as vice president, holding high level meetings which his boss had not fully been briefed on. The incident increased Mugabe's political mistrust for Mnangagwa, whom he suspected was presenting himself to President Xi Jinping as the best political actor to secure China's investments in Zimbabwe after he steps down. The rest is history. Mnangagwa has since invited China back to mine diamonds in Marange, and their special force has received the green light from vice president Rtd General, Constatino Chiwenga, to find a station in the country. Now there is every reason to believe that Mugabe's November 2017 ouster could have been a result of China viewing his stay in power as a threat to their economic investments, especially after having stripped them of diamond mining rights."
The Communist Party of China invited Mnangagwa to visit Beijing from July 6 to 10 2015. During this stay, he met business leaders and senior ruling party and government officials including former Chinese Vice-President Li Yuanchao.
Zimbabwe is a hotbed of Chinese investments topping billions of dollars across key economic sectors of mining, agriculture, and telecommunications. Chinese businessmen are involved in farming formerly white-owned commercial farms, and Beijing has won a contract to construct the country's new capital city in Mount Hampden, including a new parliament to be built at a cost of US$46million.
Diplomatic sources said VP Chiwenga was allegedly at the heart of consenting to China bringing in their elite force to set camp in Zimbabwe. "The main protagonist is your vice president," said one of the envoys based in Pretoria. "VP Chiwenga has remained in regular contact with top officials from the People's Liberation Army. He met with Chinese defence minister in 2015, when he was the Zimbabwe Defence Forces Commander, where stronger cooperation was forged and an agreement signed to have the special force come to Zimbabwe. It also blends well with his ambitions to take over power, when his time comes. The army unit headed for Zimbabwe comes from China's special ground force called PLASF (People's Liberation Army Special Operations Forces)."
A video showing Chinese soldiers singing a native Shona war cry song alongside their Zimbabwean counterparts in a bus at an unknown location went viral on social media last year, igniting speculation of Chinese military assimilation into the Zimbabwe army. Army public relations staffers on 4 April could neither confirm nor deny that China was about to deploy a special force in the country, by Itai Mushekwe/Mary-Kate Kahari concludes on Bulawayo 24 News.