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Regional powers to hold Lesotho crisis meeting

– Dysfunctional coalition –

The military, led by Lieutenant General Kamoli, is seen as broadly supportive of the Lesotho Congress for Democracy (LCD) party, which has been in an ever-more dysfunctional coalition government with Prime Minister Thabane since 2012.

The party’s leader, Deputy Prime Minister Mothetjoa Metsing, has denied involvement in the coup.

He also flew to South Africa for talks with President Jacob Zuma on Sunday, saying that a minister from his party, Motloheloa Phooko, was now in charge of the government according to the constitution.

“There is no coup in Lesotho,” he insisted.

But as life returned to Lesotho’s streets, it was not clear who was in charge of this beautiful but poor kingdom of two million people.

The police were struggling to regroup, with the police headquarters still abandoned and most officers deciding to remain in hiding.

The military has been confined to barracks, with some junior soldiers telling AFP they are not sure whose command to follow.

Amid the political turmoil, Maseru’s residents stocked up on food and basic necessities.

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“People are worried what will happen, because ‘no work, no pay’,” said fruit and vegetable vendor Kamele Pakisi. “There is no stability.”

Worshippers filled the city’s cathedral as normal, but many feared for what lies ahead, convinced this spasm of political violence was not yet over.

There is concern that a mass anti-government demonstration planned for Monday could bring a new chapter of violence.

“We are not afraid of today, we are just afraid of tomorrow,” said Mphasa Chonela.

The police have called for the march not to go ahead, but critics question whether that is an attempt to protect the prime minister from criticism.

Meanwhile the international community, and Lesotho’s neighbours, are trying to fashion a brokered peace.

The United States voiced concern at the security clashes and called for “peaceful dialogue” in the country.

Lesotho has suffered a series of coups since independence in 1966, and the political temperature in the country has been rising rapidly in recent months.

The prime minister suspended parliament in June, forcing divisions in the ruling coalition to the fore.

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In 1998 South Africa launched an ill-fated invasion of Lesotho when the “kingdom in the sky” was in the midst of another political crisis, reducing the capital to rubble.

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