Joice Mujuru.
We are 'People First'," Mujuru told AFP by telephone, confirming the name of her new party but giving no further details."We don't lead the people, but people lead themselves."
Mujuru,
the widow of Zimbabwe's first post-independence army general, was fired
from the government and the ruling ZANU-PF party in December 2014.
Her
ousting came after a campaign by Mugabe's wife Grace denigrating Mujuru
and accusing her of corruption, fomenting party division and plotting
to topple Mugabe.
Many of her allies and perceived sympathisers met a similar fate in a party purge.
Mujuru,
60, who was replaced as vice president by long-time Mugabe ally
Emmerson Mnangagwa, denied all accusations of disloyalty.
She was a guerrilla fighter during Zimbabwe's 1970s liberation war before rising to become deputy leader in 2004.
A
former ZANU-PF stalwart, she earlier served in several cabinet posts
under Mugabe and was seen for many years as his favoured choice of
successor.
Her husband, Solomon Mujuru, died in a mysterious house fire in 2011.
Mujuru
signalled her intention to form a political party last year by
releasing a manifesto that opposed Mugabe's key policies including
indigenisation laws that compel foreign firms to cede majority stakes to
locals.
ZANU-PF has been riven by factional fights over Mugabe's succession although party figures have sought to downplay any splits.
Mnangagwa is now viewed as the likely next president, with Grace Mugabe, 50, also a possible candidate.
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