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SADC mediated talks between ZANU (PF) and MDC - Index of articles
Tsvangirai
threatens to exit Zimbabwe crisis talks if violence continues
Blessing Zulu, Voice of America (VOA)
October 15, 2007
http://www.voanews.com/english/Africa/Zimbabwe/2007-10-15-voa39.cfm
Zimbabwe opposition
leader Morgan Tsvangirai said Monday that his faction of the Movement
for Democratic Change will quit South African-mediated crisis talks
unless a stop is put to violence and intimidation accuses the ruling
party of carrying out.
Tsvangirai did
not say whether this would also mean a boycott of the elections
due for early 2008. But he has previously said that his faction's
participation in those elections depends on whether they shape up
to be free and fair. Earlier elections, like the 2002 presidential
election, have been marred by violence mainly against the opposition.
Tsvangirai's
statement differed significantly from remarks attributed to the
secretary general of his faction, Tendai Biti, who was quoted by
Web news agency ZimOnline as saying the MDC would stay with
the negotiating process despite rising violence and intimidation
of opposition members, "pursuing it to its logical conclusion."
Biti is an opposition
negotiator in the talks mediated by South African President Thabo
Mbeki, with Welshman Ncube, secretary of the rival MDC faction
headed by Arthur Mutambara. Ncube could not be reached for comment
on Tsvangirai's ultimatum.
In a statement
Monday, Tsvangirai faction spokesman Nelson Chamisa said the ruling
party acted in bad faith because it has continued to "hound
our supporters, brutally assaulting and attacking them against the
spirit of the dialogue process." Since the negotiations began,
police have barred 103 Tsvangirai faction rallies, he said.
In an interview,
Tsvangirai told reporter Blessing Zulu of VOA's Studio 7 for Zimbabwe
that his party is committed to the talks - but added that
there are rising doubts as to whether the ruling party is committed
to the Pretoria-mediated negotiations.
Tsvangirai spoke
from Philadelphia, a stop on a North American trip during which
he has been meeting with opposition supporters in the US and Canada.
Meanwhile, Harare
police summoned Paul Madzore, member of parliament for the Glen
View section of Harare and the Tsvangirai faction's Harare Province
organizing secretary, and his brother Solomon, the faction's youth
secretary, for questioning.
Madzore said
police and intelligence officers summoned him and his brother to
Harare Central Police station where it was alleged that speakers
at a rally the faction held on Sunday in Glen Norah, Harare, had
preached hate and insulted police officers.
He said police
objected to what they said were calls by speakers for those present
to note the names of police involved in human rights abuses for
future prosecution.
The MDC faction
says this is a ploy by police to intimidate activists and ban rallies.
Madzore told
reporter Zulu that he and his brother Solomon were moved from one
police station to another and warned against "verbally attacking
the police."
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