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SADC mediated talks between ZANU (PF) and MDC - Index of articles
Cautious
optimism over results of Zimbabwe crisis resolution talks
Ndimyake Mwakalyelye, Voice of America (VOA)
October 26, 2007
http://www.voanews.com/english/Africa/Zimbabwe/2007-10-26-voa40.cfm
With the end-October
deadline set by South African President Thabo Mbeki for the conclusion
of crisis resolution talks between Zimbabwe's ruling and opposition
parties at hand, observers are voicing optimism and skepticism as
to the outcome.
Taken at face value,
the fruits of the South African mediated negotiations seem to be
substantial: a bipartisan compromise in parliament on a constitutional
amendment that at first seemed drafted to maximize the 2008 election
chances of President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF party; the draft of
a fully overhauled constitution; tentative talks on the political
violence the opposition alleges on the part of the ruling party;
and tentative commitments by ZANU-PF to repeal certain repressive
laws.
Besides tossing
out the Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act, used by the government
to intimidate and in some cases silence media outlets, and the Public
Order and Security Act, an all-purpose measure for repressing
political opposition, the ruling party is also talking about amending
electoral laws in time for the presidential, general and local elections
that are tentatively slated for March of next year.
The fruits of the Pretoria
discussions mediated by Mr. Mbeki under the aegis of the Southern
African Development Community are still heavily overshadowed by
charges that the government and ruling party, particularly in provincial
cities and rural areas that are long-time ZANU-PF fiefs, continue
to use violence as a political tool.
Encouragingly, Home Affairs
Minister Kembo Mohadi this week met with a delegation from the Movement
for Democratic Change faction led by Morgan Tsvangirai, which had
held a news conference earlier in the week to allege that MDC supporters
were still being beaten and in some cases killed for belonging to
the opposition.
Mohadi's promise to investigate
the alleged violence was seen by some as a gesture of good faith,
but by the more cynical as a public relations move aimed at Mbeki
and his Southern African peers leaders who want to see the crisis
resolved before it causes further damage to the region as well as
suffering for Zimbabweans.
Now the question in many
minds is whether the agreements coming out of the Pretoria talks
will translate into a better and more peaceful life for those Zimbabweans.
To examine these issues,
VOA turned to Advocacy Coordinator Abel Chikomo of the Media Monitoring
Project of Zimbabwe, and Senior Researcher Chris Maroleng of the
Institute for Security Studies in South Africa.
Maroleng told reporter
Ndimyake Mwakalyelye of VOA's Studio 7 for Zimbabwe that developments
led him to believe things were looking up for Zimbabwe.
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