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Mbeki
flies into eye of Zim storm
Peter
Fabricius, Leila Samodien, The Cape Argus (SA)
May 09, 2008
http://www.zwnews.com/issuefull.cfm?ArticleID=18740
President Thabo Mbeki
flies into Zimbabwe today to hold talks with political leaders amid
the deepening political crisis in that country, just as the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) leadership conceded that the
party will not support a presidential run-off election. Foreign
Affairs spokesman Ronnie Mamoepa said yesterday: "Mbeki will
meet with the country's political leadership in the context of his
Southern African Development Community (SADC)-mandated facilitation
process. "In Zimbabwe, he is going to meet the political leadership
of that country . . . all the political leaders in that country,"
he said. South African officials are not disclosing the agenda of
Mbeki's meetings today but clearly he will be looking for answers
from President Robert Mugabe to the many questions being raised
about growing political violence in the country and when he intends
to hold the run-off election, amid speculation that it could take
months. Mbeki was likely to resist growing pressure to persuade
Mugabe to accept UN monitors for the expected run-off, officials
said.
Last night MDC secretary
general Tendai Biti said that the party would not support a run-off
on the basis that its leader Morgan Tsvangirai had already won.
Speaking after an Institute for Justice and Reconciliation seminar
in Cape Town last night, Biti said the MDC would not condone a run-off
because it would give the reigning regime an opportunity to terrorise
voters into siding with the ruling Zanu PF. "We've already
won the election, why should we support a run-off?" asked Biti,
who was the keynote speaker at a seminar entitled "Zimbabwe:
Where to now?" However, Tsvangirai, who is living in Johannesburg,
has said he would only announce his decision on the run-off once
the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) announced the election date.
Biti said last night that Mugabe had resorted to a run-off as a
last resort because he knew he had lost at the ballot box. "You
cannot rule a country if you do not control parliament," he
said, referring to the MDC's parliamentary victory, in which it
scored 99 seats over Zanu PF's 97. Reluctant to single out any one
country, he also slammed the international community for inaction
in not stepping into the Zimbabwe election crisis in a significant
way. "The international community has a role of midwife to
play in the birth of a new Zimbabwe, but they have not done enough
to realise what Zimbabweans are fighting for," Biti said. "It
is not at their discretion (to step in); it is their duty . . .
Maybe they will pay attention when rivers of dead people flow through
Zimbabwe as in Rwanda."
Meanwhile, human
rights groups, opposition politicians and regional observers have
reported an upsurge in political violence in Zimbabwe since the
March 29 elections. The MDC says more than 30 of its supporters
have died in the violence. Farmers' groups also said armed youth
militias had pushed 40 000 workers off farms in a campaign targeting
supporters of the opposition. In a further sign of a government
crackdown, police yesterday arrested the leaders of the country's
main trade union over speeches they made during a workers' day rally
last week, their lawyer said. Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions president Lovemore Matombo and secretary-general
Wellington Chibebe, who are critical of Mugabe, were taken
into custody after surrendering to police, who were reportedly
looking for them, their lawyer Andrew Makoni, told Reuters. Police
have also reportedly arrested Davison Maruziva, the editor of the
Standard, a privately owned weekly, as well as prominent human rights
lawyer Harrison Nkomo.
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