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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Kaunda
advocates for Zim govt of national unity
ZimbabweJournalists.com
June 09, 2008
http://www.zimbabwejournalists.com/story.php?art_id=4270&cat=2
Zambia's founding leader
on Sunday mooted a unity government in crisis-wracked Zimbabwe led
by President Robert Mugabe with opposition chief Morgan Tsvangirai
holding a new prime ministerial post. Kenneth Kaunda, a close friend
of Mugabe, said there was a need to "rethink" the June
27 presidential run-off between the two, saying it would not bring
peace to country, plagued by political and economic c rises for
years. "We have in Zimbabwe a situation which will not be helped
by any type of outcome of the June 27 repeat elections," Kaunda
said in a statement.
He proposed a unity government
headed by Mugabe with Tsvangirai as his prime minister, along the
lines of a similar administration launched in Kenya this year to
end bloody post-electoral violence after disputed polls. "The
authority between president and prime minister must be fairly shared,"
said Kaunda, who ruled Zambia from 1964 to 1991. Mugabe served as
Zimbabwe's prime minister from 1980 - the year the country gained
independence from Britain - until 1987 when he abolished the position
and assumed the new office of executive president, gaining more
powers in the process.
Kaunda said leaders from
the Southern Africa Development Community (SADC), regional bloc
should begin work on fleshing out such a government. "The call
now is 'come together and start afresh'," Kaunda said. "Through
uniting in this government, there can be healing for many dangerous
divisions there are in Zimbabwe today."
Tsvangirai won the first
round of the election in Zimbabwe in March but officially fell just
short of an absolute majority. Violence has mounted in the lead
up to the run-off, with the opposition Movement for Democratic Change
saying around 60 of its supporters have been killed by pro-Mugabe
militias. Mugabe blames the opposition for the increase in violence,
but the United Nations' chief representative in Zimbabwe has said
the president's supporters are to blame for the bulk of it. The
veteran leader is accused by critics of leading the once-model economy
into ruins with the world's highest inflation rate and serious foot
shortages.
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