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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
talks in stalemate
Nelson
Banya, Reuters
July 13, 2008
http://africa.reuters.com/top/news/usnL13349132.html
Harare - President Robert
Mugabe's party and the opposition failed last week to agree a framework
for talks to end Zimbabwe's crisis, the opposition said on Sunday,
but state media said negotiations would continue. The first preliminary
talks between the two sides since a disputed election were adjourned
on Friday without agreement, a spokesman for the opposition Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC) told Reuters. Election-related violence
that has killed 113 MDC activists since the first round of voting
in March was continuing and this led to the talks stalemate, MDC
spokesman Nelson Chamisa said. The MDC faction led by presidential
candidate Morgan Tsvangirai and a smaller grouping led by Arthur
Mutambara began preliminary discussions on Thursday with officials
from Mugabe's ruling Zanu PF under the auspices of South African
mediators in Pretoria, the South African capital.
"There was (no agreement).
The matters are still outstanding. It's not about the table discussions
in Pretoria but about what's happening on this side of the Limpopo
(river)," Chamisa said. "We still have to clear the course
for meaningful talks." Despite Chamisa's denials, Zimbabwean
state media reports on Sunday suggested an agreement had been reached
on a way forward for negotiations. The state-owned Sunday Mail said
the parties had agreed on a "working framework" which
"paved the way for serious talks". A South African newspaper,
The Sunday Independent, said the negotiating parties would sign
an agreement to guide "intensive talks" that would begin
in Harare on Wednesday and run until the end of July. The talks
would focus on the formation of an inclusive government, it reported.
Tsvangirai defeated
Mugabe in a March 29 presidential election but failed to win the
absolute majority needed to avoid the second ballot. The MDC leader
then withdrew
from the June 27 runoff vote citing political violence, and has
refused to negotiate a power-sharing deal until the government halts
the bloodshed. Chamisa accused the ruling party of continuing violence.
"Our MPs, councillors and members are being victimised. We
still have attacks targeting our sympathisers. In fact it's as if
the MDC is a banned organisation," Chamisa said. "Under
these circumstances where you have a deficit of goodwill it is difficult
to engage in meaningful dialogue." The MDC announced on Friday
what it said was the latest death in the violence of one of its
officials, Gift Mutsvungunu. His decomposing body was found in a
Harare suburb on Thursday, with eyes gouged out and severely burned
buttocks, it said.
Once prosperous
Zimbabwe has the world's highest inflation rate, estimated to be
at least 2 million percent. Millions of its people have fled abroad
in search of food and work. Tsvangirai is under intense African
pressure to enter full-blown negotiations with Mugabe, who has branded
the MDC puppets of the West and vowed to never let them take power.
Mugabe, 84, who has ruled since independence from Britain in 1980,
insists the opposition must recognise his landslide victory in the
election last month. Mugabe's government on Saturday welcomed the
failure of a Western-backed U.N. Security Council resolution to
impose sanctions over its violent presidential elections, calling
it a victory over racism and meddling in its affairs. Russia and
China on Friday vetoed
the resolution, which would have imposed an arms embargo on the
southern African country and financial and travel restrictions on
Mugabe and 13 other officials.
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