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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Zim
'close to forming unity govt'
News 24
July 24, 2008
http://www.news24.com/News24/Africa/Zimbabwe/0,,2-11-1662_2363547,00.html
Senior negotiators from
Zimbabwe's main opposition Movement for Democratic Change and the
ruling Zanu -PF party began talks on Thursday and a report indicated
they were close to reaching a deal on forming a unity government.
The talks were under
way on Thursday, President Thabo Mbeki's spokesperson Mukoni Ratshitanga
said. Top MDC officials and two Zimbabwean cabinet ministers were
leading the rival negotiating teams meeting at an undisclosed venue
in Pretoria.
Preliminary talks began
on Tuesday after Mbeki secured a framework deal between President
Robert Mugabe and MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai on Monday for talks
to end the deadlock over Mugabe's re-election on June 27 in a poll
boycotted by the opposition because of violence.
Ratshitanga said even
if negotiators missed a two-week deadline set under the framework
agreement, it did not mean the end of talks.
He said: "It does
not mean if the talks are not done in two weeks, that the talks
will collapse."
Zim
deal 'basically done'
The main aim of the Pretoria
talks would be the creation of a government of national unity, but
the two sides differed on who should lead it and how long it should
stay in power.
Business Day reported
on Thursday that the two sides were close to reaching a deal but
still needed to iron out the final details.
Business Day, citing
sources in both parties and people familiar with the talks, said
a final settlement could be reached soon as the parties had already
agreed on many issues.
"They have agreed
on most of the issues, except mainly the framework for a new government.
The deal is basically done, but what remains are a few issues of
detail, implementation and logistics," Business Day quoted
a source as saying.
Zimbabwean political
analyst Eldred Masunungure said a breakthrough in talks was possible
as the rival parties had been talking under mediation led by President
Thabo Mbeki since March last year.
Media
blackout
Masunungure said: "A
breakthrough is a reasonable possibility, even in two weeks. This
is essentially the second phase of the SADC-mediated process, the
first phase having started in March 2007."
Mbeki was appointed by
regional grouping the Southern African Development Community to
mediate between the Zimbabwean parties. He had been increasingly
criticised, especially by the MDC, which accused him of taking too
soft a line with Mugabe.
As part of the framework
deal, the rival parties agreed to a media blackout but Zimbabwe's
state-owned Herald newspaper reported on Thursday that MDC and Zanu-PF's
main negotiators flew to South Africa on the same flight on Wednesday.
Masunungure,
a political science lecturer at the University
of Zimbabwe, said a major issue for the negotiators would be
the form of a unity government with a number of options mooted,
including splitting the executive to create a titular presidency
for Mugabe and executive premiership for Tsvangirai.
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