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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Talks
going well, but adjourning - Mbeki
Serena
Chaudhry, Reuters
July 29, 2008
South African President
Thabo Mbeki on Tuesday denied that talks between Zimbabwean President
Robert Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF and the opposition MDC had hit deadlock
and said they were "doing very well".
But Mbeki told reporters
that the negotiators will be adjourning for a few days to allow
them to return to Zimbabwe to consult with their leaders.
A Movement for Democratic
Change opposition official said on Monday that talks in Pretoria
were deadlocked because the MDC could not accept an offer for its
leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, to be vice president of a unity government.
"They are continuing
to talk. They haven't concluded and they will be adjourning shortly
for a couple of days because they want to go to Harare and consult
with their principals. And then they will come back by the end of
the week," Mbeki told reporters in Pretoria.
Tsvangirai won a first
round presidential vote on March 29 but pulled out of the June 27
second round citing systematic violence which the MDC says has killed
120 of its supporters.
The MDC says only Tsvangirai
can lead a new government.
Mbeki, who is mediating
the talks, said the two sides were determined to keep to a two-week
timetable agreed under a deal on the framework for discussions signed
on July 21.
"They are doing
very well... they undertook that they would try and conclude the
negotiations within two weeks of the signing... They are indeed
very determined to keep to that commitment and so they are continuing
to talk among themselves and indeed to reach agreements about various
matters that are on their agenda," Mbeki said.
Unity
government
Both Mugabe and Tsvangirai
are under heavy international pressure, including from within Africa,
to negotiate a national unity government to end a crisis that has
ruined the economy and flooded neighbouring states with millions
of refugees.
Senior negotiators from
ZANU-PF and the MDC started full talks last Thursday.
The MDC official
said Tsvangirai would meet his negotiators on Tuesday, before proceeding
to a meeting of the Southern Africa Development Community (SADC)'s
committee on politics, defence and security in Angola on Wednesday.
Deeply concerned by the
violence and the economic crisis, SADC and the African Union (AU)
are pushing for a power-sharing deal in Zimbabwe.
The southern African
grouping appointed Mbeki as Zimbabwe mediator last year.
ZANU-PF has said it will
not accept any deal that fails to recognise Mugabe's re-election
or seeks to reverse his land redistribution programme, under which
the government has seized thousands of white-owned farms since
2000.
Critics say the farm
seizures helped wreck the once prosperous economy and bring food
shortages and inflation now running at over 2 million percent, but
the opposition has said it would not go back on the land seizures.
The parties
also disagree over how long a national unity government should remain
in power. Tsvangirai's MDC wants fresh elections held as soon as
possible, while Mugabe, who has ruled since 1980, wants to carry
on with his new five-year mandate. (Writing By Marius Bosch; Editing
by Barry Moody)
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