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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Details
of Zimbabwe deal emerge
BBC News
September 12, 2008
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7611992.stm
Zimbabwe's President
Robert Mugabe is to retain control of the army and chair cabinet
meetings, according to leaks of Thursday's power-sharing deal.
South African President
Thabo Mbeki said Mr Mugabe had agreed to share power with Morgan
Tsvangirai but said details would be released on Monday.
Mr Tsvangirai will control
the police force and chair a new council of ministers, the sources
say.
The deal followed seven
weeks of talks and this year's election violence.
Mr Mugabe has yet to
comment on the agreement, brokered by South Africa's leader.
Fair
division?
BBC News is banned in
Zimbabwe, but a BBC correspondent inside the country says MDC supporters
are not rejoicing on the streets, nor are Zanu-PF backers protesting.
Instead a silent optimism
prevails - and after so many false dawns, Zimbabwe is holding its
breath, our correspondent says.
International donors
have said they would resume financial aid for Zimbabwe's collapsing
economy if Mr Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change (MDC)
is given a genuine share of power.
The EU said it would
"evaluate the situation" at a foreign ministers' meeting
on Monday.
BBC world affairs correspondent
Adam Mynott says the agreement appears to give Mr Mugabe and Mr
Tsvangirai roughly equal shares of power.
In cabinet, Mr Tsvangirai's
MDC and another MDC faction will together have 16 seats, while Mr
Mugabe's Zanu-PF will have the remaining 15.
Mr Mugabe will control
the armed forces, while Mr Tsvangirai will be in charge of the police.
Our correspondent says
the devil will lie in the detail and in the ability of the two men
and the power blocks under them to wield genuine authority.
Mbeki
hails deal
Work on finalising the
agreement will continue over the weekend. Some opposition MDC voices
have already called the deal a climb-down, although others have
said it is the best available.
MDC chairman and Zimbabwe's
parliamentary speaker Lovemore Moyo told the BBC that although his
party was pleased with the deal, it had been a compromise.
"We wanted a titular
head of state with an executive prime minister but that did not
happen," he said.
"So what we got
at the end of the day perhaps was probably nearly a sister-sister
power-sharing, so I'm saying it's not exactly initially what we
wanted."
Negotiations started
at the end of July, but stalled over the allocation of executive
power between Mr Mugabe and Mr Tsvangirai - bitter rivals for a
decade.
The breakthrough came
after the last four days of talks in the Zimbabwean capital, Harare.
Mr Tsvangirai was first
to announce the breakthrough, telling reporters on Thursday simply:
"We've got a deal."
Later, Mr Mbeki told
a news conference the two sides had agreed to form an inclusive
government.
He said: "I am absolutely
certain that the leadership of Zimbabwe is committed to implementing
these agreements."
The deal would be signed
at a ceremony in Harare attended by African leaders, he said.
British
concern
Zimbabwe's envoy to the
UN, Boniface Chidyausiku, told the BBC that the deal was a "triumph
for African diplomacy".
The UN special representative
on Zimbabwe, Haile Menkerios, said the announcement marked a way
forward that all sides could live with.
Britain's Foreign Office
said it was following the situation closely, adding, "our concern
is the welfare of the Zimbabwean people".
Zimbabwe has
the fastest shrinking economy in the world with annual inflation
of more than 11,000,000%.
Mr Mugabe, in power since
independence from Britain in 1980, won a controversial presidential
run-off election in June.
He ran unopposed after
Mr Tsvangirai withdrew, claiming the MDC was the target of state-sponsored
violence.
In the first round of
the presidential election in March, Mr Tsvangirai gained more votes
than Mr Mugabe, but official results say he did not pass the 50%
threshold for outright victory.
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