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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Power-sharing
deal looking precarious
IRIN
News
September 26, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=80623
On 15 September,
Mbeki oversaw the signing of a deal
between President Robert Mugabe, the leader of the Movement for
Democratic Change (MDC), Morgan Tsvangirai and Arthur Mutambara,
leader of a smaller MDC faction, in what became his last foreign
policy act as president. He was ousted from South Africa's top job
a few days after returning from Zimbabwe.
Mbeki's axing meant the
South African president had to cancel his trip to a UN annual General
Assembly meeting in New York, while Mugabe departed for the US and
is only expected to return to Zimbabwe in early October, as it is
the custom of the 84-year-old president to have his annual medical
check-ups abroad.
The deal was expected
to signal the beginning of Zimbabwe's reconstruction, but reports
of political violence are still commonplace, the inflation rate
of more than 11 million percent remains unchecked, an outbreak of
cholera in the capital, Harare, and Mashonaland West Province has
claimed 20 lives in the past week, and reports that children have
begun to succumb to starvation indicate that the country's humanitarian
situation is worsening.
Earlier this year the
UN estimated that more than five million people, out of a population
of 12 million, would require food assistance in the first quarter
of 2009. November is the planting period for the main agricultural
season, but cash shortages, a paucity of agricultural inputs and
renewed disruptions on farms do not bode well for the coming harvest.
Mbeki's power-sharing
deal became deadlocked last week after ZANU-PF reportedly refused
to concede any of the portfolios covering security, home affairs,
justice, local government, finance, information and foreign affairs
to the MDC.
Parliament has convened
once since the disputed presidential election on 27 June, but was
immediately adjourned and is not expected to reconvene until mid-October.
It is yet to pass the constitutional amendments needed to create
the posts of prime minister and deputy prime minister - allocated
to Tsvangirai and Mutambura, respectively - under the agreement.
Mugabe
feels ZANU-PF pressure
A member of ZANU-PF's
politburo, the party's top decision-making body, told IRIN that
before leaving for New York, Mugabe was accused by senior party
members of ceding too much power to the opposition parties. "It
looks like Mugabe used the UN conference as an excuse to flee from
the gathering storm in his party," the party insider said.
"Because of his
lengthy absence from the country, there is a lot of uncertainty
within the country and ZANU-PF. In addition, when ... [apportioning]
cabinet posts, Mugabe has to deal with the delicate issue of mollifying
two camps in his party which are jostling to succeed him."
The constitutional amendments
need a two-thirds majority to pass, which could potentially hand
disgruntled ZANU-PF MPs a way to stall the deal.
The changing
of the guard in neighbouring South Africa, in which Mbeki was deposed
ahead of next year's scheduled elections, left Mugabe "devastated",
according to the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU).
The MDC often accused
Mbeki of being partisan towards Mugabe after the Southern African
Development Community (SADC) appointed him as the regional body's
lead negotiator in 2007, while Mugabe recently lauded Mbeki's style
of negotiations.
Such praise has not been
reciprocated in South Africa, where the Congress of South African
Trade Unions (COSATU), the country's largest union federation and
an alliance partner of the ruling African National Congress (ANC),
played a pivotal role in ousting Mbeki and remain unhappy with his
power-sharing deal.
COSATU spokesman Patrick
Craven told IRIN the federation was "profoundly unhappy with
the negotiations on the table" and termed it an "elite
deal negotiated between a few individuals, with no attempt to involve
civil society." The power-sharing government has a five-year
term.
Union
pressure on Tsvangirai
SADC spokesperson Charles
Mubita told Zimbabwe's official The Herald newspaper that Mbeki
would continue to lead the SADC's mediation talks, because "It
does not need someone to be a sitting president to facilitate in
a dispute."
COSATU's Craven said
the union federation has so far not taken a position on Mbeki's
continued role as the lead negotiator in Zimbabwe.
Tsvangirai will attend
a meeting of the ZCTU's general council on 27 September to explain
the details of the power-sharing agreement. The labour federation,
which was a launch pad of the MDC, is against the negotiated deal
and prefers the formation of a transitional authority, followed
by free and fair elections.
Tsvangirai and the MDC
achieved a parliamentary majority in the 29 March general elections
but was a couple of percentage points shy of the 50 percent plus
one vote required to win the presidency outright.
Tsvangirai withdrew
from the run-off ballot in protest against the high levels of political
violence, which Mugabe subsequently won as a sole candidate - a
result not recognised by the international community.
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