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Mugabe
"overstepped" in claiming key ministries
Stephen Kaufman, US State Dept
October 14, 2008
http://www.america.gov/st/democracy-english/2008/October/20081014165910esnamfuak0.4772303.html
The United States
urges the implementation of the original power-sharing agreement
brokered between Zimbabwe's political opposition and the government
of President Robert Mugabe, and says Mugabe's claims on the
country's key ministries run counter to that deal.
State Department
spokesman Sean McCormack said October 14 that there is now "a
real bump in the road in terms of the implementation" of the
September 15 agreement between Mugabe and Morgan Tsvangirai of the
opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).
Under the deal,
mediated by former South African President Thabo Mbeki, the opposition
would control 16 Cabinet seats and Mugabe's Zimbabwe African National
Union - Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) party would have 15.
Mugabe's
government published
a list October 11 showing how it intends to divide the ministries.
It awarded itself key portfolios such as defense, home and foreign
affairs, justice, mining and land, and assigned the opposition relatively
minor ministries such as constitutional affairs and water management.
Tsvangirai has threatened to break off talks on forming a coalition
government.
McCormack said
Mugabe "apparently overstepped the bounds" of the September
15 deal "in claiming several ministries that were not part
of the power-sharing agreement."
He said trust
in Zimbabwe's long-term ruler has "always been the open
question" when it came to the power-sharing deal. After it
was announced, "we welcomed the agreement but we also held
out final judgment until it was actually implemented."
"The devil
is in the details of the implementation," McCormack said,
and the United States will wait to see how the current impasse is
resolved.
"Of course,
any implementation solution has to be one that is acceptable to
the MDC and Mr. Tsvangirai," he said.
According
to the World Food Programme, more than 5 million people —
nearly half of Zimbabwe's population — are facing starvation
while talks to form the government continue.
In an October
9 worldwide appeal for assistance, the U.N. agency said $140 million
was needed to provide enough rations for its food stocks, which
are set to run out in January 2009.
Millions of
Zimbabweans have already run out of food or are surviving on one
meal a day, the agency said.
The United States
continues to be the largest donor to the World Food Programme and
has also been a leading provider of humanitarian assistance to Zimbabwe.
Between 2002 and 2007, the United States gave about $400 million
in humanitarian assistance, most of which was food aid.
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