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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
SADC
admit power sharing document was fraudulently altered
Lance Guma, SW Radio Africa
October 31, 2008
http://www.swradioafrica.com/news311008/sadc311008.htm
SADC Secretary
General Tomaz Salomao has finally admitted the power
sharing deal signed on the 15th September was fraudulently altered
before the signing ceremony and different from the one agreed to
by the parties on the 11th September. The Tsvangirai MDC initially
raised the concerns in an interview with Newsreel in early October,
complaining that ZANU PF had doctored the agreement to alter certain
clauses in the document that was to be signed a few days later.
Despite Monday's Troika meeting acknowledging this fraud,
the communiqué
released by Salomao after the meeting said nothing about the issue.
But analysts felt it was important for the Troika to come out publicly
and condemn the alteration.
The Tsvangirai MDC accused
Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa, Secretary General of the MDC
Mutambara group Welshman Ncube, and Thabo Mbeki's representative
at the talks Mujanku Gumbi, of making the changes to the document,
without Tsvangirai's knowledge. The party claimed Chinamasa,
Ncube and Gumbi changed clauses relating to - an increase to the
number of non-constituent senators issued to the Mutambara faction,
a clause stating that a replacement for vice prime minister cannot
be a non-constituent MP and that parties would jointly consult each
other on the appointment of ambassadors and other key government
officials.
Salomao has now publicly
admitted to the alterations in interviews with journalists and pledged
that the issue would be resolved. This follows pressure from the
MDC who wrote a stinging letter to the SADC headquarters highlighting
their concerns. Meanwhile Mugabe's ZANU PF party held a politburo
meeting this week in which sources say the party resolved not to
make any concessions on the ministries they grabbed using a government
gazette issued by Mugabe. If this is true it could mean the urgent
full SADC summit which was called for, after Monday's deadlock,
could again be a waste of time.
South Africa's
SABC reported on Friday that the SADC summit will now be held in
Johannesburg next week.
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