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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
The
divorce becomes final
IRIN
News
November
14, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=81482
Zimbabwe's political
crisis deepened on 14 November with the withdrawal of the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), led by Morgan Tsvangirai,
from the moribund power-sharing deal
with President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF.
An MDC communiqué
at the end of a national council meeting said it would peacefully
campaign against any unilateral government appointed by Mugabe,
and called for fresh elections under international supervision.
The party defended its
decision on the grounds that, since the signing of the power-sharing
agreement on 12 September, Mugabe had pursued an "obstructionist
approach" and an "entrenched power-retention agenda"
for the ZANU-PF party.
The MDC alleged that
this included the "crafting of an assassination plot, codenamed
Operation Ngatipedzenavo, intended to eliminate the MDC leadership",
amid a wider campaign of violence and intimidation aimed at the
party "and the people of Zimbabwe".
The communiqué
rejected a resolution passed by leaders of the Southern African
Development Community (SADC) on 9 November, urging the formation
of an all-inclusive government to save the faltering agreement.
The MDC accused the SADC
of mistakenly narrowing the sticking points to only control of the
home affairs ministry and police, ignoring the unresolved logjams
over the distribution of other portfolios, the appointment of provincial
governors, permanent secretaries and ambassadors. IRIN was unable
to get comment from ZANU-PF.
The power-sharing deal,
brokered by South African President Thabo Mbeki, appointed as mediator
by the SADC, was meant to fairly apportion ministries between ZANU-PF,
Tsvangirai's MDC, and a breakaway faction of the MDC led by Arthur
Mutambara.
Mugabe was to retain
the presidency, while Tsvangirai was to become prime minister and
have a say in the running of the government until new elections
in 2012. But no constitutional amendment was passed to create the
post of premier, and the deal was quickly overcome by bickering
over posts and powers.
Mugabe is now expected
to form a government without Tsvangirai - which many fear
signals a return to the extreme levels of violence that racked the
country during this year's election, when over 80 MDC supporters
were killed.
The MDC won the 29 March
legislative poll and Tsvangirai beat Mugabe into second place in
the presidential vote, but fell short of the 50 percent plus one
ballot required for a first-round victory.
Tsvangirai withdrew from
the presidential run-off, citing the political violence, which left
Mugabe as the sole candidate. However, the election was condemned
regionally and internationally as unfree and unfair.
Disappointment
Zimbabweans in Zimbabwe's
second city, Bulawayo, received the news of the MDC's withdrawal
from the unity deal with mixed feelings.
Martha Moyo, 28, said
she was disappointed. "Everybody knows that ZANU-PF has no
solution to the country's problems, and everyone was hoping that
Tsvangirai will agree to come into the government and solve our
problems."
Jabulani Sithole, 36,
said the MDC was justified in refusing to take part. "It is
clear that Mugabe did not want the MDC in government, because he
should have negotiated in all earnestness, but giving them useless
ministries was an indicator that the talks are dead, and what is
left now is for the talks to collapse."
The MDC was condemned
as "unpatriotic" by Nhamo Tsunga, 40. "These people
[MDC] just want power, and they do not care how much we are suffering.
The MDC should have just agreed to join government, and then sort
out the other issues when they are in government. All this shows
that they are selfish, and they are doing these things for themselves
and not for the people."
Zimbabweans have been
battered for years by shortages, lack of social services, and an
inflation rate estimated at 231 million percent in July.
A trio of elders - former
UN secretary-general Kofi Annan, former US president Jimmy Carter,
and rights activist Graca Machel - are due to visit Zimbabwe next
week to try and focus global attention on the humanitarian crisis.
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