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New Constitution-making process - Index of articles
Mugabe
loyalists halt major meeting in Zimbabwe
Angus Shaw,
Associated Press
July 13, 2009
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jd_JZmhdw6XWClfpenWt9g-dqNNAD99DLUDO0
Militants from President
Robert Mugabe's party disrupted a national conference aimed at drawing
up a new constitution on Monday in a setback for Zimbabwe's unity
government.
The collapse of the meeting
in disarray appeared to be another sign of Mugabe's determination
to resist constitutional reforms, which might loosen his grip on
the country he has ruled for nearly three decades.
When Mugabe did not arrive
at the meeting on time, Parliament Speaker Lovemore Moyo, a member
of Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change, began his opening
remarks but was drowned out by militants singing revolutionary songs.
That set off scuffles with supporters of former opposition leader
Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, and Moyo was forced to withdraw.
A Movement for Democratic
Change councilor sustained serious head injuries after he was hit
with an unidentified object at the conference, a statement by the
party said.
Under Zimbabwe's unity
government, an agreement that brought Mugabe and Tsvangirai together
in February, a new constitution must be drawn up ahead of new elections
within two years.
Many delegates at Monday's
meeting alleged that the disruption was planned, citing a lack of
security at the venue that allowed thousands of Mugabe loyalists
to stream in.
"It is outrageous.
This is delinquent behavior," said Philius Njira, a member
of a constitutional reform group.
The convention center,
which can hold 5,000 people, was filled to capacity, with hundreds
more seated in aisles and on stairways. Organizers had tried to
limit each party to 600 delegates and 240 for veterans of Zimbabwe's
war for independence. Delegates from civil society groups also were
invited.
Before the opening, dancing
and ululating Mugabe militants showed the clenched fist salute of
his ZANU-PF party, while Movement for Democratic Change supporters
waved their open hands.
Leaflets on constitutional
reform were handed out, but ZANU-PF supporters tore them up and
threw them to the floor.
Inside the crowded venue,
there were minor scuffles, with opposing supporters pushing and
shoving each other. One woman was seen slapping another female delegate.
Mugabe was scheduled
to open the conference at 10 a.m. (0800 GMT), but when he had not
arrived two hours later, Moyo said the conference would begin the
process of writing the "supreme law" of the country.
"A constitution
is about people deciding how they are governed. It is not about
the government or anyone else telling the people how they want to
be governed," he said, before he was drowned out.
Eric Matinenga, the minister
of constitutional affairs, who withdrew from the dais along with
Moyo, told reporters that organizers were meeting to try and salvage
the conference. But hundreds of delegates had streamed out of the
convention center, and there was still no sign of Mugabe.
Nelson Chamisa, a spokesman
for the Movement for Democratic Change, told reporters that Tsvangirai
was meeting with Mugabe to discuss the disruption of the meeting
by "well coordinated ZANU-PF cadres."
But there was no further
information on when constitutional proceedings would resume. By
late afternoon, police had cordoned off the convention center, and
most delegates had left the venue.
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