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Inclusive government - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
parties moot revision to September 2008 Global Political Agreement
Blessing
Zulu, VOA News
August
25, 2009
http://www.voanews.com/english/Africa/Zimbabwe/2009-08-25-voa44.cfm
With the one-year
anniversary of the signature of Zimbabwe's Global
Political Agreement for power sharing coming up Sept. 15, the
principals in the country's unity government and their negotiators
have opened informal talks to extend a GPA engagement not to contest
by-elections - and possibly to allow the government to run for five
years, sources said.
The moratorium on contesting
by-elections for seats won in 2008 by the three parties in the so-called
inclusive government - President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF, the Movement
for Democratic Change formation of Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai,
and the MDC grouping of Deputy Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara -
runs out in about three weeks.
Some 16 House and Senate
seats have been vacated, in particular several of those held by
Mutambara's MDC formation due to the party's expulsion of rebel
legislators, raising the prospect of hotly contested by-elections
at a time when the reverberations of 2008 post-election violence
are still being felt and the country has much business to attend
to.
Citing the "divisive
and often times confrontational nature of elections and by-elections"
GPA Article 21 pledged the signing parties not to seek each other's
seats if they came open. This engagement was to run for just one
year, but with the unity government troubled by many unresolved
issues even a few by-elections could generate considerable tension.
Elsewhere, ZANU-PF lawmaker
Paul Mangwana, co-chairman of the parliamentary select committee
on constitutional reform, said last week that the government is
likely to last for five years as the majority of legislators want
to serve their full terms of five years.
Sources in the Mutambara
MDC confirmed informal talks are under way, but sources in the Tsvangirai
MDC said there were divisions over extending the no-contest provision.
Some said by-elections should be contested once the clause expires,
but others warn this could lead to more political bloodshed. Some
ZANU-PF hardliners want to contest by-elections so they can try
to trim the MDC House majority - but others fear the gap might
only widen.
Minister of state Gorden
Moyo, attached to the office of the prime minister, said the Tsvangirai
formation does not intend to extend the moratorium on contesting
by-elections.
But ZANU-PF Justice Minister
Patrick Chinamasa has said that extending the moratorium is the
prerogative of the three principals who signed the original agreement.
Industry and Commerce
Minister and Mutambara MDC Secretary General Welshman Ncube, one
of the lead negotiators of the 2008 power-sharing pact, told reporter
Blessing Zulu of VOA's Studio 7 for Zimbabwe that informal discussions
are under way.
London-based political
analyst and human rights lawyer Dewa Mavhinga said political violence
should be more of a pressing issue than by-elections.
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