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Mugabe
may replace MDC ministers boycotting government
Cris Chinaka, Reuters
October 28, 2009
http://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE59R0BN20091028?sp=true
Zimbabwean President
Robert Mugabe may appoint acting ministers in place of officials
from Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's party who are boycotting
cabinet meetings, local media said on Wednesday.
The rival leaders formed
a power-sharing government in February to ease a decade-long political
and economic crisis, but they have been arguing over how to share
executive power, the appointment of senior state officials, the
pace of reform and Western sanctions against Mugabe's ZANU-PF party.
The dispute deepened
this month when Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Party (MDC)
said it would stop attending cabinet meetings in protest against
the arrest of one of its top officials and what it called Mugabe's
refusal to fully implement the power-sharing pact.
On Wednesday, the Herald
newspaper, which like other state media is controlled by ZANU-PF,
quoted Information Minister Webster Shamu as saying Mugabe might
soon appoint acting ministers to fill in for MDC officials.
Shamu said the MDC boycott,
which began on October 16, was affecting the government's work in
preparing for a new farming season and its efforts to turn around
the agriculture-based economy after years of recession.
"His Excellency
(Mugabe) may have to consider appointing ministers in an acting
capacity to key ministries for the sake of a successful agricultural
season and general economic turnaround," Shamu was quoted as
saying.
Political analysts say
the appointment of acting ministers would further anger the MDC,
although the party's options are limited.
Shamu said those whose
positions were likely to be filled included Finance Minister Tendai
Biti, Planning Minister Elton Mangoma and Energy Minister Elias
Mudzuri, all senior MDC figures who sit on a cabinet committee on
agriculture.
A mediation team of three
ministers from the 15-nation Southern African Development Community
(SADC) will meet ZANU-PF and the MDC on Thursday to try to break
the deadlock.
Mugabe says he has fulfilled
his part of the agreement and wants Tsvangirai to campaign for the
lifting of Western sanctions against his ZANU-PF and for an end
to a propaganda campaign by MDC supporters abroad.
Political analysts say
that, although the coalition has been shaken by the MDC boycott,
a complete collapse still looks unlikely because both parties have
no viable alternative.
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