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Zuma
breaks talks deadlock
Faith Zaba and Dumisani Muleya, Zimbabwe
Independent
March 19, 2010
http://www.theindependent.co.zw/local/25803-zuma-breaks-talks-deadlock.html
South African President
Jacob Zuma yesterday managed to squeeze a raft of concessions from
Zimbabwe's rival political parties and their leaders in a
bid to resolve the country's decade-long political crisis.
Zuma, who spent two hectic
working days holed up in a Harare hotel engaged in marathon meetings,
told journalists after long hours of behind-the-scenes negotiations
that the parties had agreed on "a package of measures"
to be implemented soon.
"The parties
have agreed to a package of measures to be implemented concurrently
as per the decision of the SADC Troika in Maputo," Zuma said.
"I believe the implementation of this package will take the
process forward substantially."
Zuma said President Robert
Mugabe, Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai and Deputy Prime Minister
Arthur Mutambara had agreed to set their negotiators to pull out
all the stops to resolve the outstanding issues.
"The leaders
have instructed their negotiating teams to attend to all outstanding
matters during their deliberations on 25, 26 and 29 March and to
report back to the facilitator by 31st of March," Zuma said.
"I will present a comprehensive progress report to the chairperson
of the SADC troika, President Armando Guebuza of Mozambique."
Informed sources within
the negotiating teams and facilitators said the package of measures
referred to proposed solutions of the dispute over the appointment
of provincial governors, appointment of Attorney-General Johannes
Tomana and Reserve Bank governor Gideon Gono, swearing in of Deputy
Agriculture minister Roy Bennett and sanctions.
The sources said negotiators
are tasked to put in place implementation mechanisms and final touches
on how to specifically share the governors' positions and
when they would be sworn-in, when Bennett should be sworn-in, whether
Tomana and Gono should both go and when, in the "national
interest", and the procedures for removing the limited economic
sanctions and travel bans that remain.
Zuma met with Reserve
Bank Governor Gideon Gono, Attorney-General Johannes Tomana, deputy
Agriculture minister-designate Roy Bennett, Defence Forces minister
Emmerson Mnangagwa and Security minister Sydney Sekeramayi on Wednesday
evening.
On Thursday,
he first met with two negotiating teams — represented by Patrick
Chinamasa and Nicholas Goche of Zanu PF and Nelson Chamisa and Elton
Mangoma of MDC-T — and then he later met the teams separately
before meeting the three principals.
Meanwhile, sources in
government close to Zanu PF told the Zimbabwe Independent that the
package included an undertaking to intensify efforts to have sanctions
removed.
They said the ministerial
committee on sanctions set up in June last year will visit Brussels
on April 21 to lobby the EU for the lifting of sanctions on Zimbabwe.
Zimbabwe has formed a
ministerial team to re-engage the EU on sanctions. The committee
is chaired by Foreign Affairs minister Simbarashe Mumbengegwi and
comprises of Chinamasa, Welshman Ncube, Priscilla Misihairabwi-Mushonga,
Mangoma and Finance minister Tendai Biti.
On governors,
there are currently two options to choose from, either through popular
vote or by the number of total seats in the House of Assembly and
Senate.
Both formulas favour
Zanu PF, which is likely to end up with five governors and MDC-T
with four. It has been agreed that MDC-M would get one even though
it did not deserve any using the proposed formulas.
The sources said the
swearing in of the governors would depend on when the current governors'
terms of office expire in August this year.
One source said: "Check
when the current terms will end and that will give you an indication
on when the governors will be sworn in, otherwise we incur costs
for their compensation. Tsvangirai anomboti mari yacho anoiwana
(Tsvangirai says he will get the money for compensation)."
On the swearing in of
Bennett as Deputy Agriculture minister, the source said MDC-T has
recommended that "if the Ministry of Agriculture was too sensitive
for Zanu PF, they are proposing that they give Bennett another ministry.
This will have to be agreed on at the meetings next week. Zanu PF
is still to debate this."
The source, however,
said there has been no movement on the Tomana issue.
"We are not going
to sacrifice Tomana but the Gono issue is no longer an issue after
Parliament passed the RBZ bill (which reduces the governor's
powers)," he said.
There were suggestions
at the talks recently that Gono had agreed to resign and that issue
was no longer as difficult as the Tomana issue. Zuma is said to
have appealed to the two to "put their country first and at
heart" in their consideration of issues.
Chinamasa refused
to disclose details of the package but said the negotiators would
be working out implementation mechanisms next week.
"We are going to
pursue certain possibilities after we meet next week when we will
conclude the matter. We will come up with an implementation matrix.
We haven't concluded any of the issues," he said.
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