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Inclusive government - Index of articles
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Statement after four-day visit in the SADC region
Statement
by Rt Hon Morgan R Tsvangirai,President of the Movement for Democratic
Change and Prime Minister of the Republic of Zimbabwe
March 18, 2011
For the past
four days, I have been meeting fellow SADC leaders to appraise them
on the dire situation in Zimbabwe, which has posed a serious threat
to the GPA and
the inclusive government.
In the past week, I have
held discussions with President Rupiah Banda of Zambia, President
Armando Guebbuza of Mozambique, King Mswati 111 of Swaziland and
Botswana President Ian Khama about the need for urgent action on
Zimbabwe to ensure the security of persons and a peaceful environment
in the country. I will soon be meeting the facilitator, President
Jacob Zuma, over the situation in the country.
I have told these fellow
leaders that the time for SADC to act and deliver is now. And we
are all agreed that Zimbabwe should not be allowed to decelerate
into an implosion. I have told the SADC leaders of the renewed siege
mood in Zimbabwe, the arbitrary arrests, the crackdown on democratic
forces in the country and the culture of impunity that is seriously
threatening the health and the life of the inclusive government.
I have told my fellow
colleagues in the region that this country risks sliding back to
the chaos of 2008; the chaos which the same regional leaders mitigated
by nudging all the political players to form an inclusive government
in the national interest. But today, the violence machinery has
once again been unrolled in the countryside, the culture of impunity
has worsened and the past eight weeks have seen an intensification
of the crackdown on the democratic forces in the country.
While I was away in the
last four days, it appears the civilian authority is no longer in
charge and dark and sinister forces have engaged in a hostile take-over
of running the affairs of the country, with or without the blessing
of some leaders of the civilian authority. Together with civic society
and other democratic forces, we had planned to hold a major peace
rally in Harare tomorrow to pray for peace in the country.
We had duly notified
the police as required by law. I was told yesterday that the police
have refused to allow that peaceful rally to proceed, against the
provisions of the law and the letter and spirit of the GPA. There
has been an instruction from the Police Commissioner-General to
effectively ban meetings when there is a Cabinet decision that no
meetings should be banned.
The MDC notes
that unless the region nips this tension in the bud, we could easily
slide back to the dark
days of 2008, a development that is not welcome to any Zimbabwean
across the political divide.
SADC, as the guarantors
of this agreement, has to play a critical role in ensuring that
we all respect the signatures that we appended to the GPA. We have
to implement all the agreed issues and usher in political, economic
and media reforms as stipulated in the GPA in order to enable the
country to transit peacefully to a credible and legitimate government
whilst SADC should monitor every step of this process.
We are all agreed that
the tenure of this inclusive government will have to lapse at some
point and an election is inevitable. But it has to be a free and
fair election devoid of the violence that has characterized electoral
processes in the country for the past 31 years.
The SADC troika summit
due to take place soon has to seriously address the issue of the
roadmap so that all political players are bound by time-bound milestones
and rules ahead of the next election. It is my sincere and fervent
hope that the SADC region will not stand back and allow this impunity
to graduate into full-fledged chaos.
The people want a guarantee
that they will be allowed to vote for parties and leaders of their
choice in a free environment.
They hope that the guarantors
of this agreement will ensure that their vote counts and that their
vote will be protected.
Finally, I appeal to
all peace-loving people and leaders of SADC, the African Union and
the broader international community to help Zimbabwe by stopping
the violence.
I thank you.
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