|
Back to Index
SADC
wants enhanced monitoring in Zimbabwe as tensions escalate
Blessing Zulu, Voice of America
June 17, 2011
View this article
on the VOA website
Exasperated by a perennial
political crisis and escalating tensions in Zimbabwe, the Southern
African Development Community has called on regional mediator President
Jacob Zuma of South Africa to increase the visibility of his brokering
efforts.
SADC sources said President
Zuma's team of facilitators will now be expected to visit
Harare at least twice a month beginning in July.
The facilitators
will be complemented by three delegates of the SADC troika on politics,
defense and security drawn from South Africa, Zambia and Mozambique
who will work with the Joint Monitoring and Implementation Committee
to the 2008 Global
Political Agreement for power sharing is adhered to as a recent
SADC summit urged.
The SADC leadership has
set August as the deadline by which the three parties shall have
completed a road map to Zimbabwe's next elections. SADC will meet
in summit in Luanda, Angola, at that time. Sources said the three
co-governing parties have started working separately on proposed
timelines for the elections road map.
President Zuma's
international relations adviser Lindiwe Zulu said she and other
Zuma facilitators will meet party negotiators early in July to finalize
the road map.
Zimbabwean Finance Minister
Tendai Biti, secretary general of the Movement for Democratic Change
formation of Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, concurred and said
a more prominent role for SADC facilitators and monitors could make
a difference.
ZANU-PF spokesman
Rugare Gumbo said the August deadline for submitting a road map
means holding a ballot this year, as President Robert Mugabe and
ZANU-PF have been demanding, a viable proposition. But SADC leaders
are wary of pressing ahead too fast and repeating the disputed 2008
election that led to the power-sharing solution.
The country must also
hold a referendum later this year on a new constitution of which
the formal drafting has yet to begin and is certain to involve much
haggling.
Deputy Prime Minister
Arthur Mutambara also called on the power-sharing parties in Harare
to stay focused and complete the election road map on time.
Former Zimbabwean diplomat
Clifford Mashiri told VOA reporter Blessing Zulu that SADC has abandoned
the policy of appeasement in dealing with President Mugabe.
Elsewhere, a senior official
of the Tsvangirai formation of the Movement for Democratic Change
met in Harare on Friday with members of the diplomatic corps to
brief them on the political situation and the implications of the
recent SADC summit.
Minister of State Jameson
Timba, international relations secretary for the MDC branch, pledged
his party's commitment to resolving Zimbabwe's long-running
crisis.
Timba told VOA Studio
7 reporter Ntungamili Nkomo that he also briefed the diplomats about
what he described as an ongoing crackdown against MDC activists.
Mr. Tsvangirai, meanwhile,
was touring companies in the Midlands towns of Kwekwe and Gweru
where business people expressed their concerns including the indigenization
plan being pushed by the ZANU-PF side of the government, and the
government's failure to protect manufacturers from cheap imports,
as correspondent Taurai Shava reported.
In Masvingo, war veterans
leader Jabulani Sibanda generated more controversy with a speech
this week that appeared to be inciting political violence. Sibanda
is alleged to have told a crowd of ZANU-PF supporters on Thursday
in Masvingo that they will not be arrested if they kill MDC supporters,
as correspondent Obert Pepukai reported.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|