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South
Africa's president says Zimbabwe elections must be 'free and fair'
Associated
Press
July 29, 2007
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/07/30/africa/AF-GEN-South-Africa-Zimbabwe.php
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa:
Zimbabwe's elections must be free and fair next year and economic
recovery in the troubled country will only be achieved by a government
viewed as legitimate by all its citizens, South Africa's president
said Sunday.
Thabo Mbeki heads the
regional mediation process between Zimbabwe's government and the
opposition Movement for Democratic Change. Mbeki said the parties
had agreed that a particular focus of the talks would be on elections
scheduled for March 2008.
"So it is important
that when those elections take place the results should not be contested,"
he told reporters in Pretoria.
"You must have elections
in Zimbabwe that are free and fair and therefore produce a government
that will be accepted by all the people of Zimbabwe as a legitimate
government emerging out of a democratic process."
Mbeki has long been criticized
for advocating a policy of quiet diplomacy toward neighboring Zimbabwe,
while others have called for more forceful action. But he received
a mandate earlier this year from the Southern African Development
Community to head talks following a brutal clampdown on opposition
leaders by Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe's government.
The negotiations, however,
are under a media blackout and little detail of the process has
emerged. Earlier this month, South Africa denied talks had collapsed
following reports that Mugabe had dumped Mbeki as a mediator and
ordered his two key negotiators to boycott negotiations.
Zimbabwe is reeling under
the worst economic crisis since independence from Britain in 1980,
with official inflation of 4,500 percent, the highest in the world.
A government edict to
slash all prices by around 50 percent last month has left shelves
bare of corn meal, bread, meat, eggs, milk and other staples and
led to acute gasoline shortages.
Some 5,000 executives,
businessmen and managers - just one of them a lesser known ruling
party senator - have been arrested and fined for defying the edict.
Mugabe, 83, blames Western
sanctions and rejects criticism that the meltdown is the result
of mismanagement and the often-violent seizures of thousands of
white-owned farms he ordered beginning in 2000.
Mbeki said Zimbabwe's
economic recovery was a "major challenge" and "would
have to be led by a government whose legitimacy is not contested."
Concerns have been raised
about a flood of Zimbabweans crossing into South Africa and other
neighboring countries to flee the economic collapse. An estimated
2-3 million Zimbabweans have immigrated to South Africa since the
downturn began seven years ago.
Mbeki acknowledged that
South Africa was affected by the situation in Zimbabwe.
"Zimbabwe is our
neighbor. So indeed, we, South Africa, inevitably would carry the
biggest burden of the consequences of any negative development in
Zimbabwe," he said.
Zimbabwe government mouthpiece
The Sunday Mail reported, meanwhile, that the independent Confederation
of Zimbabwe Industries has called for "a cease-fire in the
price war."
Callisto Jakonya, head
of the organization, said manufacturers were ready to negotiate
with the government over the viability of industry and how to stay
in business.
Tafadzwa Musarara, chairman
of the Grain Millers Association, told the paper many members of
his group, responsible for processing 75 percent of the nation's
grain supplies, faced ruin.
The government's fixed
price for the cornmeal staple was half the cost of producing it,
causing buying sprees and worsened shortages when cornmeal stocks
became available, he said.
"These distortions
need to be corrected immediately," he said.
The opposition Movement
for Democratic Change has described the price cuts as a ploy to
shore up ruling party support before national elections scheduled
early next year.
One faction of the divided
opposition announced Saturday it abandoned plans to fight a unified
election campaign with its rival group led by founder Morgan Tsvangirai,
dealing another blow to embattled opposition supporters facing a
split vote.
The Sunday Mail also
reported that a government minister, the most senior official jailed
for alleged corruption in a purported drive against graft, was acquitted
of the charges three years after his arrest.
Chris Kureneri, 58, was
jailed in 2004 for allegedly breaching foreign currency laws in
the building of a seaside mansion in the South African city of Cape
Town.
He spent 17 months in
prison before being held under house arrest.
The paper said High Court
Judge Susan Mavangira cleared Kureneri on Friday on seven alleged
corruption charges involving the illegal "externalization"
of hard currency while at the finance ministry.
He was convicted on one
charge of breaching the nation's single nationality laws by holding
a Canadian passport found during investigations into the corruption
allegations, a comparatively minor offense carrying the penalty
of a fine.
A sentencing hearing
to determine the fine will be held later, the newspaper said.
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