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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Southern
African summit on Zimbabwe stretches into following day
VOA News
April 12, 2008
http://voanews.com/english/Africa/Zimbabwe/2008-04-12-voa22.cfm
An extraordinary summit
of the Southern African Development Community lived up to its billing
as regional leaders discussing the post-election crisis in Zimbabwe
remained behind closed doors well past midnight Saturday without
issuing a communiqué on the two-week delay in issuing results
of the country's March 29 presidential election.
Observers speculated
that the delay signaled a fierce debate between those reluctant
to issue in effect a reprimand to Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe,
and regional peers who might feel that the time had come to set
aside longstanding loyalties to the man who once provided a redoubt
to South African fighters battling apartheid.
There seemed little doubt
that South African President Thabo Mbeki was prominent in the former
group: on his way to Lusaka he stopped in Harare for discussions
with President Mugabe following which he declared that "there
is no crisis" in Zimbabwe and suggested that inconclusive election
results might necessitate a runoff ballot.
Mr. Mugabe was conspicuously
absent from the summit, having dispatched three ministers in his
place. A senior Zimbabwean official said the summit was unnecessary.
Regional leaders received
a briefing from opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, whose formation
of the Movement for Democratic Change insists that he won an outright
majority in the presidential election. Also on hand was former finance
minister Simba Makoni, a presidential candidate and former Mugabe
aide believed to have run a distant third in the ballot.
SADC Chairman and Zambian
President Levy Mwanawasa, who called the summit on short notice,
made clear in opening remarks that he, unlike Mr. Mbeki, believes
the situation in Zimbabwe constitutes a crisis and requires regional
intervention.
Mr. Mwanawasa voiced
concern that the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission has still not released
presidential results two full weeks after the elections, and also
took the high court to task for failing to address the matter with
dispatch, leaving, as he put it, "our Zimbabwean brothers and
sisters.in the dark" as to who won the election.
Earlier, director Earnest
Mudzengi of the National Constitutional Assembly, a leading non-governmental
organization, was critical of President Mugabe's absence.
Zimbabwean activist Jenni
Williams, national coordinator of the Bulawayo-based Women of Zimbabwe
Arise, urged regional leaders to speak sufficiently strongly to
force the Harare government to divulge the results of the election.
University of Zimbabwe
Professor John Makumbe, often critical of Mr. Mbeki's "silent
diplomacy" on Zimbabwe, told reporter Marvellous Mhlanga-Nyahuye
of VOA's Studio 7 for Zimbabwe that Mr. Mbeki stopped in Harare
for instructions from Mr. Mugabe.
British Prime Minister
Gordon Brown said the international community was running out of
patience with Mr. Mugabe, though he said world leaders are remaining
careful not to jeopardize an outcome that reflects the will of the
Zimbabwean people.
From Washington, Freedom
House Deputy Programs Director Daniel Calingaert said his organization
is optimistic the summit can point the way forward, but is also
a test of the regional organization's capacity to solve problems
and promote democracy.
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