| |
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
opposition reunites
Stephen Bevan, The Daily Telegraph (UK)
January 26, 2008
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/01/27/wzimb127.xml
The two warring
factions of Zimbabwe's main opposition party, the Movement for Democratic
Change, have agreed to reunite and back a single election candidate
against President Robert Mugabe. Under the plan, Morgan Tsvangirai,
the party's leader, would be their presidential candidate in the
elections that Mr Mugabe announced on Friday would be held on March
29. Both factions of the MDC have been calling for the elections
to be postponed until after the introduction of a new constitution,
which has already been agreed between their negotiators and the
ruling Zanu PF party. They also want a new and independent electoral
commission and voters' roll, and the redrawing of electoral boundaries
- moves that, they say, are essential for free and fair elections.
However, Mr Mugabe has refused, accusing the opposition of being
unwilling to face him at the polls. His decision to bring the election
date forward will be the final nail in the coffin of mediation
efforts between the MDC and Zanu PF, undertaken by South Africa's
President Thabo Mbeki. The MDC will formally decide whether to take
part at the end of this week, when its supreme decision-making body,
the national council, meets.
Meanwhile, however, the
two sides, one led by Mr Tsvangirai, the other by Professor Arthur
Mutambara, have reached broad agreement on reunification in the
face of fierce repression and deteriorating living conditions. Roy
Bennett, the white former MP who is treasurer of the main faction
of the Tsvangirai-led MDC, confirmed that they had reached agreement
on all but a few issues. "It will be a united front that faces
any election, if we go into the election," he said. "Most
of the fundamentals have been agreed to." Another senior official
in the Tsvangirai faction, speaking anonymously, said it was a done
deal. "We have agreed to reunite but we can't say officially
because there are certain processes that have to be gone through,"
he said. The MDC split in 2005 when Mr Tsvangirai brushed aside
its national council and decided not to take part in elections to
Zimbabwe's senate. In February 2006, the breakaway faction elected
Prof Mutambara as its president. However, he was unable to turn
the breakaway MDC into a credible electoral force in its own right
and it has steadily lost support. Gabriel Chaibva, spokesman for
the Mutambara group, said: "There is willingness to chart the
way forward as one party adopting one candidate."
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
|