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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Pressure
on Zim's MDC to share power
Chris
McGreal, Mail & Guardian
June 12, 2008
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=341820&area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__africa/
Zimbabwe's opposition
is under intense political and violent pressure to agree to call
off a second round of presidential elections in a fortnight and
join a coalition government that keeps President Robert Mugabe in
power.
Morgan Tsvangirai, the
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) leader, won the first round
of elections in March but narrowly failed to win an outright majority.
He has rejected any deal that leaves Mugabe in office, and says
there can be no agreement on power sharing before a run-off vote.
But there is concern
among some opposition politicians that, if the MDC insists on taking
power, the government will use escalating state-sponsored violence
as a pretext to call off the polls at the last minute and impose
emergency rule.
South Africa President
Thabo Mbeki, former Zambian leader Kenneth Kaunda, and Mugabe's
former finance minister, Simba Makoni, are pressuring Tsvangirai
to accept a deal modeled on the recent post-election "African
solution" in Kenya. This would see Mugabe remain as president
but Tsvangirai become Prime Minister. However, the MDC regards Kenya
as a bad example because the opposition victory was overturned through
violence.
Makoni said that he has
been acting as an informal mediator between the MDC and Mugabe's
Zanu-PF party, along with Mbeki, to press the opposition to agree
to a transitional government, because of rising violence. "In
the current situation, there is no hope that a free and fair election
can be undertaken," Makoni said.
Kaunda has added
to the pressure on Tsvangirai with a public
call for him to accept the post of prime minister under a Mugabe
presidency. "The authority between president and prime minister
must be fairly shared," Kaunda said.
The MDC replied that,
as it is Mugabe who has created the violence and political instability,
it would be perverse to reward him by allowing him to remain president
-- when Tsvangirai should serve as the country's leader during any
transitional government, because he won the first round of voting.
Tsvangirai said that
while the MDC is prepared to accept Zanu-PF into a power-sharing
government, Mugabe has to go and his party must be in a minority.
"The Kenyan model of a government of national unity is not
an option because ... our circumstances are different. The people's
choice must be respected," he said.
But there is fear among
some of Mugabe's opponents that he will use the violence as a pretext
to claim there is too much instability to hold a vote.
The state-run press has
laid the groundwork with an attempt to blame the victims by portraying
the MDC as responsible for the campaign of beatings and killings,
which the opposition says has left at least 60 dead and about 200
missing.
More than 3 000 people
have been treated in hospital after severe beatings, and tens of
thousands have been forced from their homes, as a result of the
violence across Zimbabwe. Tsvangirai said the campaign had been
devastating: "The structure of our party has been decimated
and our polling agents remain prime targets."
On Wednesday, Mbeki described
the violence as a "serious concern" that needs to be addressed
by regional leaders. The South African president has angered the
MDC by declining to specifically identify the government as instigating
the attacks.
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