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Jubilant MDC takes key speaker post in Zimbabwe parliament
Monsters
and Critics
August 25, 2008
View article on the Monsters and Critics website
Harare - In a landmark
victory for Zimbabwean opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, the
candidate of his Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) won the vote
for speaker of parliament Monday giving the party control of the
key post for the first time.
The MDC's Lovemore Moyo
took 110 votes against 98 for Paul Themba Nyathi, the only other
candidate, who was fielded by a breakaway MDC faction led by Arthur
Mutambara.
President Robert Mugabe's
Zanu-PF did not put up its own candidate and backed Nyathi.
'The MDC is a people's
party. Once again the people have spoken,' George Sibotshiwe, spokesman
for Tsvangirai told Deutsche Presse- Agentur dpa jubilantly.
The announcement of Moyo's
win sparked joyful scenes among MDC MPs in parliament, who sang
and cheered 'Zanu is rotten.'
A defiant Moyo in his
acceptance speech said parliament would 'cease to be a rubber stamping
house. It'll ensure that progressive laws are passed.'
Of most concern to Mugabe
are strong suspicions that one or more of his own party members
went over to Tsvangirai in the secret ballot.
Tsvangirai's MDC has
100 MPs, but only 99 were present for the vote. Zanu-PF has 99,
Mutambara's faction has 10 seats and there is one independent.
Unless all of Mutambara's
MPs voted against their own man - a scenario thought unlikely -
some Zanu-PF members must have switched sides.
A senior MDC source said
the party estimated at least four Zanu-PF members had voted for
Moyo, and that the remaining extra votes came from the Mutambara
faction, which is divided on the prospect of working with Mugabe's
party.
The win could disrupt
Mugabe's plans to convene parliament Tuesday and try to form a government
without Tsvangirai.
'We have control of parliament
now,' the MDC source said. 'We now decide when parliament will sit.
As far as we're concerned the speaker will convene parliament when
there is a president.'
The MDC, the West and
some African countries refuse to recognize Mugabe as president given
that he was returned to power in an election that the MDC boycotted.
Tsvangirai took the most
votes in the last credible presidential election in March.
Earlier the MDC's position
had looked bleak when two of its MPs were detained by police on
arrival at parliament in what the MDC termed Zanu-PF's 'sinister
agenda' to rig the parliamentary vote in its favour.
The two - Shua Mudiwa,
MP for Mutare West and Eliah Jembere, MP for Epworth - were later
released and returned to vote.
Moyo's election strengthens
Tsvangirai's hand in stalled negotiations with Mugabe on the formation
of a government of national unity.
The talks are currently
deadlocked over how Mugabe and Tsvangirai would share power if,
as proposed, Mugabe remains president and Tsvangirai becomes prime
minister in a Kenya-style deal aimed at ending months of political
violence.
The MDC is calling for
Tsvangirai to have control of government. Zanu-PF insists that Mugabe
remain both head of state and head of government.
Mugabe, Tsvangirai and
Mutambara had agreed at the outset of their negotiations in July
not to convene parliament or form a government, 'save by consensus.'
But Mugabe later got
the nod to forge ahead from Zimbabwe's neighbours in the 14-nation
Southern African Development Community (SADC).
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