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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Zimbabwe ruling party dismisses opposition call for fresh elections
Peter
Clottey, VOA News
September
08, 2008
http://www.voanews.com/english/Africa/2008-09-08-voa2.cfm
President Robert Mugabe's
ruling ZANU-PF party has dismissed as frivolous and an affront to
Zimbabweans calls by the leader of the main opposition for fresh
elections. Morgan Tsvangirai of the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) is challenging President Mugabe to fresh elections
under international supervision, which he predicts he would win.
Tsvangirai added that his MDC would rather quit the stalled power-sharing
talks than sign an unsatisfactory deal, which he claimed would be
detrimental to the opposition.
George Mkwananzi
is the deputy chairperson of the National
Constitution Assembly. He tells reporter Peter Clottey from
South Africa's capital, Pretoria, that Tsvangirai's call will meet
stiff resistance from both President Mugabe and Southern African
Development Community (SADC), a regional body.
"Let me start by
saying that there is nothing wrong on the part of the MDC or its
president to demand this, particularly by upping their stakes in
these negotiations. But as far as I can see that is a demand that
is likely to meet very stiff resistance not only from ZANU-PF and
Robert Mugabe, but also from the SADC region, which thinks that
it has everything under control. It has recommended that negotiations
under the facilitation of Thabo Mbeki (South Africa's President)
must continue and believe that the negotiation will produce a settlement
for Zimbabwe," Mkwananzi noted.
He said the regional
body would not be pleased with the demand of opposition leader Morgan
Tsvangirai.
"They (SADC) would
feel that they are being undermined, they are being bypassed and
there is no confidence that is being expressed on their abilities
and capacities to bring a solution for the crisis in Zimbabwe. So,
that is the major stumbling block for such a call," he said.
Mkwananzi said President
Mugabe could name his cabinet this week despite strong opposition
from the MDC, which has said such a move would erode any gains made
at the stalled peace negotiations in South Africa.
"Yeah, Mugabe is
an old and stubborn fellow. He can go ahead and pout together a
cabinet after all he has nothing else to lose, except to save his
face by appearing to be brave and in charge. So, he can actually
go ahead and do that in spite of the consequences, which he knows
very well that it would mean a deepening of the crisis, it would
mean the skyrocketing of prices it would mean the inflation getting
worse and worse. He can still go ahead in spite of all these things,"
Mkwananzi pointed out.
He said former Zambian
President Kenneth Kaunda's call for both sides in the Zimbabwe political
crisis to bury the hatchet might fall on deaf ears.
"I don't
think it is a fresh call because that has been a call from everybody.
I don't think Robert Mugabe respects Kaunda that much for him to
begin to take such a call seriously because if you know they were
never really good friends even during the time of the liberation
struggle. He (Kaunda) was more of Nkomo ZAPU man. So, I don't think
it adds any dimension to the current calls by other people on this
issue," he said.
Mkwananzi said the opposition
could put the ruling ZANU-PF party under pressure in order to be
taken seriously.
"I believe if the
MDC can actually accompany their talks for the demand for fresh
elections supervised by the international body, if it can be accompanied
by very strong mass action, if they can mobilize people in Zimbabwe
and make that country ungovernable, then they would be able to force
Mugabe to take them seriously, and in fact would be forced to take
the talks seriously, and they would concede," Mkwananzi noted.
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