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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Morgan Tsvangirai: 'I will have to trust Mugabe'
Basildon
Peta, The Independent (UK))
September
14, 2008
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/morgan-tsvangirai-i-will-have-to-trust-mugabe-929876.html
Zimbabwe's opposition
leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, due to become Prime Minister under a
compromise deal with his old adversary, Robert Mugabe, has defended
the agreement. He says he has no choice but to trust the man who
presided over the deaths and torture of hundreds of his supporters.
Speaking exclusively
to The Independent on Sunday, Mr Tsvangirai said: "When you
negotiate, you ought to have faith and confidence in each other.
Otherwise, there is no point in negotiating, because you are bound
to fail. I am therefore giving him [Mr Mugabe] the benefit of the
doubt."
Last week, after months
of pressure from President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa as mediator,
Mr Tsvangirai agreed to work with his arch-enemy under a power-sharing
deal that they are due to sign tomorrow. "My vision is for
transformation and rebirth of this country," he told the IoS.
"I wouldn't have agreed to be part of this deal if it was an
inadequate platform to achieve that vision."
Since he founded the
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) nine years ago, creating the
first effective opposition to Mr Mugabe since independence in 1980,
Mr Tsvangirai, 56, has been bitter rivals with the 84-year-old President,
who has derided him as an "ignoramus", "an uneducated
tea-boy", a "British poodle" and "chematama"
(the one with a fat face). Yet they are now being forced to share
power, despite Mr Tsvangirai's insistence that he would not agree
to Mr Mugabe's position being anything but ceremonial, and the older
man's vow that the opposition would "never" govern.
Earlier this year, after
the MDC defeated the ruling Zanu-PF party in parliamentary elections
and Mr Tsvangirai came out ahead in the first round of the presidential
poll, Mr Mugabe unleashed a wave of violence against the opposition.
The monitoring group Human Rights Watch said Zanu-PF and its allies
had been implicated in at least 163 killings and the beating and
torture of more than 5,000 people. Mr Mugabe claimed victory in
the second round after his opponent withdrew to avoid exposing his
supporters to further violence, but international pressure, and
the collapse of Zimbabwe's economy, forced him to the negotiating
table.
Both sides have agreed
that details of the deal will not be disclosed until tomorrow, but
it has emerged that Mr Mugabe will remain as President and chair
the cabinet. Mr Tsvangirai will become Prime Minister and chair
a "council of ministers" tasked with debating and recommending
policy initiatives to cabinet. According to David Coltart, an MDC
senator, Mr Mugabe will have "greatly reduced powers to those
he enjoys today", while Mr Tsvangirai will have "substantial",
though not "absolute" power.
The complex
power-sharing arrangement has aroused doubts among some of Mr Tsvangirai's
main allies, such as Dr Lovemore Madhuku, chair of the non-governmental
National Constitutional
Assembly. He does not believe Mr Mugabe has shed his tyrannical
tendencies. He called the deal "more of a capitulation by the
MDC than by Zanu-PF". Dr Madhuku, a law lecturer, added: "The
fact that Mugabe remains as head of state with substantial powers
means the MDC will be co-opted as a junior partner."
The MDC leader disagreed,
saying it gave him enough leeway to push through his agenda of reform.
But international donors are unlikely to provide the money needed
to salvage Zimbabwe's economy unless Mr Tsvangirai is seen to exercise
real control. The two sides are due to share out ministries during
talks this weekend.
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