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Tsvangirai calls for urgent assistance
IRIN
News
September
15, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=80368
Morgan Tsvangirai, invested as Prime Minister of Zimbabwe as part
of a power-sharing deal
with his bitter rival, President Robert Mugabe, called for international
support to help the raise the country off its economic haunches
at the signing of the agreement in the capital, Harare.
The deal, mediated by South African President Thabo Mbeki, will
see Tsvangirai, leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change, share executive powers with Mugabe in the first dilution
of Mugabe's powers since he assumed the presidency in 1980, when
the country won its independence from Britain.
Mugabe will remain executive president and chair cabinet, as well
as the National Security Council - also known as the Joint Operations
Command (JOC), the country's overarching security body that includes
the chiefs of the army, police, and Central Intelligence Organisation,
the feared secret police. Mugabe, or his party, ZANU-PF, will also
appoint two vice-presidents.
Tsvangirai, as executive prime minister, will chair a Council of
Ministers and hold the post of deputy chairperson of the cabinet,
as well as being a participating member of the National Security
Council. Tsvangirai will appoint a deputy prime minister, while
an MDC faction will see its leader, Arthur Mutambara, appointed
as a second deputy prime minister.
Mbeki said there were still outstanding details to be finalised.
"Some discussions have already started about the constitution
of this inclusive government, [but] they have not yet concluded.
I am confident that they will do so as soon as possible."
Zimbabwe, once prosperous, faces an economic meltdown in which inflation
is officially estimated at more than 11 million percent, unemployment
is above 80 percent, there are shortages of food, electricity, fuel
and foreign currency, and the UN forecasts that more than five million
of the country's 12 million people will need food assistance in
the first quarter of 2009.
Appeals for help
Tsvangirai, who introduced himself in his speech as "I, the
Prime Minister of Zimbabwe," said, "A new beginning will
be built more quickly with support from the international community.
"We are grateful for the support you have shown us over the
past nine years, and we appeal to our regional neighbours, our African
brothers and sisters and the international community to assist us
in rebuilding our nation, to assist us to address problems facing
our society, our education and health care systems, and our economy.
"The first priority
of the government is to unlock the food already in our country and
distribute it to our people. We need doctors and medicines back
in our hospitals, teachers back in our schools.
"We need businesses
that can grow and provide jobs to the people; we need electricity
again to power our businesses and homes; we need water that is safe
and accessible; we need affordable food in our shops, crops in our
fields, and petrol back in our vehicles; we need to be able to access
our own cash from our banks. We need to stabilise our economy and
restore value to our currency.
"The international
aid organisations came to help our country and found our doors locked,"
Tsvangirai said. "We need to unlock our doors to aid."
Despite the humanitarian
crisis engulfing the country, aid organisations were banned from
operating for nearly three months during a violent election campaign
that led to the presidential ballot, which Mugabe won as the sole
candidate, and was widely condemned as flawed.
Tsvangirai's call for
unity at the signing ceremony went unheeded outside the Harare hotel
venue, where rival groups of supporters engaged in running battles
that were eventually brought under control by baton-wielding riot
police.
Tsvangirai said, "I
have signed this agreement because I believe it represents the best
opportunity for us to build a peaceful, prosperous, democratic Zimbabwe.
I have signed this agreement because my belief in Zimbabwe and its
peoples runs deeper than the scars I bear from the struggle. I have
signed this agreement because my hope for the future is stronger
than the grief I feel for the needless suffering of the past years."
While Tsvangirai read
from a prepared speech and offered words of conciliation to his
rival - "the hand with which I sign this agreement is the hand
I extend to President Robert Mugabe," - Mugabe spoke off the
cuff, did not acknowledge Tsvangirai, and repeated the theme that
Zimbabwe should be wary of the imperialist designs of the former
colonial power, Britain, and the US.
"We must resist
those who want to impose their own will on us," Mugabe said.
"Zimbabwe is a sovereign country. Only the people of Zimbabwe
have the fundamental right to govern it; they alone will set up
government, they alone will change it."
"Why, why, why the
hand of the British? Why, why, why the hand of the Americans here?
Let us ask that. Let us not ignore the truth as we move forward,
we must accept reality," he said to jeers from opposition members
and supporters in the audience.
Mugabe has consistently
claimed that the MDC was a front for Western powers, and although
he did not specifically mention the MDC in his speech, this claim
is a well-known theme.
Oxfam, the international
aid agency, said in a statement that it was "not an option"
to delay aid. "The international community must provide support
and assistance to the new coalition government," said Charles
Abani, Regional Director of Oxfam in Southern Africa.
"Assistance must
be carefully coordinated and managed, so that very weak state institutions
are not overstretched. Zimbabwean civil society must also be included
in a transparent process."
Investment in agriculture
was key, the statement said, as farmers required fertilisers and
seeds to prepare for the November planting season. "The international
community must not just throw money at this problem, then walk away
and say, 'job done'. Zimbabwe needs a long-term plan, built on partnership
and shared responsibilities, and supported by long-term, predictable
aid from international governments," Abani said.
Sanctions
not lifted
However, the council
of European Union members states, which has imposed a raft of "smart
sanctions" against the country's ruling elite for alleged human
rights abuses and undemocratic practices, was reportedly adopting
a wait-and-see approach before lifting any of the punitive measures
instituted against Mugabe's government.
In a statement, the council
welcomed the power-sharing deal and said it would "pay close
attention to its implementation, which will imply the immediate
end to all forms of intimidation and violence", and that it
would "examine the development of the situation at its next
meeting" on 13 October.
"All discussion
on [EU] sanctions, more or less, is on hold until we see the details
of the deal, and until we see the deal translated into action on
the ground," British foreign minister David Miliband said.
Dominique Strauss-Kahn,
head of the International Monetary Fund, was reported as saying
on Monday that the Fund was ready to hold talks with the country's
leaders.
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