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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
'Urgent' need for unity government to avoid starvation: Tsvangirai
Earth
Times
September
27, 2008
http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/234353,urgent-need-for-unity-government-to-avoid-starvation-tsvangirai.html
Zimbabwe's prime-minister-designate Morgan Tsvangirai said Saturday
there was an "urgent" need for the country to form a new
government to prevent starvation amid worsening food insecurity
in the troubled country. Addressing journalists in Harare, Tsvangirai
said: "We need to respond to this crisis with utmost urgency.
It is therefore imperative that a government be formed in the next
few days and begins to implement plans to ensure that our people
have food and do not die of starvation."
He said the country's
industry was operating at about 10 per cent of its capacity.
"Therefore (the
food and manufacturing industry) will not be able to deliver sufficient
supplies to the market in order to contribute to the national food
requirement," said the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC)
leader.
Tsvangirai signed a power-sharing
deal with President Robert Mugabe on September 15 but they are yet
to agree on the distribution of cabinet ministries.
Speaking in New York
earlier this week, Mugabe said that only four ministries had still
to be agreed on.
Tsvangirai hinted the
divisions were greater.
"I think to minimize
the remaining issues to only four issues, it is to underplay the
whole process. The issue is that the negotiation must be concluded.
I think the matter will be solved once all the principals are back
in the country."
Mugabe was in New York
for a a UN General Assembly session and is expected back in the
coming days.
Zimbabwe's economy is
caving in following a near decade of disastrous policies that are
blamed for widespread food shortages and inflation, officially put
at 11.2 million per cent, but estimated to be several times that.
Over 5 million people, nearly half the population, is expected to
need food aid by January.
Tsvangirai said food
security experts told him that the country needed to import 800,000
tonnes of maize to avoid starvation before the next harvest in April
2009.
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