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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Mugabe 'gives Zanu-PF key posts'
BBC
News
October 11,
2008
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7664921.stm
Zimbabwean President
Robert Mugabe has allocated key ministries to his own party - in
defiance of a power-sharing deal,
reports say.
The opposition Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC) said the move had put the deal "in
jeopardy".
The MDC had signed the
power-sharing agreement with Mr Mugabe's Zanu-PF party on 15 September.
But the parties have
been deadlocked in allocating ministries and have called back South
African mediators.
South Africa's former
President Thabo Mbeki was invited back after a meeting on Friday
between Mr Mugabe, MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai and MDC splinter
group head Arthur Mutambara.
'Nonsense'
On Saturday, Zanu-PF
said a list of ministries had been agreed by all the parties.
Bright Matonga, Zanu-PF's
deputy information minister in the previous cabinet, told the BBC
the allocation was very fair.
Zanu-PF takes 14 ministries
and 16 are allocated to the two factions of the MDC, he said.
Mr Matonga said the post
of finance minister had yet to be decided.
But MDC spokesman Nelson
Chamisa said: "This is Zanu-PF's arrogant wish list that puts
the whole deal into jeopardy. It is unilateral, contemptuous and
outrageous.
"Just yesterday
we agreed to call in the facilitator Thabo Mbeki because there was
a deadlock. The MDC totally and absolutely rejects this nonsense."
One of the MDC's key
expectations was that it would get control of the police if Zanu-PF
controlled the army.
Under the deal Mr Mugabe
remains president while Mr Tsvangirai becomes prime minister.
But the deal has so far
failed to ease the country's crippling economic crisis.
Some outlets have been
licensed to sell goods in US dollars
On Thursday, it was announced
that Zimbabwe's annual inflation rate had soared to 231,000,000%.
Meanwhile, the UN says
it needs $140m for food aid over the next six months.
Critics of Mr Mugabe
say he triggered the economic crisis when he began seizing white-owned
farms for land redistribution ahead of parliamentary elections in
2000.
But Mr Mugabe blames
Western sanctions which target him and his chief supporters for
wrecking Zimbabwe's economy.
The crisis worsened after
disputed elections earlier this year. Mr Tsvangirai gained more
votes than Mr Mugabe in March's polls, but not enough for outright
victory.
He pulled out of a run-off
in June, accusing Zanu-PF militia and the army of organising attacks
on its supporters which left some 200 people dead.
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