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Zimbabwe
Christian churches reject Mugabe victory
MacDonald
Dzirutwe, Reuters
July 15, 2008
http://ca.reuters.com/article/topNews/idCAL1567545720080715?sp=true
Zimbabwe's Christian
community on Tuesday rejected President Robert Mugabe's re-election
last month as marred by violence and intimidation and said it would
support a government of national unity
In a statement
obtained by Reuters, the heads of all the churches in the predominantly
Christian country said the contest between Mugabe and opposition
leader Morgan Tsvangirai was marred by the worst violence since
independence in 1980.
Tsvangirai pulled
out of a run-off ballot last month, citing a campaign of intimidation
and killings by Mugabe supporters that Western governments said
made his re-election illegitimate.
U.S. President
George W. Bush said on Tuesday he was disappointed Russia and China
had vetoed broader sanctions against Mugabe and other Zimbabwean
officials, but said the United States might impose tougher penalties
of its own.
In their statement,
the Zimbabwean churches said they were "ready and committed
to partner with all efforts that will result in a transitional authority
and subsequently a government of national unity, to bring peace
stability and reconciliation within the nation."
The Heads of
Christian Denominations said torture, murder, abductions, displacement
and psychological trauma had fatally undermined the election.
"Our conclusion
is that the will of the people of Zimbabwe was not given authentic
expression during these elections," they said, adding that
the violence was continuing.
Mugabe, aged
84 and in power since the end of British rule, blames the opposition
for the bloodshed.
Framework for talks
Tsvangirai has
demanded the government halt attacks on his supporters as one of
several pre-conditions to negotiating with Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF.
Preliminary
talks between Tsvangirai's MDC, a smaller faction of the party and
ZANU-PF appear to have stalled despite the efforts of South African
mediators to get all three to agree to a framework for more substantial
negotiations.
An opposition
source said on Tuesday the talks would resume on Wednesday.
Tsvangirai won
the most votes in the first round but fell short of the absolute
majority needed to avoid a second ballot.
He wants an
African Union envoy to be appointed to help mediate talks, something
South African Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister Aziz Pahad rejected
on Tuesday.
South Africa
and other AU members are pressing Mugabe and Tsvangirai to accept
a power-sharing deal similar to the one that ended post-election
violence in Kenya earlier this year.
African leaders
see a unity government as the way to avert a spread of violence
and total economic collapse in Zimbabwe, which has the world's highest
inflation rate, estimated at more than 2 million percent, and chronic
food and fuel shortages.
The National
Civil Society Assembly, which represents 30 civil groups in Zimbabwe,
said on Tuesday it would support a transitional government only
if it was headed by someone who was not a member of ZANU-PF or the
MDC.
It also wants
the mandate of a transitional government to be confined to drafting
a new constitution, reforming state institutions and preparing for
fresh elections after 18 months.
(Additional
reporting by Muchena Zigomo in Pretoria and Jeremy Pelofsky and
Sue Pleming in Washington; Writing by MacDonald Dzirutwe and Paul
Simao; Editing by Andrew Dobbie)
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