Mugabe must back down, says rival

Mugabe must back down, says rival
By Basildon Peta in Johannesburg and Daniel Howden

HARARE - Morgan Tsvangirai, Zimbabwe's opposition leader, has refused to be
pushed into a deal that would leave Robert Mugabe in effective control of
the country.

The man regarded by many as the president-elect said Mr Mugabe

would have to cede power before any agreement on a government of national

unity would be possible.

Claims from the Mugabe camp that it had divided the opposition appeared to

be unfounded.

Mr Tsvangirai said his rival must back down or negotiations would collapse,

a source close to the talks told The Independent. Mr Tsvangirai walked out

of talks late on Tuesday night after South Africa’s President Thabo Mbeki,

who is mediator, tried to push him into an agreement that would have made

him prime minister in name alone, leaving executive power in the hands of

President Mugabe.

Mr Tsvangirai, who won more votes than his rivals in a March election, is

demanding executive powers be transferred to a prime ministerial position

before he will sign up to any deal. He has come under intense pressure from

three sides, as Arthur Mutambara, the leader of a smaller opposition

faction, has joined Mr Mbeki and Mr Mugabe in pushing for the 84-year-old

President to hold on to as much power as possible. The Mugabe regime is

determined to retain control of the security services while leaving Mr

Tsvangirai to sort out the devastated economy.

There is increasing anger in the impoverished nation over the role of Mr

Mutambara, who has positioned himself closer to the Mugabe camp in a bid to

get a government role despite his lack of popular support. He failed to win

a seat at the election and his faction has only 10 MPs. While he stopped

short of saying he had signed up to the Mugabe plan, yesterday he called on

Mr Tsvangirai to make concessions for the good of the country.

A senior official in Mr Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change said

there was a major disagreement on the section of the draft agreement – drawn

up with the South Africans – dealing with the powers of the prime minister

to appoint, chair and run cabinet issues as executive head of government.

The wording of that section would have reduced the post of premier to that

of ceremonial status, preserving Mr Mugabe’s enormous power.

The source said Mr Tsvangirai raised serious objections but his rival would

not concede and denied that the talks had collapsed, saying the opposition

leader would return to the negotiations when the Mugabe camp changed its

position.

“They have only collapsed in the sense that there won’t be a deal before

Mbeki leaves as originally planned,” said the source.

“They have only collapsed in the sense that the deadline for a deal has not

been met. But they have not collapsed forever because there is still room

for more dialogue and a consensus can still be reached if Mugabe reconsiders

his stance. The ball is in his court. There is no way we can budge on this

fundamental issue [configuration of powers].”

Attempts by Mr Mbeki yesterday to spin the MDC leader’s departure as a

period of consultation with his party was denied. The MDC maintains that Mr

Mugabe can remain as head of state only if he concedes actual power.

Any deal is supposed to be endorsed by all three parties but this does not

preclude Mr Mugabe and Mr Mutambara from doing their a separate deal outside

the current mediation. Mr Mutambara is understood to be pushing for a

position of deputy prime minister in a new government, but if he abandons

the main opposition leader to land the job he is likely to be reviled by

much of the country.

Any such agreement would also hand a slim parliamentary majority to Mr

Mugabe and his ruling Zanu-PF party but it would do nothing to deliver the

massive external aid needed to refloat the economy. Mr Tsvangirai’s main

strength is his clear backing from the international donor community. – tHE

Independent

Post published in: News

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