The regional summit – whose date is still to be announced – comes
after the 15-member bloc’s security Troika failed last week to pressure
President Robert Mugabe and opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai to reach
agreement on the composition of a new power-sharing government.
 South African President and current chairman of SADC Kgalema Motlanthe will chair the extraordinary summit, according to the diplomats, who did not
want to be named.
     “South Africa as the current chairperson of the regional body is
almost certain to host the crisis meeting on Zimbabwe,” said one of the
diplomats. “Although Mozambique is the current chairperson of the Troika, it
has been found necessary that the head of the regional organisation chairs
the meeting.”
     The diplomat who is privy to the Zimbabwe power-sharing negotiations
also said that prospects of the deal being reached before year-end were
good.
     “We do not want this issue to be taken to the UN (United Nations),
this is an African problem and we do not want it to go out of the region. We
do not even want the African Union to have anything to do with it.”
     Mugabe, Tsvangirai and another opposition leader Arthur Mutambara
agreed to form an all-inclusive government under a September 15
power-sharing deal that retains Mugabe as president while making Tsvangirai
prime minister and Mutambara deputy prime minister.
     Analysts see such a power-sharing government as the first step to
ending decade-long food shortages and economic crisis in Zimbabwe. But six
weeks after agreeing to share power political leaders are yet to form a
unity government because they cannot agree on who should control the most
powerful ministries.
     The United States last week voiced concern over delays to form a unity
government in Zimbabwe and put the blame squarely on Mugabe who it said was
refusing to share power genuinely and equitably as outlined under the
power-sharing accord.
ZimOnline
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Post published in: News

