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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Senegalese
leader slams Zim unity move
Fiona
Forde, Basildon Peta and Hans Pienaar, Independent Online
July 03, 2008
http://www.int.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=2646&art_id=vn20080703060742510C653686
Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt
- Senegalese President Abdoulaye Wade says calling for a government
of national unity doesn't go far enough in addressing Zimbabwe's
crisis. He has also questioned President Thabo Mbeki's role as mediator.
In an interview with
Independent Newspapers in the Red Sea resort town on Wednesday,
Wade said "limiting opinion at the intervention point"
in calling for negotiations - without any reference to the recent
botched poll - was not the right thing to do.
"Because (President
Robert Mugabe) will get back as a president, full president, the
chief of the police, of the army. And, on the other side, you have
half of the population. They will fight. And we (the African Union)
will be responsible for not taking the correct measures."
However, the 82-year-old
leader said he would support the plan mapped out for the country
and assist where he could. While he is not formally putting himself
up for the job of mediator, he said, unlike Mbeki, he had good relations
with both Mugabe and rival Movement for Democratic Change leader
Morgan Tsvangirai and had an understanding of the crisis, after
years of negotiating on the sidelines.
"I have told Mugabe
that I will not be involved in official mediation, but call me any
time. I am waiting. I will help."
During a briefing in
Harare on Wednesday, Tsvangirai called Mbeki's role as mediator
into question by calling for an AU envoy to intervene and accusing
the South African president of bias after years of failed intervention.
Wade said that in the
recent past he had told Mbeki that "Tsvangirai is not confident
with you" and had expressed the same concern to Mugabe.
He also said the Zanu-PF
leader had told him that "Mbeki is a friend, of course, but
I am not accepting what he wants".
Wade said evidence of
that came to light when he received a call from Tsvangirai a day
before Friday's sham election. The MDC leader sought advice about
a last-minute offer the Mbeki delegation had made in a bid to stop
the violent poll.
"They offered him
a position of executive prime minister, but they said they had not
yet met Mugabe."
Tsvangirai declined,
as did Mugabe. The AU has now called on the two rivals to sit down
and negotiate what Mbeki failed to facilitate.
However, Tsvangirai insists
that a government of national unity (GNU) "doesn't address
the problems facing Zimbabwe or acknowledge the will of the Zimbabwean
people".
Wade has appealed to
both sides to begin to talks immediately about a GNU. He believes
it is the only solution to a situation where Mugabe and Tsvangirai
both have half the population behind them and the country is divided
along battle lines.
MDC spokesperson Nelson
Chamisa said on Wednesday night the party was ready for talks and
had laid down its conditions. He said the MDC would give the Mugabe
regime a "two-week window" in which to meet the conditions.
A South African government
source said exploratory discussions would start at three different
places and would likely focus initially on reducing the violence.
Tsvangirai said in Harare
on Wednesday that violence was continuing as Zanu-PF sought retribution
against voters who did not turn out for Friday's runoff or spoilt
their ballot papers. So, for now, a GNU would not be on the agenda.
"A GNU doesn't address
the problems facing Zimbabwe or acknowledge the will of the Zimbabwean
people," Tsvangirai declared in response to an AU resolution
calling for a GNU.
After the AU summit in
Sharm el-Sheikh, Mbeki said on SABC TV that Mugabe had not objected
to the AU's request for dialogue.
"He said they were
committed to that and that indeed, even as we were sitting at the
meeting, the Zimbabweans were interacting among themselves."
Mbeki described Mugabe
as "fully supportive" of co-operation and dialogue between
Zimbabwe's political parties to find a solution to their challenges.
AU President Jakaya Kikwete,
who is also president of Tanzania, said in Egypt on Wednesday that
talks led by the Southern African Development Community would begin
"as soon as possible" and "will move very quickly".
Although he declined
to put a time frame on a final deal, he said he would expect "to
see movement by the end of the year".
Kikwete said neither
Mugabe nor Tsvangirai had expressed any objection to him personally
and that he did not expect them to do so.
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