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Tsvangirai tells of frustration at rate of change in Zimbabwe

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Published Date: 17 August 2009
ZIMBABWE prime minister, Morgan Tsvangirai, has voiced his frustration at the sometimes slow pace of change in the new power-sharing government.
As president Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF party this weekend accused Mr Tsvangirai of reneging on the coalition agreement by failing to get sanctions lifted, the premier told The Scotsman that he's worried that tensions between rival political parties cou
ld stand in the way of free and fair elections due to be held in 18 months.

But Mr Tsvangirai stressed his commitment to a controversial power-sharing deal that, he says, has "restored the hopes of the people".

Sitting under a mango tree in the eastern city of Mutare yesterday, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) leader insisted the deal had brought peace to a country wracked by nearly a decade of economic and political turmoil.

"It's frustrating that some of the issues are not moving as fast as we would wish," he said. "But overall I think that the inclusive government has achieved stability."

Zanu-PF and the MDC are set to go head-to-head in a crunch meeting today. The MDC is unhappy that Mr Mugabe is refusing to budge on the appointments of central bank chief Gideon Gono and attorney general Johannes Tomana, alleged to be behind the recent prosecutions of several MDC MPs.

Zanu-PF's top decision-making body, the politburo, has told Mr Mugabe to take Mr Tsvangirai to task on the issue. Asked about his relationship with the president, whose police brutally beat him on the head at a prayer rally in 2007, Mr Tsvangirai said the pair were trying to co-operate. "I think we have tried at a personal level to reduce competition and concentrate on trying to ensure that this inclusive government does not slide back," he said.

He added that remnants of mistrust were only natural "among people who had been polarised for so long".

In the past six months Zimbabwe has changed almost beyond recognition. Month-on-month inflation is now 0.6 per cent (previously, annual inflation topped 500 billion per cent) and once-empty shop shelves are stuffed with South African imports. In a highly-significant move, Mr Tsvangirai was saluted by army chiefs at last week's Defence Forces Day celebrations.

He said he was optimistic – "I'm very positive: you can't restore hope by being sceptical" – but also spoke of his fears for the future.

"We have to make sure there's no reversal of democratic reforms; that there's progress as we move towards an election," he said. "I'm also worried that if there are any incidents of this tension, in 18 months' time, will we be in a position of holding a free and fair election? We must have that election."







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  • Last Updated: 16 August 2009 11:03 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Zimbabwe
 
1

,

17/08/2009 04:46:13
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
2

fife runner,

17/08/2009 05:12:54
# very naive
3

Ben Thehoose,

17/08/2009 08:02:54
From the breadbasket of southern Africa to basket case in one Presidency. Well done Mugabe. Even Gordon Brown hasn't quite managed that here. Yet.
4

Mike S,

17/08/2009 09:08:31
#2 I agree; with Mugabe's track record why would anyone trust the leopard to have changed it's spots. Anyone naive enough to trust Mugabe should not be a leader just as Brown naively trusted Blair to deliver.
5

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 17/08/2009 09:36:30
Broon will be girding his loins to rush in and impose "democracy" like in Afghanistan. Not. Because O'Bampot hasn't told him to do that yet (no oil) and it wouldn't be right to invade an African country and so expose yourself as racist/colonialist/non-PC - delete as appropriate. i.e. a vote loser which is all he ever cares about.
6

oder,

Scotland 17/08/2009 09:55:08
you have shown great naivety in getting into bed with
the devil,it was never going to be acceptable to the world at large, the only man who new Mugabe well was Ian Smith but the world wouldn't listen.

Leopards`s are mighty hunters they dont destroy their own lair. Mugabe is the equivalent of a Hyena they to have spots that dont change, parasite and scavenger are a more apt description.

 

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