Mugabe clings to power
Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe addresses a speech, on April 18,
2008 during celebrations for the country's independence. Photograph:
Alexander Joe/AFP
Robert Mugabe reached a deal to form a coalition government with a
minor opposition faction yesterday, in the hope of winning international
legitimacy after talks with his main rival, Morgan Tsvangirai, collapsed
when Zimbabwe's president refused to relinquish power.
Mugabe's agreement with Arthur Mutambara, leader of a breakaway group
from Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change, to form a national
unity administration will give him control of the new parliament. But it
will not open the door to the foreign aid Zimbabwe desperately needs to
stabilise its wrecked economy, collapsing under the weight of inflation
estimated at above 10m per cent.
Britain and other foreign donors have said they will not unlock a
£1bn aid package until Mugabe relinquishes power to Tsvangirai, who won
the first round of presidential elections in March but withdrew from a
run-off contest three months later amid a state-sponsored campaign of
murder, beatings and abductions against his supporters.

Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe addresses a speech, on
April 18, 2008 during celebrations for the country's
independence. Photograph: Alexander Joe/AFP |
The terms of the deal with Mutambara were not immediately clear,
although it is likely that Mugabe offered him the newly created post of
prime minister or a vice-presidency and some cabinet posts. Mugabe,
however, will retain real power.Mutambara's faction holds just 10 seats
in parliament but they represent the balance of power, and will keep
Zanu-PF in control after it lost its outright majority in March for the
first time since independence 28 years ago.
Mutambara is an Oxford-educated robotics professor, who appeared to
look down on Tsvangirai as his intellectual inferior but who failed to
connect with the mass of voters. Mutambara said he would make an
announcement today.
But his move was not unexpected after he made comments strongly
critical of his former leader, and was praised by Mugabe on Monday.
Mutambara also condemned western pressure on Zimbabwe's leader this
week, saying that outsiders had no right to determine who governed his
country.
Sources close to Tsvangirai said three days of negotiations in Harare
mediated by South Africa's president, Thabo Mbeki, ran into the ground
after Mugabe had agreed to appoint Tsvangirai as prime minister but
insisted on retaining ultimate authority over government.
Among the Zimbabwean leader's demands was one that he be the most
senior member of the cabinet.Mugabe also rejected significant
constitutional reform, and insisted that a coalition administration
under his authority serve a full five-year term. Tsvangirai wanted an
interim government of about two years before new elections.
"Mugabe wanted Tsvangirai as a ceremonial prime minister. There was
never any serious intent by Mugabe to give up power," said a source
close to the negotiations.
"There is no future for these talks unless the facilitator [Mbeki] is
able to come forward with proposals that demonstrate a change in
Mugabe's position."Last night Mugabe's supporters were attempting to
blame Tsvangirai for the failure of the negotiations, accusing him of
storming out of the talks when they did not go his way. The MDC said
Tsvangirai left when the meetings were finished.
Mbeki has persistently talked up the prospects for a deal between the
two main rivals for power. He had arrived on Sunday predicting an
agreement within the day, in the hopes that a new government and
parliament would be installed this week, permitting Mbeki to claim a
great success at a regional heads of government summit in Johannesburg
this weekend.
-AFP |