Text Only
Search

South African President Meets with Mugabe

05 July 2008

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe (L) is pictured with South African President, chief regional negotiator Thabo Mbeki (R) and an unidentified member of the dissident MDC delegation, 05 Jul 2008
Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe (L) is pictured with South African President, chief regional negotiator Thabo Mbeki (R) and an unidentified member of the dissident MDC delegation, 05 Jul 2008
South African President Thabo Mbeki has met with Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe to try to help end Zimbabwe's political crisis.

Mr. Mbeki also met Saturday with leaders of a breakaway faction of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change Saturday, however the main opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, declined to participate in the meeting.

A spokesman for the opposition said the party is waiting for the African Union to join the mediation efforts. The MDC has criticized Mr. Mbeki's mediation bid as being biased in favor of President Mugabe.

Mr. Mbeki told reporters after Saturday's meeting that he wanted the negotiations to move quickly.

A Zimbabwean government official criticized Tsvangirai for skipping the meeting, saying it showed a lack of respect.

Morgan Tsvangirai in Harare, 19 Jun 2008
Morgan Tsvangirai in Harare, 19 Jun 2008
Tsvangirai withdrew from Zimbabwe's June presidential runoff election because of what he called systematic violence against his supporters.

In other developments, a British newspaper says secret footage taken at a Zimbabwean prison shows how a supporter of President Robert Mugabe rigged the country's June 27 runoff election.

The film obtained by the Guardian newspaper apparently shows ruling ZANU-PF party officials forcing officers at Harare central jail to cast their ballots for Mr. Mugabe.  It also shows a prominent leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, Tendai Biti, in leg irons.

Separately, The Washington Post newspaper reports Saturday that Mr. Mugabe initially planned to give up power after losing the first round of the election. 

The Post, citing sources at a key meeting, says military officials convinced Mr. Mugabe to remain in power by using the army to rig a runoff election.

Zimbabwe's government has not commented on either report.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
Hidden Camera Footage Shows 'Vote-Rigging' in Zimbabwe
Back From AU Summit, Mugabe Sets Terms For Power-Sharing Talks With Opposition
Facing Suspension, Zimbabwe Cricket Withdraws From 2009 Tourney
Zimbabwe Police Said To Be Seeking Opposition Parliamentarians
 
  Top Story
G-7 Nations Agree on Financial Action Plan  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
US, India Sign Civilian Nuclear Accord  Audio Clip Available
Suicide Bomber Kills at Least 30 in Pakistan's Northwest  Audio Clip Available
Obama Responds To McCain Character Attacks  Audio Clip Available
NATO to Target Opium Network Funding Taliban  Audio Clip Available
Russian Troops Withdraw from Georgia, But Is It Enough?  Audio Clip Available
Rice in Top-Level Consultations on North Korean Nuclear Impasse
19 Killed in Southern Peru Suspected Shining Path Attack
Asia's Markets Follow Wall Street With Panic Selling  Audio Clip Available
Obama, McCain Stress Bad Economy
Former Finnish President Martti Ahtisaari Wins Nobel Peace Prize  Audio Clip Available
Turkish Air Strikes Target Kurdish Rebels in Iraq
Petraeus: Serious Ethnic Challenges Loom in Iraq  Video clip available
Israeli Police Deploy in Coastal Town After Jewish-Arab Clashes  Audio Clip Available
South Korea Says North's Nuclear Compromise May Be Near  Audio Clip Available
Financial Crisis Not Changing West African Desire to Migrate to US  Audio Clip Available
Nigerian Oil Workers to Strike  Audio Clip Available
As Election Day Approaches, US Presidential Contenders Trade Charges in TV Ads  Video clip available