Text Only
Search

S. Africa's Mbeki In Wings As Zimbabwe Power-Sharing Stalls


03 October 2008
Interview With John Makumbe - Download (MP3) audio clip
Interview With John Makumbe - Listen (MP3) audio clip

Despite a deepening economic and humanitarian crisis, Zimbabwe on Friday still lacked the cabinet required to put a power-sharing national unity government in place.

Delays in launching what is called an "all-inclusive" government may have been extended by the resignation of former South African president Thabo Mbeki under pressure from his own ruling African National Congress. After days of uncertainty, Mbeki through a spokesman confirmed Friday he will continue to mediate Zimbabwe's fragile power-sharing process.

Negotiators for ZANU-PF and the two formations of the Movement for Democratic Change were expected to meet on Saturday in an effort to break a week-long deadlock on the allocation of key cabinet posts.

However, Secretary General Tendai Biti of the MDC formation led by Morgan Tsvangirai, the prime minister-designate, said he knew of no scheduled negotiating session.

Top officials in President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF party say the only key ministry that they are willing to consider handing over to the MDC is Finance. They say Foreign Affairs is off limits and Home Affairs has been allocated to a member of the former ZAPU party which ZANU-PF absorbed in the late 1980s after post-liberation bloodletting.

Nor is Local Government up for discussion, ZANU-PF sources say.

MDC officials for their part say only Mbeki, who mediated the power-sharing deal out of an equally tenacious impasse, is in a position to break the deadlock over cabinet appointments. But caretaker Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa insists Mbeki’s help is not needed.

Political analyst John Makumbe, a professor at the University of Zimbabwe, told reporter Blessing Zulu of VOA's Studio 7 for Zimbabwe that ZANU-PF is negotiating in bad faith and that no portfolio should be considered off the table in negotiations.

More reports from VOA's Studio 7 for Zimbabwe...

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

  Top Story
US Army Charges Alleged Fort Hood Shooter with Premeditated Murder

  More Stories
Obama Promises Strategy, Clear Mission, Public Support For Troops  Audio Clip Available
Kremlin Calls for Sweeping Modernization of Russia  Audio Clip Available
Union Says Zimbabwe Farm Workers Worst Abused Sector in Past 10 Years  Video clip available
Obama Begins First Presidential Trip to Asia  Audio Clip Available
Obama to Hold Jobs Summit in December   Audio Clip Available  Video clip available
Reports: US Ambassador to Kabul Expresses Caution About More Troops  Audio Clip Available
APEC Ministers say Economic Recovery Fragile  Audio Clip Available
Clinton Vows Support for Philippine Typhoon  Recovery, Anti-Terrorism Fight  Audio Clip Available
US Leaders May Interact With Burmese at Singapore Summit  Audio Clip Available
N. Korea Says South Will Pay 'Expensive Price' for Naval Clash
China Rejects Human Rights Watch Report on Black Jails
Thasksin Delivers Speech in Phnom Penh
Sri Lanka Military Chief Resigns  Audio Clip Available
As Alleged Fort Hood Shooter Recovers, New Questions Arise  Video clip available
Pakistan Seeks Role in US-Afghan Policy
Obama's Middle East Strategy Stalls
Zimbabwe Land Seizures Reportedly Intensify  Audio Clip Available
First Recorded Dengue Fever Epidemic Hits Cape Verde  Audio Clip Available
Paisley, Swift Winners at CMA Awards  Audio Clip Available