ZWNews.com ZWNews.com
home Media Centre Get Involved Letters Contact Us
Issues
 
POLITICS
ECONOMY
THE LAND
RULE OF LAW
CORRUPTION
HUMAN RIGHTS
ENVIRONMENT & TOURISM
DRC

Serach ZWNews.com
advanced search


HIVOS!

Sokwanele

SW Radio Africa
The independent voice of Zimbabwe
 
Studio7
 
SW Radio Africa
 
Zimonline
 
Zvakwana
 

help page
SW Radio Africa
The independent voice of Zimbabwe

help page
Thursday 2 September, 2010   HEADLINES
Zimbabwe rivals in new talks to end deadlock print friendly version  
author/source:Independent (UK)
published:Tue 25-Nov-2008
posted on this site:Tue 25-Nov-2008
Article Type : News
A basket of issues that have to be tackled
By Muchena Zigomo

Zimbabwe's political rivals will meet in South Africa today for talks to end a political deadlock, amid mounting pressure from regional leaders for a deal to prevent the humanitarian crisis becoming still worse. Negotiators from President Robert Mugabe's ruling Zanu PF party, the opposition Movement for Democratic Change and a breakaway MDC faction will meet former South African President Thabo Mbeki to discuss a draft constitutional amendment paving the way for a new government. Mbeki has been reviewing the draft law, which many in the southern African country hope will usher in a new government to end a crippling economic crisis that has seen inflation soar to more than 230 million percent. The MDC has refused to enter government, accusing Zanu PF of trying to take the most powerful ministries and freeze it out, violating a Sept. 15 power-sharing deal.

Talks on forming a cabinet have been deadlocked for two months. The power-sharing agreement may unravel if Mugabe names a cabinet without MDC agreement, jeopardising what is seen as the best chance of reversing a decade of gradual economic collapse. The MDC had threatened to boycott Tuesday's meeting, but said on Monday it would attend the talks and aim to address all the issues stalling an agreement. "Our team, consistent with the duty and obligation to represent the people, will attend tomorrow's meeting in South Africa," spokesman Nelson Chamisa told Reuters. "We will not accept any parochial and reductionist approach that seeks to impose only one item, the constitutional amendment on us. We all know there is a basket of issues that have to be tackled collectively."

back to top
Zimbabwe's parties will have little to tell Zuma as Mugabe once again digs in his heels
Cape Times (SA) Wed 31-Mar-2010
New charges for Roy Bennett
Times (SA) Wed 31-Mar-2010
Zimbabwe artist granted bail after Matabeleland exhibit
BBC News Wed 31-Mar-2010
Zimbabwe journalist interrogated over land scandal story
APA (France) Wed 31-Mar-2010
Parliamentarians probing Zimbabwe diamond field abuses hit corporate barrier
VOA News Wed 31-Mar-2010
Another snag for Zimbabwe's stop-and-go constitutional revision process
VOA News Wed 31-Mar-2010
Mugabe's premier struggles for slice of power
Financial Times (UK) Wed 31-Mar-2010
South African facilitators back in Zimbabwe as power-sharing parties miss deadline
VOA News Tue 30-Mar-2010
Zim no go area: German business group
Zim Online (SA) Tue 30-Mar-2010
Afriforum seizes Zim property
Times (SA) Tue 30-Mar-2010