Mugabe threatens to break off talks with opposition
January 19th, 2009 - 12:27 pm ICT by ANI Harare, Jan.19 (ANI): Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe on Sunday threatened to break off power-sharing talks with the opposition, if the latters leader Morgan Tsvangirai declined to sign a deal in their next meeting.
The bitter rivals are set to meet today for talks mediated by South African President Kgalema Motlanthe, who hopes to salvage a unity accord, reports the Sydney Morning Herald.
Ordinary Zimbabweans continue to suffer due to the political stalemate, with half the population dependent on food aid, and facing astronomical levels of hyperinflation. A cholera epidemic is also sweeping unchecked across the country.
“This is the occasion when it’’s either they accept or it’’s a break. We have gone past negotiations and whatever concessions were there to be made have already been made,” Mugabe said in the Sunday Mail newspaper, the government mouthpiece.
The agreement, which was signed in September last year, calls for 84-year-old Mugabe to remain president while Tsvangirai would take the new post of prime minister. But they have yet to agree on how to share power within cabinet despite repeated interventions by African leaders.
Since leaders of the 15-nation South African Development Community (SADC) failed at a November summit to break the impasse, Tsvangirai has spent more than two months outside the country trying to lobby international support.
He returned to Zimbabwe on Saturday, and was meeting with the leadership of his Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) on Sunday to hammer out the party’’s stance ahead of the talks.
The newspaper warned in an editorial that Mugabe could form a government with his ZANU-PF party.
On the other hand, Tsvangirai argues that his party should hold more influence in government, after the MDC won a majority in parliament and he defeated Mugabe during a first-round presidential vote in March.
The result unleashed a brutal wave of political violence, leaving over 180 people dead, mostly MDC supporters, according to Amnesty International. (ANI)
- Zimbabwe becoming a police state: Tsvangirai - Mar 19, 2011
- Mugabe fighting for life in Singapore hospital? - Apr 10, 2012
- Over a quarter of voters on Zimbabwe's electoral rolls 'are dead' - Jan 22, 2011
- UN offered lucrative retirement package to Mugabe: Wikileaks - Dec 19, 2010
- Zimbabwe police fire tear gas to disperse prayer meeting - Apr 10, 2011
- Zimbabwe's central bank to lay off 85 percent of staff - Aug 29, 2010
- Zimbabwe lacks funds to organize elections: Finance Minister - Apr 27, 2011
- SADC says Zimbabwe impasse over, MDC calls claims malicious - Jan 27, 2009
- SADC backs Mugabe over powersharing; to assist Congo Army - Nov 10, 2008
- Zimbabwe may impose treason charges against PM Tsvangirai over Wikileaks revelation - Dec 28, 2010
- SADC 'disappointed' at Zimbabwe, calls for Congo ceasefire (Lead) - Nov 09, 2008
- North Korea's Zimbabwe warm-up match called off after protests - Jun 01, 2010
- Mugabe back home as officials deny reports of his illness - Aug 26, 2009
- IMF restores Zimbabwe's voting rights after seven years - Feb 20, 2010
- Zimbabwe President Mugabe threatens to "crush" opposition ahead of early polls - Dec 20, 2010
Tags: african leaders, astronomical levels, bitter rivals, cholera epidemic, democratic change, food aid, hyperinflation, morgan tsvangirai, political stalemate, political violence, president robert mugabe, presidential vote, robert mugabe, south african president, sunday mail, sydney morning herald, unity accord, zanu pf, zimbabwe president robert mugabe, zimbabweans