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MDC getting cold feet?
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Mon, 29 Jun 2009 18:19
Zimbabwe's former opposition party said Monday it would boycott
the next Cabinet meeting and was considering disengaging from a
troubled, four-month-old unity government with President Robert
Mugabe.
The Movement for Democratic Change has complained about
continued harassment and arrests of Mugabe's opponents and his
unilateral appointments of top officials.
Mugabe and Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, bitter rivals,
formed their coalition in February, pressed by neighbors to end a
decade of violent confrontation and work together to resolve the
southern African nation's severe economic crisis.
MDC Vice President Thokozani Khupe said the latest irritant came
Monday, when Mugabe rescheduled the weekly Cabinet meeting from
Wednesday to Monday because he was going to be out of town for an
African Union summit in Libya. At a news conference, Khupe depicted
that as a snub to Tsvangirai, her party's leader, saying he should
have chaired the meeting in
Mugabe's absence.
Mugabe's party "has not welcomed MDC as an equal partner," said
Khupe, a deputy prime minister in the unity government.
Khupe said her party would boycott the rescheduled Cabinet
meeting, but remained "committed to the (coalition) agreement in
the interest of our people" despite "clear evidence of the absence
of a reliable and honest partner."
She did not say when MDC ministers would resume attending
Cabinet meetings.
"It is our constitutional right to consider disengagement," she
said. "It is time toxicity and insanity are removed (from the
coalition)."
The MDC has asked the Southern African Development Community,
which pushed for the coalition government to be formed, to
intervene. It is asking for help in resolving issues such as
Mugabe's appointment of loyalists as the central bank governor and
the attorney general, the arrests of and attacks on independent
rights activists and MDC lawmakers, and the seizures of
white-owned
farms.
Khupe said Mugabe loyalists had also frustrated democratic and
media reforms.
The Southern African Development Community, though, has said it
did not see a reason to step in now.
Tsvangirai was returning Monday from a tour of the West that has
focused new attention on tensions in the unity government.
Mugabe is barred by travel restrictions from visiting the
countries on Tsvangirai's itinerary, and the leaders with whom the
premier had cordial talks - among them President Barack Obama -
accuse Mugabe of trampling on democracy and ruining a once-vibrant
economy.
Zimbabwe's state-run Herald newspaper has reported that some
officials aligned to Mugabe were worried about Obama's reference to
building a new partnership not with the coalition government, but
with Tsvangirai, a former opposition leader who has been beaten and
jailed by Mugabe's regime.
Tsvangirai says his three-week trip was aimed at
re-engaging
with the West, while officials linked to Mugabe have tried to
portray it as an attempt to persuade the international community to
lift sanctions.
In an interview Friday with The Associated Press, Zimbabwe's
Vice President Joice Mujuru, a Mugabe loyalist, expressed
frustration that Tsvangirai's European and U.S. trip didn't raise
as much financial aid as her government had hoped.