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Zimbabwe Rivals Sign Power-Sharing Agreement (and link to Agreement text)

by Bill <williamgates@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sep 16, 2008 at 12:33 AM

Zimbabwe Rivals Sign Power-Sharing Agreement 

By CELIA W. DUGGER and ALAN COWELL 
Published: September 15, 2008 

HARARE, Zimbabwe — After more than 28 years of unbroken power, 
President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe signed an agreement with the 
opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai on Monday to divide the 
responsibilities for running the troubled country. 

While many of the pieces of the long-awaited deal remained either 
unresolved or unannounced, Mr. Tsvangirai said the agreement “sees the 
return of hope to all our lives.” 

Despite questions about how the agreement would be implemented after so 
much acrimony and hostility between the two men, Mr. Mugabe said: “We 
are committed to the deal. We will do our best.” 

Opposition sup****ters at the ceremony in a conference center at a 
Harare hotel celebrated the signing and were jubilant when Mr. 
Tsvangirai appeared, hooting and applauding. Among the audience were 
many opposition workers who had gone into hiding in the run-up to the 
election in March or been beaten in government-sponsored violence over 
the last eight years. 

Godknows Nyamweda, 36, a local ward councilor here in Harare, rolled up 
his sleeve to show the scars where he said he had been sliced by a 
knife. 

“I came to make sure my big fishes have not betrayed me and to make 
sure I’m walking in a free country,” he said. 

There was still an undercurrent of fear that that the repression could 
yet return with a vengeance, and some people were afraid to be quoted 
by name. 

The crowd also repeatedly cheered the presence of Botswana’s president, 
Seretse Khama Ian Khama, clapping and chanting, “Khama, Khama, Khama.” 
He has been Mr. Mugabe’s harshest critic in the region, refusing to 
recognize the legitimacy of his election. 

Western diplomats were studying the text of the deal to see how power 
will actually to be divided. Western nations are wary of pouring 
billions of dollars into Zimbabwe for its reconstruction unless they 
are convinced that Mr. Tsvangirai has the authority he needs to change 
economic policies they believe have been calamitous for the country. 

The arrangement was reached after weeks of negotiations that opened in 
July. The negotiations followed a season of contentious elections, 
scarred by bloodletting and intimidation, which the opposition blamed 
on the government. Mr. Tsvangirai claimed victory in the first round of 
elections in March. But he boycotted a presidential runoff in June, 
citing political violence, leaving Mr. Mugabe as the sole candidate. 

Despite the violence and bad feelings between the two sides, the sight 
of Mr. Mugabe, Mr. Tsvangirai and a second opposition leader, Arthur 
Mutambara, clasping hands beside Thabo Mbeki, the South African 
president who mediated the deal, prompted some participants to suggest 
that Zimbabwe’s fortunes might have changed after years of autocracy 
and economic chaos. 

Mr. Tsvangirai said a sense of hope “provides the foundation of this 
agreement that we sign today that will provide us with the belief that 
we can achieve a new Zimbabwe.” 

For his part, Mr. Mugabe seemed far less accommodating, using a speech 
after the signing ceremony to renew his accusations that Britain, the 
former colonial power, and the United States were responsible for 
Zimbabwe’s problems. 

“African problems must be solved by Africans,” he said. “The problem we 
have had is a problem that has been created by former colonial power. 
Why, why, why the hand of the British? Why, why, why the hand of the 
Americans here? Let us ask that.” 

Mr. Tsvangirai, often labeled an agent for the British in the state 
media, said in his own remarks that it was time for Zimbabwe to open up 
to international donors — Britain and the United States among them — 
who were seeking to feed the multitude of hungry Zimbabweans. 

The moment was another milestone in Zimbabwe’s political history. 

Almost three decades ago , Mr. Mugabe, leader of the political party 
that claimed the loyalty of the biggest of two guerrilla armies 
fighting white minority rule in the country, formerly called Rhodesia, 
was brought only reluctantly to negotiate a peace deal in 1979 rather 
than press for a military outcome. 

Some years later, Mr. Mugabe struck a unity agreement with a fellow 
nationalist leader, Joshua Nkomo, that led to Mr. Nkomo’s political 
eclipse. 

Mr. Tsvangirai said his commitment to the agreement showed that “my 
belief in Zimbabwe and its peoples runs deeper than the scars I bear 
from the struggle” — a reference to the beatings he received in 
detention. 

The full details of the agreement seemed unclear. Introducing the 
signatories, Mr. Mbeki, the South African leader who staked much 
political and diplomatic capital on negotiating the accord, referred to 
Mr. Mugabe as president, Mr. Tsvangirai as prime minister and Mr. 
Mutambara as deputy prime minister. 

As the two sides have negotiated over power, Mr. Tsvanigrai has sought 
control of the police, which he believes were involved in a campaign of 
violence against his sup****ters during the election. 

Mr. Mugabe dwelled in his speech on the role in negotiating a 
settlement played by Zimbabwe’s neighbors, referring back to the days 
when a belt of southern African lands bordering the last bastions of 
white rule in Africa called themselves “frontline” states and sup****ted 
liberation movements, including those in Zimbabwe. 

“They have come to our assistance once again,” he said. 

Mr. Mugabe reserved his main credit for the deal for Mr. Mbeki, 
describing his mediation as “noble work.” 

Talking about the negotiations that led to the agreement, Mr. Mugabe 
also said there were “lots of things in the agreement that I don’t 
like, and still don’t like.” 

However, he said, “we are all Zimbabweans and is there any other road, 
any other route to follow? History makes us walk the same route.” 

With Zimbabwe’s economy virtually collapsed and inflation running at 
more than 11 million per cent, the new government in Zimbabwe is likely 
to need huge financial sup****t from some of those outside powers Mr. 
Mugabe blamed so vehemently for its woes. 

And some of those outsiders remained skeptical about the implementation 
of the agreement. 

David Miliband, the British foreign secretary, echoed a European Union 
statement linking aid to reforms. 

“The new government needs to start to rebuild the country,” Mr. 
Miliband said in a statement. “If it does so, Britain and the rest of 
the international community will be quick to sup****t them.” 

Celia W. Dugger re****ted from Harare, Zimbabwe, and Alan Cowell from 
Paris. Graham Bowley contributed re****ting from New York. 

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/world/2008/09/0915_Zimbabwe_A
greement.pdf
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Zimbabwe Rivals Sign Power-Sharing Agreement (and link to Agreem
Bill <williamgates@[EM  2008-09-16 00:33:50 

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