Zimbabwe's Tsvangirai seeks SADC pressure on Mugabe

Mon Oct 19, 2009 4:17pm GMT
 

By MacDonald Dzirutwe

HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabwean Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai will meet regional leaders this week to put pressure on coalition partner President Robert Mugabe to settle disputes in the unity government, a senior aide said on Monday.

Tsvangirai said on Friday his Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) party would disengage from Mugabe's "dishonest and unreliable" ZANU-PF party in the unity cabinet set up in February.

Political analysts say the MDC's decision may not mean the end of the power-sharing government but it will put pressure on the Southern African Development Community (SADC), the regional body under whose auspices former South African President Thabo Mbeki brokered a settlement in Zimbabwe last year.

The MDC boycott has created the country's most serious political crisis since the formation of the new administration. Mugabe's spokesman George Charamba said on Sunday Mugabe would chair a cabinet meeting on Tuesday without the MDC.

The SADC said Tsvangirai would meet Mozambican President Armando Guebuza, who chairs the SADC's political panel on defence and security, on Tuesday in Mozambique.

An aide told Reuters Tsvangirai would travel this week to the Democratic Republic of Congo for a meeting with President Joseph Kabila, chairman of the SADC, to urge the body to force Mugabe to honour the power-sharing agreement signed last year.

"He (Tsvangirai) will be meeting SADC leaders, including Jacob Zuma (South Africa) and Jose Eduardo dos Santos (Angola)," said the aide, who refused to be identified.

"We are doing all this to explain to the region the problems affecting the unity government. They (SADC) are the guarantors of this agreement."   Continued...

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