The Long and Winding Road: Towards a free and fair electoral system

Speech given by Senator David Coltart
Law Society Summer School: Troutbeck
14th November 2008

I am grateful to Beatrice Mtetwa, President of the Law Society, for giving me a blank cheque today to speak about our electoral system.

You may say that this is useless, since cheques are all but worthless in Zimbabwe at the moment. Nevertheless, I will seize the opportunity to dream a bit with you today – to speak about some of the measures we still need, in my view, to ensure that the citizens of Zimbabwe are able to elect the people they believe are best suited and qualified to run the country.

As we discussed this morning, the last eight years presents a very sorry picture of our electoral environment.

Between 2000 and 2006, as Legal Secretary of the MDC, I was responsible for bringing all the electoral cases during that period. I brought some 38 challenges to the 2000 Parliamentary election. I brought Morgan Tsvangirai’s challenge to the March 2002 Presidential election. Yet, records show that by the 2005 Parliamentary election, not a single case had concluded with the overturn of a result. By the time of the 2008 Presidential election, Morgan Tsvangirai’s case was also not concluded. The same applies to the 2005 Parliamentary election – electoral cases were brought but not a single one was successful. These farcical delays and other issues have brought the entire electoral and judicial system into disrepute.

There are two lessons to be learnt from this.

First, in the overwhelming majority of cases, the complaint of the losing candidate had little to do with the electoral law per se. The problem was violence and the State’s unwillingness to deal with it. In other words, it doesn’t matter how good one’s electoral laws and systems are if violence is allowed to pervade the atmosphere, the process will not be free and fair and the will of the electorate will be subverted.

Second, much depends on the quality and independence of the judges rather than the electoral law. Several of the 2000 cases were fought in the High Court. Several of these cases resulted in fine judgements. However, when appeals were lodged by the losing Zanu PF defendants, the Supreme Court’s delay in setting the matters down and shocking dereliction of duty meant that these cases were never finalised. In the 2005 case, Mangoma v Mutasa, Justice Makarau handed down an excellent judgment, finding that food had been used as a weapon. However, she was then constrained by a serious flaw in the electoral system which required her to establish its material effect on the election which the learned Judge felt she could not do.

The point is that much depends on the quality of the judges. Research has shown that too much plasma TV affects one’s judgment. If the Courts are to play a meaningful role in the future, there will be a need to reform the judiciary to ensure that our benches are occupied by professional, independent and competent judges rather than politicians. In other words, it doesn’t matter how good one’s electoral laws and systems are, if they are not adjudicated upon by an independent judiciary.

In this situation, those laws simply provide a smokescreen of fairness which hides the harsh reality. This is illustrated by the changes to the law since 2000. There have been obvious improvements to our electoral laws since 2000. We have seen the introduction of translucent boxes; voting on one day; counting of votes at the polling station; posting of results outside the polling station and a minimum period of six months within which to hear cases.

These have all helped. However, as shown in June 2008, it is all absolutely worthless in the face of massive violence and a biased Electoral Commission.

We need a sea change in an approach to determining who is entitled to vote. The liberation cry of “one man (person), one vote” has been totally undermined by ZANU PF’s exclusive policy on voter registration. We need to change from an exclusive to an inclusive policy.

An exclusive policy does everything to exclude people from being on the voter’s roll. For example, one has to apply to go on; one has to prove residence by providing letters from chiefs etc; vast powers given to Electoral officials to arbitrarily remove one from the voter’s roll; there are very exclusive and restrictive citizenship laws.

In other words, the entire system is designed to make it difficult to register and
difficult to vote – this is the negation of the principle of “one person, one vote”.

What must be done to reform our Electoral legislation?

1. We need a change in citizenship provisions. Both present laws and those envisaged in the so-called Kariba Constitution (agreed to in September 2007 by the Zanu PF and MDC negotiators) are very restrictive. In essence, we need to respect a fundamental birth right – if one is born in Zimbabwe and at least one parent was lawfully resident in Zimbabwe at the time of birth, then one should be entitled to become a citizen.

We also need to take into account the deleterious consequences of both the liberation war and the events of the last eight years. If one was born outside Zimbabwe to at least one parent who was forced to live outside the country because of political circumstances, he or she ought to be entitled to citizenship by descent.

In other words, we must open up the number of people eligible to become citizens.

2. We must change registration procedures. Mudede boasts about his computerised registration system of births and deaths. He is correct in one sense; it is potentially a very good system. However, it has been subverted. We need to change the laws to ensure that every person who is born in Zimbabwe or who acquires citizenship either through registration or descent will automatically be placed on the voter’s roll upon reaching 18. In other words, one will not need to apply to be registered, it will be done automatically.

To ensure that a person’s address can be included for delimitation purposes, we should create an obligation on schools to submit address details to the Registrar General’s office of every child who turns sixteen. In the absence of this, we could us the address of birth as a default address solely to determine which constituency a person will be registered in.

We could also shift the onus for removal. If the Registrar General or anyone else wants to remove a person from the voters’ roll, the onus should be on the Registrar General to bring an application to the High Court, including personal service on the specific individual, to remove that person. The State must also fund the legal expenses of the Respondent to ensure that people are given every chance to remain on the voters’ roll.

3. We need to create a genuinely independent Electoral Commission. For all the claims that the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission is independent, the objective evidence shows that it is not. Until there is a genuinely neutral procedure regarding selection, it will remain a biased body. However, we do not wish to replicate Tsvangirai’s definition of an independent commission.

Instead, we need an expanded selection committee which will include political parties, churches, civic organisations and to create a “long list” from these areas. The constitution should proscribe minimum qualifications including gender, integrity, objectivity (not held office) and maturity. Those initially selected should be put before a public, televised hearing before a Senatorial select committee. Those approved by Senate should be presented to the President for selection from a “short list”. The President should then select a prescribed number from the “short list”.

4. We must prohibit the use of State resources in an election campaign. For example, the use of helicopters, ZRP, ZESA, police etc.

5. We must have mandatory public debates for the Presidential election.

6. Finally, there must be a zero-tolerance approach to violence. Violence and the threat of violence has been the single reason why our elections have not been free and fair for the past several decades. Until we totally snuff it out, it will continue to raise its ugly head. We need a specific provision in our law which will state that the moment any violence or threat of violence is established objectively by a court at any stage of the electoral process by any person, that this will void the election.

Some will argue that this is an impossible standard, but it is not. Why should Africa have a different standard to the rest of the world? Finnish elections in 2007 were obviously peaceful, as was the recent election of Barack Obama. It is possible.

We have a severe illness in our country. Our nation needs peculiar and harsh medicine to cure itself from the disease. Until we take this step and move from paying mere lip service to the principle of non-violence, we will never ensure that the citizens of Zimbabwe are able to choose the people they believe are best suited to run the country.

The Law Society has a major role to play. We have a unique opportunity to argue that these principles be part of the Constitutional reform process envisaged over the next 18 months in terms of the 15th September 2008 agreement.

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Robert Mugabe to form government ‘as soon as possible’

The Telegraph
By Sebastien Berger And Peta Thornycroft in Johannesburg
10 November 2008

The opposition Movement for Democratic Change had been demanding control of the home affairs ministry, but a Southern African Development Community (SADC) summit in Johannesburg at the weekend said the post should be shared.

“We will try to institute it as soon as possible,” said the octogenarian leader, who has presided over the destruction of the economy of his country, where millions of people need food aid.

The MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai will be invited to submit names for inclusion in the cabinet, added Zanu-PF’s chief negotiator Patrick Chinamasa. “Whether he will respond positively or not only time will tell,” he said.

The opposition is now faced with a stark choice, either walking away from the agreement signed in September – which it has previously said it would not do – or give in, and join a government in which it would clearly be the junior partner.

It is yet another negotiating coup for Mr Mugabe, who has demonstrated his ability to out-manoeuvre opponents time and again over the decades.

The MDC spokesman Nelson Chamisa said: “Our position as of now is that a false settlement is riskier than no settlement,” adding that the party leadership would meet on Friday to consider developments and decide on “the future of the dialogue process”.

David Coltart, an MDC Senator, added: “This is highly unsatisfactory. For me it is not so much how the cake cuts but how it is eaten. Everything in Zimbabwe is disastrous.”

Britain condemned the summit’s conclusions, with Gordon Brown’s official spokesman saying: “The international community is quite clear that it expects an equitable agreement on the allocation of ministries between Zanu-PF and the MDC.”

But signs of fatigue over the issue are beginning to emerge among the SADC leaders – only five of the organisation’s 15 members were represented at the head of state level at the summit, with the MDC’s biggest supporters, Botswana and Tanzania, only sending their vice- president and foreign minister respectively.

Sources said that the MDC had lost sympathy within the gathering when it sought to re-open all ministerial allocations, having previously said that home affairs was the key sticking point.

Meanwhile. the Global Fund to fight Malaria, Aids and Tuberculosis yesterday announced that it had approved grants for programmes in Zimbabwe totalling $169m (£107m) over two years.

After a dispute over its money being made available to recipients, with the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe holding on to millions of pounds’ worth of foreign exchange for several months, the fund said it would delay putting the grants into effect “until it has agreement on a way of channelling cash that will not enable any interference by the government at all”.

“This may prove difficult in the current political environment,” said its spokesman Jon Liden, “so nobody should hold their breath about when these grants become active”.

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Robert Mugabe to form government ‘as soon as possible’

The Telegraph
By Sebastien Berger
10 November 2008

Robert Mugabe, the president of Zimbabwe, said he would form a new government “as soon as possible” yesterday, after his neighbours backed him over the country’s deadlocked power-sharing agreement.

The opposition Movement for Democratic Change had been demanding control of the home affairs ministry, but a Southern African Development Community (SADC) summit in Johannesburg at the weekend said the post should be shared.

“We will try to institute it as soon as possible,” said the octogenarian leader, who has presided over the destruction of the economy of his country, where millions of people need food aid.

The MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai will be invited to submit names for inclusion in the cabinet, added Zanu-PF’s chief negotiator Patrick Chinamasa. “Whether he will respond positively or not only time will tell,” he said.

The opposition is now faced with a stark choice, either walking away from the agreement signed in September – which it has previously said it would not do – or give in, and join a government in which it would clearly be the junior partner.

It is yet another negotiating coup for Mr Mugabe, who has demonstrated his ability to out-manoeuvre opponents time and again over the decades.

The MDC spokesman Nelson Chamisa said: “Our position as of now is that a false settlement is riskier than no settlement,” adding that the party leadership would meet on Friday to consider developments and decide on “the future of the dialogue process”.

David Coltart, an MDC senator, added: “This is highly unsatisfactory. For me it is not so much how the cake cuts but how it is eaten. Everything in Zimbabwe is disastrous.”

Britain condemned the summit’s conclusions, with Gordon Brown’s official spokesman saying: “The international community is quite clear that it expects an equitable agreement on the allocation of ministries between Zanu-PF and the MDC.”

But signs of fatigue over the issue are beginning to emerge among the SADC leaders – only five of the organisation’s 15 members were represented at the head of state level at the summit, with the MDC’s biggest supporters, Botswana and Tanzania, only sending their vice- president and foreign minister respectively.

Sources said that the MDC had lost sympathy within the gathering when it sought to re-open all ministerial allocations, having previously said that home affairs was the key sticking point.

Meanwhile. the Global Fund to fight Malaria, Aids and Tuberculosis yesterday announced that it had approved grants for programmes in Zimbabwe totalling $169m (£107m) over two years.

After a dispute over its money being made available to recipients, with the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe holding on to millions of pounds’ worth of foreign exchange for several months, the fund said it would delay putting the grants into effect “until it has agreement on a way of channelling cash that will not enable any interference by the government at all”.

“This may prove difficult in the current political environment,” said its spokesman Jon Liden, “so nobody should hold their breath about when these grants become active”.

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Robert Mugabe forces Zimbabwe aid agencies into cash crisis

The Telegraph
By Peta Thornycroft in Harare
Last Updated: 1:07AM BST 19 Oct 2008

Aid agencies have accused Robert Mugabe of cutting their lifeline to millions of starving Zimbabweans after he imposed sweeping new bank restrictions which have made it impossible for them to finance their operations.

In a bid to stop speculators profiteering on the wide gulf between the official and black market exchange rates, the Zimbabwean reserve bank has cancelled the inter-bank money transfer system used by businesses and aid agencies to move cash around.

With daily cash withdrawals limited to Z$50,000 a day – worth just £1.20 given Zimbabwe’s current soaring inflation rate – it has become impossible for relief workers to make the large payments necessary to buy and distribute food or pay staff wages.

The banking restriction came despite a warning last week by the United Nations that nearly one third of Zimbabwean under-fives were now malnourished, and that nearly half the population would depend on emergency food aid by next year.

“We cannot get money from the banks to pay people to distribute the food, it is as simple as that,” said the operations manager of one of the top three distributing agencies, which has been working in Zimbabwe for the last 16 years.

“We can’t pay our staff hotel bills, or buy food for our field workers, or even advertise for people we need to hire to distribute food,” he said. “We have enough food in the warehouse to ensure no one starves, and we have enough money in the bank to finance our operations, but the Reserve Bank (of Zimbabwe) will not give us access to it.”

The aid agencies spoke out as power sharing talks between Mr Mugabe’s ruling Zanu PF party and the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, led by Morgan Tsvangirai, appeared to be on the verge of collapse.

Mr Tsvangirai is refusing to give way to Mr Mugabe’s insistence that Zanu-PF should remain in control of the home affairs ministry, which controls the security forces widely blamed for intimidating and killing MDC supporters following elections earlier this year.

“The (powersharing) agreement is rubbish,” one Western diplomat told The Sunday Telegraph. “It is a pathetic agreement and it was only a question of time before it collapsed, as Zanu PF has no intention of abiding by any of its conditions.”

Both sides have now asked the Southern African Development Community to intervene in the talks mediated by former South African president Thabo Mbeki, and will meet in Swaziland tomorrow.
Mr Mugabe banned all non-governmental organisations (NGOs) from working in rural areas after he lost the first round of the presidential elections to Mr Tsvangirai.

He claimed NGOs had been handing out food to supporters of Mr Tsvangerai, and only allowed them to resume their work in August.

The Zimbabwean central bank cancelled inter bank transactions – known as the Real Time Gross Settlement system – on the orders of its governor, Gideon Gono, who is viewed as the president’s personal banker and widely regarded as the most powerful man in the country after Mr Mugabe.
Critics accuse him of diverting public money to support Mr Mugabe’s ruling Zanu PF party and of fuelling the current inflation crisis by printing banknotes.

When he cancelled inter bank transfers, he made no exception for humanitarian agencies. Now, like the rest of the population, they are struggling to operate in a country where cash devalues so fast that every supplier demands instant cash payment.

“We have workers stuck in hotels which have no food because they have no cash to buy food,” said a worker with one agency. “Every bit of foreign money we bring in to the country has to go through the Reserve Bank.

“You would think the government or the welfare ministry would ease our way, be happy we were feeding the people, but instead they make it impossible for us to work.”

The chaos caused by the government’s latest inept efforts to rein in hyperinflation can be seen outside any bank or building society, where queues to withdraw money last from dawn to dusk, and where grown men often weep if they are turned away as darkness falls.

A senior civil servant, who queues nearly every day to withdraw his government salary in amounts equivalent to £2.20 each time, said: “We come here at six in the morning. We eat nothing before we leave, we eat nothing during the day, we have no water to drink – and then sometimes we go home without money because the bank has run out of cash.”

Last week the United Nations in Zimbabwe took the issue up with the Reserve Bank, but to no effect so far.

“We don’t want to believe that this is deliberate,” said the chief executive of one of the largest donor organisations in Zimbabwe.

Eric Matinenga, an MDC MP for a rural constituency 150 miles south of Harare, said: “My constituency is in a desperate state and people are in a very bad way. I was not aware of this. We have to go to parliament about this.”

MDC Senator David Coltart, from the country’s second city, Bulawayo, said he has had a harrowing week in his urban constituency. “The food shortage is catastrophic,” he said.

“There are HIV Aids patients on anti-retrovirals who have not had adequate food supplies for two months and some of them are at death’s door. There are probably 25,000 others in my constituency alone also at death’s door.

“One tall woman who weighed 75kg in January is now down to 43kg. I see this every day. About two million people need food now, and it will be five million by January. The situation is absolutely critical.”

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Mimicking Mugabe: Zimbabwe’s false democratic project

New Zimbabwe.Com
By Mthulisi Mathuthu
Posted to the web: 18/10/2008 13:11:08

AS THE curtain slowly comes down on one of the vilest regimes of our time, it seems easy to cast President Robert Mugabe as a failed politician who blew a sure thing – veering off from being a gentleman of international standing into a petty tyrant.

Opposite this fallacy is the uncomfortable home truth: Mugabe is a successful and consistent politician who sought, got and kept power by any means necessary.

The magic behind this was a calculated combination of hate, bloodletting and deception which make it possible that in the post-Mugabe era, he will remain ‘the climate’ for many years to come.

So neat and tight has been this interplay that even his erstwhile masters in Whitehall and White House have had the embarrassment of scooping the egg off their faces.

One of the most dangerous legacies that Mugabe seems sure to leave behind and will continue for many generations to come is his ubiquitous quarrelsome brand of politics underlined largely by violence, hate, propaganda, obtuse scholarship and bootlicking.

If what has been happening in Zimbabwe in the last eight years is anything to go by, it seems clear that even when the veteran dictator finally goes or dies and the walls of Jericho finally come crumbling down, there won’t be any change at all and the Zimbabwe we seek will remain a dream. Instead, the new masters will just replace the current ones and march into the palace with their bootlickers, praise-singers, shock-troops and the other hangers-on in attendance.

Among them will be perfect matches for people like Tambaoga, George Charamba, Happyson Muchechetere, Webster Shamu, Vimbai Chivaura, Claude Mararike, Tafataona Mahoso, Munyaradzi Huni, Caesar Zvayi and other bigots — only that they will be singing for a different master.

A cursory look into the Zimbabwean body-politic will reveal that there are indeed traces of Mugabe’s way of doing business. This is not surprising since as recent as the late 1990’s most of the opposition activists still had the guts to purchase wholesale into Mugabe’s politics despite all the evidence of fascism.

Many people are so angry with Mugabe that they will go to awkward lengths to sound like democrats because they used to sing praises to a malevolent leader.

One of the most illustrative developments of our time has been the split in the MDC and the treatment given to both camps by journalists, analysts, activists and scholars (the lines between these are so thin that you need extra-powerful goggles to see them).

The varying treatment accorded to both Arthur Mutambara and Morgan Tsvangirai camps has underlined how Mugabe has succeeded in planting and germinating his brand of politics across the political architecture that exists in Zimbabwe.

Once the schism occurred in the MDC in 2005, the masters of spin came forth to cast the Mutambara crew as Mugabe’s stooges and Tsvangirai as a democrat.

Personal political miscalculation on the part of Welshman Ncube ceased to be what it was and was diligently commuted to treason. Mutambara is no longer a politician who failed to outmanoeuvre Tsvangirai but is a Mugabe stooge who committed a sin so unforgivable and unimaginable that he must deserve everything bad and cruel.

Human rights activists, lawyers, journalists and scholars from Geneva to Washington are all tumbling over one another in a scramble to be heard first denouncing these upstarts who wanted to derail the freedom train.

Like their opposites in Zanu PF, these scholars have chipped in to sift through all these insults and turned them into points of reference to mean that Mutambara, Davie Coltart, Ncube and Paul Themba Nyathi sold out like Abel Muzorewa and Ndabaningi Sithole.

One way to affirm one’s commitment to the revolution is no longer to attack Sithole but Mutambara and Ncube.

No evidence is required to substantiate the claim that Coltart — a well-up lawyer who spent many years exposing human rights violations, invariably inviting Mugabe’s ire — has now joined the tyrant to derail the march of democracy!

At work here is the kind of scholarship which turned Zanu PF propaganda from Maputo into academic effort, while at the same time concocting eulogies for certain politicians under the pretext of analysis.
Through Mugabe’s rule, we have come to learn that the most dangerous laws in Zimbabwe are unwritten and one of them is that war betides he who tries to oppose the hero of the time for he will soon be gone. A tonne of bricks will be hurled in his direction and those who think alike. They shall all be pulverised and there will be no trace of their remains.

In this way of doing business, democracy means that the gates to heaven will only be open to those who praise the hero of the times always and denounce the villain of the times always; anything else is treasonous and you will be called all sorts of names ranging from CIO through tribalist to nonentity.
As is well known, under Mugabe there can never be debate. The sum total of all this is that Mugabe emerges as having succeeded in fostering among us a culture of bootlicking, labelling, denouncing and blackmail.

A combination of failure to read through Mugabe’s designs and total dishonesty on the part of the electorate and the international community has ensured Mugabe’s success from the attainment of power to the securing his future.

It seems almost certain that Mugabe will not go to Hague for the 1980’s atrocities in Matabeleland. A huge chunk of Africa stands squarely behind him (never mind Khama and Odinga). He has survived everything that has been thrown at him — BBC, CNN, ITV and the entire Fleet Street edifice as a whole — not because of anything but by playing the victim and exploiting the inconsistencies in international politics.

The more the Western media (who shielded him during his 1980’s killings) excoriated him, the more he beat the drums of victimhood to a crescendo and earned himself the ears of many from the developing world.

A man who should have occupied his place in the annals of history as a malevolent tyrant is getting away with a claim to heroism. Yet his intention was never to serve to Zimbabwe but instead Zimbabwe had to serve him in his totalitarian project, and he succeeded.

All those who tried to outflank him are either dead or are in the political wilderness or will soon pay a heavy price. Here is a man who shouldn’t have been anywhere nearer power but should have been a professor of mass communication teaching specifically English, propaganda and public speaking now a few steps from becoming one of the top Africans! (Remember the New African survey?).

Add to that, his ways are commonplace within the Zimbabwean society where the more his victims say they hate him, the more they mimic him!

There won’t be any climate change in Zimbabwe after Mugabe – a political survivor who simply couldn’t lead but could divide and proceed. Witness the sure and undisputed candidate for Hague whistling past the gates of justice to safety.

This, by any standards, is success.

Mthulisi Mathuthu is The New Zimbabwe news editor and can be contacted on e-mail: thuthuma@yahoo.com

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Zimbabwe crisis in quotes

Nehanda Radio
17 October 2008

“We are still in the same deadlock. We failed to agree. ZANU-PF is trying to give us a bicycle without wheels but we are refusing to ride that bicycle,” MDC-T chief negotiator, Tendai Biti.

“We need to be tolerant, patient and lower our expectations. The deal is only three weeks old yet it took Kenya five months to come up with a national unity government,” Senator David Coltart, the legal affairs secretary for the Mutambara-led MDC.

“When the power sharing deal was signed we all celebrated hoping that relief was coming. But nearly a month later nothing has happened and people are getting disillusioned.” Mwenezi East Member of Parliament, Kudakwashe Bhasikiti.

“We also know why his party is demanding the Home Affairs ministry. They held discussions in Pietermaritzburg, South Africa recently but we can’t go into that now.” Mugabe spokesman George Charamba refering to Morgan Tsvangirai.

“Mbeki must not preside over the signing of another half-baked agreement. The future of Zimbabwe over the next five years is at stake. He must hold a private meeting with Mugabe where he should impress upon him the fact that presidents don’t own countries, while citing his own recent experience.” Zimbabwe Times editor Geoff Nyarota.

“I understand the ministry of finance has been settled in favour of the MDC, but proposals on how to handle the ministry of home affairs are still being discussed behind closed doors. We have no details on that.” Unnamed government source speaking to the media.

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Zimbabwe Talks Move Toward Compromise

VOA
By Peta Thornycroft
16 October 2009

Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe has made some compromises over distribution of cabinet portfolios according to the state controlled and owned Herald newspaper Thursday. Peta Thornycroft reports from Harare a partial agreement is expected Thursday after two full days of intense and long sessions of negotiations mediated by former South African president Thabo Mbeki.

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe arrives at hotel in Harare on October 15, 2008 for the second day of talks, which are being mediated by former South African President Thabo Mbeki
At stake for prime minister designate Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the Movement for Democratic Change party, is the ability to run a new government and deliver relief urgently to the people of Zimbabwe.

He signed up to a power sharing agreement last month but it broke down at the weekend when Mr. Mugabe assigned all the security ministries to his ZANU-PF party. ZANU-PF now sits on the opposition benches in parliament following the narrow MDC victory in the March elections.

Tsvangirai has let it be known that he is deeply concerned about the sudden and dramatic upsurge in hunger nationwide, particularly in the south of Zimbabwe.

Several Legislators from the south, in Harare for parliament, said children under five are beginning to die in their rural areas. One legislator said he believes this is the worst food insecurity in living memory in the Matabeleland North province.

Senator David Coltart said Wednesday he is watching people shrivel in front of his eyes in his district in second city Bulawayo.

Food agencies have not yet begun any meaningful distribution of emergency feeding to many areas under threat of mass starvation, as they were banned in June by the government for three critical months from making preparations for emergency feeding. They are now trying to catch up but hunger stalks most of the population which goes to bed hungry at night.

Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) President Morgan Tsvangirai in Harare, 15 Oct. 2008
The pressure therefore is also on Tsvangirai to find a way through the talks to be able to form a government.

The dispute over ministries narrowed in the last day to the crucial ministries of finance and home affairs.

The finance ministry would allow Tsvangirai to control the aid he hopes the west will provide to rebuild the social
welfare ministries he will control.

Home affairs, controls the police. However Mr. Mugabe, with his vast portfolio of powers embedded in the executive presidency, can appoint the commissioner of police even if Tsvangirai has some power over the every day affairs of the large police force.

Several policemen in Harare in bank queues in the last few days said they were hungry, were not paid enough, and did not want to be controlled by Mr. Mugabe.

However the senior ranks of the police, such as those in the army and intelligence services, have been given white owned farms by Mr. Mugabe.

The unlocking of the deadlock declared by Tsvanirai last week will attract both praise and criticism from Zimbabweans. Many of the poor in the streets say they are desperate for a change, any change.

Others say he would be settling for an inferior deal in which he would be providing respectability in the international arena for Mr Mugabe who will continue to wield the real power.

No one , however, seems to have suggestions of any alternative to an attempt at a government of national unity.

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Zimbabwe Talks Move Toward Compromise

VOA
By Peta Thornycroft
Harare
16 October 2008

Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe has made some compromises over distribution of cabinet portfolios according to the state controlled and owned Herald newspaper Thursday. Peta Thornycroft reports from Harare a partial agreement is expected Thursday after two full days of intense and long sessions of negotiations mediated by former South African president Thabo Mbeki.

At stake for prime minister designate Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the Movement for Democratic Change party, is the ability to run a new government and deliver relief urgently to the people of Zimbabwe.

He signed up to a power sharing agreement last month but it broke down at the weekend when Mr. Mugabe assigned all the security ministries to his ZANU-PF party. ZANU-PF now sits on the opposition benches in parliament following the narrow MDC victory in the March elections.

Tsvangirai has let it be known that he is deeply concerned about the sudden and dramatic upsurge in hunger nationwide, particularly in the south of Zimbabwe.

Several Legislators from the south, in Harare for parliament, said children under five are beginning to die in their rural areas. One legislator said he believes this is the worst food insecurity in living memory in the Matabeleland North province.

Senator David Coltart said Wednesday he is watching people shrivel in front of his eyes in his district in second city Bulawayo.

Food agencies have not yet begun any meaningful distribution of emergency feeding to many areas under threat of mass starvation, as they were banned in June by the government for three critical months from making preparations for emergency feeding. They are now trying to catch up but hunger stalks most of the population which goes to bed hungry at night.
The pressure therefore is also on Tsvangirai to find a way through the talks to be able to form a government.

The dispute over ministries narrowed in the last day to the crucial ministries of finance and home affairs.

The finance ministry would allow Tsvangirai to control the aid he hopes the west will provide to rebuild the social
welfare ministries he will control.

Home affairs, controls the police. However Mr. Mugabe, with his vast portfolio of powers embedded in the executive presidency, can appoint the commissioner of police even if Tsvangirai has some power over the every day affairs of the large police force.

Several policemen in Harare in bank queues in the last few days said they were hungry, were not paid enough, and did not want to be controlled by Mr. Mugabe.

However the senior ranks of the police, such as those in the army and intelligence services, have been given white owned farms by Mr. Mugabe.

The unlocking of the deadlock declared by Tsvanirai last week will attract both praise and criticism from Zimbabweans. Many of the poor in the streets say they are desperate for a change, any change.

Others say he would be settling for an inferior deal in which he would be providing respectability in the international arena for Mr Mugabe who will continue to wield the real power.

No one , however, seems to have suggestions of any alternative to an attempt at a government of national unity.

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Zimbabwe cabinet squabble holds up aid

ABC
By Africa correspondent Andrew Geoghegan
Posted Fri Oct 10, 2008 8:33am AEDT

Zimbabwe’s opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), says a deadlock over power sharing arrangements with President Robert Mugabe is plunging the country into deeper economic hardship.

MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai is calling for urgent foreign mediation amid claims that Zimbabwean people will starve if the crisis is not fixed.

Mr Tsvangirai is adamant that his party will have significant power in Zimbabwe’s new unity Government. He wants to take charge of the Home Affairs Ministry, which controls the police, but Mr Mugabe refuses to give it up.

The deadlock means that more than three weeks after signing a power sharing deal, Zimbabwe is effectively still without a government.

Mr Tsvangirai is calling on former South African president Thabo Mbeki to resume his role as mediator.
The deadlock has delayed any economic relief and Zimbabweans are now desperately trying to feed themselves as inflation moves beyond 230 million per cent.

Senator David Coltart from the Movement for Democratic Change says most people can no longer afford food.

“So we simply can’t go on like this for much longer without there being a very serious risk that people will start dying in their thousands,” he said.

The country’s economic meltdown is expected to continue until the MDC and Robert Mugabe’s Zanu-PF party settle on the allocation of cabinet positions.

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New talks collapse

Financial Gazette
Njabulo Ncube, Political Editor
9th October 2008

A FRESH round of negotiations to unlock the impasse over the allocation of ministries between the two formations of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) and ZANU-PF collapsed last night with President Robert Mugabe’s negotiating team dangling the release of Morgan Tsvangirai’s passport as a bargaining chip.

Before the negotiations yesterday, former South African president Thabo Mbeki had to shelve his trip to Harare after being advised to allow the three parties to iron out their differences without recourse to the Southern African Development Community (SADC) appointed mediator.

Mbeki was reportedly due in the capital on Tuesday at the invitation of the MDC, which had asked SADC to salvage the dialogue.

ZANU-PF and MDC negotiators have been locked in marathon talks for almost two weeks but have hit a brick wall over the allocation of the 31 ministerial posts.

While ZANU-PF claims the dispute revolves round the ministries of Finance and Home Affairs, the MDC is adamant the stalemate is on all Cabinet portfolios and the 10 posts for provincial governors.
ZANU-PF has since last week demanded all key ministries in the all-inclusive government, but Tsvangirai has rejected an uneven distribution of portfolios.

“We are still in the same deadlock. We failed to agree. ZANU-PF is trying to give us a bicycle without wheels but we are refusing to ride that bicycle,” MDC-T chief negotiator, Tendai Biti told The Financial Gazette last night. “As MDC we are discussing among ourselves whether the principals should meet or call in the facilitator,” Biti added.

Earlier ZANU-PF chief negotiator, Patrick Chinamasa accused the MDC of endangering the talks by negotiation in public.He said: “The MDC is prejudicing talks by trying to negotiate in public. That will not assist the process. That is a sure way of collapsing the negotiations.” Chinamasa said there was no need to involve Mbeki at this stage. “We must keep talking. The facilitator (Mbeki) is not going to run this country,” he said.

Sources privy to the talks said the release of Tsvangirai’s passport was being used by ZANU-PF negotiators to force the MDC leader to accept whatever ministerial posts foisted on him and his team.
They claimed meetings with Kembo Mohadi yesterday proved fruitless after the Home Affairs Minister allegedly told the MDC the passport was with President Mugabe.

Tsvangirai’s spokesman, George Sibotshiwe said the MDC leader had been promised his passport yesterday but was shocked that it had taken the spotlight in the allocation of ministerial posts.
“We now believe they are using the passport to tempt him to sign,” said Sibotshiwe.

“This morning when we went to the RG (Registrar General)’s office, they told us point blank to phone President Mugabe. We have no doubt the passport is being used as a bargaining chip,” he said.
But Presidential spokesman, George Charamba dismissed MDC claims that his boss was holding on to Tsvangirai’s passport, saying that the MDC leader was frustrated because his political machinations were not falling into place as planned by his handlers.

“How does he know that ZANU-PF is using his passport as bait? Let him ask for a passport in a proper way,” Charamba said.

“The RG’s office has a constitutional mandate to issue passports and other identity documents. But I know why he is saying that. Tsvangirai is frustrated because he wanted to hold a joint press conference with Mutambara but Mutambara did not show up. We also know why his party is demanding the Home Affairs ministry. They held discussions in Pietermaritzburg, South Africa recently but we can’t go into that now,” he said.

In a brief telephone interview, Mohadi yesterday said his superiors in government were handling the Tsvangirai passport issue. “He (Tsvangirai) is my boss but there are other superiors that can help him. So if he has a problem he should go to his boss in government,” said Mohadi.

Tsvangirai yesterday postponed a press conference at his home on the stalled power-sharing agreement to today.

Leader of South Africa’s ruling African National Congress Jacob Zuma on Tuesday threw his weight behind Mbeki’s mediation.

But analysts doubt if Mbeki still has the clout to deal with the differences threatening the deal following his ouster last month.

Eldred Masunungure, a political scientist with the University of Zimbabwe believes Mbeki would now be more of a lame duck mediator.

“He has been weakened a great deal. He is still smarting from his recall. I don’t see him coming to the mediation with the kind of stamina, zeal and robustness he displayed during previous missions,” said Masunungure.

Useni Sibanda, the coordinator of the Christian Alliance of Zimbabwe, which has also been monitoring the dialogue, said SADC now needed to bring in the extended team of United Nations and African Union officials to assist Mbeki.

“The reference team is now needed more than before,” said Sibanda. “The leverage he had as South African state president is no longer there. It is time the other members of the reference group came into the picture to assist him otherwise I don’t see the negotiating parties giving Mbeki the same respect he enjoyed in the past one year,” Sibanda said.

The discord in the negotiations is beginning to attract sharp criticism from parliamentarians.
Mwenezi East Member of Parliament, Kudakwashe Bhasikiti, this week told a parliamentary caucus that the national leadership was letting the nation down. Bhasikiti requested Chinamasa to convey an appeal to the three principals in the negotiations as a matter of urgency saying the crisis threatened to spin out of control.

“When the power sharing deal was signed we all celebrated hoping that relief was coming. But nearly a month later nothing has happened and people are getting disillusioned,” Bhasikiti said.

David Coltart, the legal affairs secretary for the Mutambara-led MDC, said while failure to name a new cabinet was regrettable people should not despair.

“We need to be tolerant, patient and lower our expectations. The deal is only three weeks old yet it took Kenya five months to come up with a national unity government,” said Coltart.

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