Crisis
summit delivers no quick fix to Zimbabwe deadlock
LUSAKA
Petroleumworld.com, April 14, 2008
Southern African leaders issued Sunday a guarded
response to Zimbabwe's presidential election impasse, calling only for the result
of the March 29 poll to be delivered as soon as possible.
And hopes for a quick fix to the crisis that has enveloped the country since
elections 15 days ago were dashed by the announcement that all the votes in 23
of the country's 210 constituencies would be recounted next Saturday.
President Robert Mugabe decided not to attend the 14-nation Southern African
Development Community (SADC) summit in the Zambian capital Lusaka, but that did
not stop regional leaders talking long into the night.
After a marathon meeting, the bloc stopped well short of criticising the Zimbabwean
government or Mugabe, who was not even mentioned in a four-page joint statement.
"The summit urged the electoral authorities in Zimbabwe that verification
and release of results are expeditiously done in accordance with the due process
of law," the statement said.
"Summit also urged all the parties in the electoral process in Zimbabwe
to accept the results when they are announced."
SADC did insist, however, that if the result of the presidential election proved
neither Mugabe nor opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai had won outright that
a second ballot was conducted fairly.
"The government is urged to ensure that the run-off elections are held in
a secure environment," the joint statement said, suggesting SADC could send
an observer mission.
Tsvangirai attended the summit and his deputy was broadly happy with the outcome,
although he expressed reservations at a call for the continued involvement of
Thabo Mbeki, the president of regional power South Africa.
Mbeki was chief mediator between the governing ZANU-PF party and Tsvangirai's
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) in the build-up to the election, but has
since come under fire for his policy of "quiet diplomacy".
Mbeki must show "more vigour, more openness and a complete abandonment of
the policy of quiet diplomacy," Tsvangirai's number two Tendai Biti told
journalists in Lusaka.
However, Biti conceded that the opposition had been largely satisfied with the
outcome of the summit. "This is a major improvement, SADC has acquitted
itself fairly well," he said.
Southern African leaders have been heavily criticised over their traditional
reluctance to speak out against Mugabe, an elder statesman who has ruled Zimbabwe
for 28 years and is the oldest leader in the region.
Nevertheless many in SADC are fed up with the economic mess on their doorstep
with inflation in Zimbabwe now well into six figures, unemployment at over 80
percent and average life expectancy down to 36 years of age.
Mbeki dropped in on Harare on his way to the summit and held his first face-to-face
talks with Mugabe since the disputed elections.
"The body authorised to release the results is the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission,
let's wait for them to announce the results," he told journalists afterwards,
adding that there was "no crisis" in his northern neighbour.
During the summit, Zimbabwe's state media announced a vote recount that could
theoretically see Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF regain control of parliament after
losing it in legislative elections, also on March 29.
ZANU-PF lost parliamentary control to the opposition for the first time in the
legislative vote with the MDC and its splinter faction winning a combined 109
seats to just 97 for the ruling party.
This means ZANU-PF need only win back nine seats in the recount to regain control
of parliament. Presidential, senatorial and council votes were also to be tallied
again in the same 23 constituencies.
In a further blow to the opposition, state television reported Saturday it had
unearthed a secret document allegedly written by Biti and detailing plans by
the MDC to rig the elections by paying off election officials.
Zambia's President Levy Mwanawasa had told leaders in his opening address that
doing nothing was not an option.
"SADC cannot stand by and do nothing when one of its members is experiencing
political and economic pain. It would be wrong to turn a blind eye," the
summit chairman said.
But the joint statement issued 13 hours later offered no clear sign that a resolution
was any closer.
"The court in Zimbabwe is going to rule on Monday so we will take it from
there," SADC Secretary General Tomaz Salomao told journalists as he wrapped
up proceedings in Lusaka.
The opposition has called for a general strike to be launched from Tuesday.
Story by Chris Otton from AFP
AFP 13 0628 GMT 04 08
Copyright© 2008
respective author or news agency.
All rights reserved.
We welcome
the use of Petroleumworld™ stories
by anyone provided it mentions Petroleumworld.com as the source.
Other stories you have to get authorization by its authors.
Send
this story to a friend
Your
feedback is important to us!
We invite all our readers to share with us
their views and comments about this article.
Write
to editor@petroleumworld.com
Any
question or suggestions, please write to:
editor@petroleumworld.com
Best
Viewed with IE
5.01+
Windows
NT 4.0, '95, '98 and ME +/ 800x600 pixels