Socialize

FacebookTwitterRSSMySpacePicasaFlickrLastFMLinkedInYoutubeVimeoDeliciousStumble UponDeviantartDiggFourSquare

Subscribe by Email

MDC sets conditions for joining Government

The Movement for Democratic Change said on Friday they would not join a proposed national unity government unless the constitutional framework is put in place and ministerial portfolios are equitably distributed.

The statement by the national council of Tsvangirai’s MDC formation did not lay emphasis on the key Home Affairs Ministry which has become a major bone of contention in power-sharing talks between the MDC and the ZANU-PF party of President Robert Mugabe.

A statement issued by the MDC national council suggested that the main impediment to the formation of a unity government was that a constitutional amendment creating the offices of prime minister and deputy prime minister, the latter to be filled by rival MDC leader Arthur Mutambara, has yet to be passed by parliament and signed by Mr. Mugabe.

Another issue on the table distribution of the governorships of Zimbabwe’s 10 provinces, two of which include metropolitan Harare, the capital, and Bulawayo, the second city.

The MDC national council declared itself “desirous of achieving finality to the current dispute given the economic meltdown and the massive suffering of the people of Zimbabwe reflected in entrenched poverty, the collapse of public health, education, transport, water and (the) energy crisis, monetary policy dislocation and supersonic inflation.”

But it reaffirmed statements by Tsvangirai and Secretary General Tendai Biti rejecting SADC resolutions in recent days, in particular the resolution issued by the Nov. 9 summit saying the government should be formed immediately even in the absence of a constitutional foundation, and recommending that MDC and ZANU-PF ministers share control of Home Affairs.

The statement argued that the Nov. 9 communique was “unprocedurally arrived at” because Mr. Mugabe failed to recuse himself from SADC discussions. It reproached his ZANU-PF for its “lack of sincerity” and failure to embrace the “paradigm shift” in national politics.

Share This Post

Posted by on November 16, 2008. Filed under Local News. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.