Powersharing talks between Zimbabwean
President Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF party and the opposition Movement for
Democratic Change broke down Monday, sources within and close to to the
MDC reported. An MDC official in Zimbabwe told Deutsche
Presse-Agentur dpa that the talks had reached an impasse over the
distribution of posts in the proposed new government. A Western NGO source close to the MDC also confirmed the talks had hit a stalemate.
Representatives from Zanu-PF and two factions of the MDC - the majority
faction led by Morgan Tsvangirai and a smaller faction led by Arthur
Mutambara - began talks four days ago on the formation of an
'inclusive' government, as called for by the African Union at a summit
in June. The talks, scheduled to take place over two weeks in South Africa,
had always been expected to be difficult, given deep-seated enmity
between Mugabe's party and Morgan Tsvangirai's nine-year-old MDC. The MDC official told dpa that Tsvangirai's position in the proposed unity government was unclear.
The MDC defeated Zanu-PF in March parliamentary elections, and
Tsvangirai took more votes than Mugabe in the first round of voting for
president on the same day. Mugabe went on to contest the
violent run-off election solo and was inaugurated as president in late
June for a further five years. The MDC has proposed that
Mugabe remain on as president with reduced ceremonial powers and that
Tsvangirai would occupy a new executive prime ministerial post. But Zanu-PF has ruled out Mugabe having anything other than a leadership role in the new government.
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