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Mbeki to travel to Zimbabwe 'early next week' - MDC says


Morgan Tsvangirai: Statement on the state of cabinet talks

Tsvangirai calls in Mbeki to break deadlock

Zanu PF says MDC jeopardising talks

Zuma urges Zimbabwe parties to keep talking

MDC wants urgent SADC intervention

Leaders meet, fail to agree on Cabinet

Zanu PF concedes finance ministry as cabinet hopes rise

Zanu PF says claims of deadlock 'mischievous'

Mbeki resignation hangs over Zim talks

Mbeki called in as Tsvangirai, Mugabe deadlocked?

Mugabe returns, says cabinet by end of the week

Tsvangirai: We must respond to crisis with utmost urgency

Cabinet deadlock 'surmountable' - Tsvangirai

Misihairabwi: Cabinet talks on course

Mugabe calls on West to lift 'demonic' sanctions

Zim parties to agree on ministries 'within days'

Mbeki still the point man in Zimbabwe - SADC

Mbeki seen staying as Zimbabwe mediator

Excerpts of Mutambara's speech at signing of power sharing deal

Tsvangirai confident of rallying international support

Copy of Zimbabwe power sharing document

In Quotes: World reaction to power sharing deal

Mugabe, Tsvangirai and Mutambara sign power sharing deal

Posted to the web: 10/10/2008 16:10:44
ZIMBABWE President Robert Mugabe and his rivals have agreed to fresh mediation by former South African president Thabo Mbeki to end a deadlock over a new unity government, the ruling party's chief negotiator and an opposition spokesman said Friday.

"The meeting was held. The outcome was that all the principals have asked the facilitator to come and assist in overcoming the impasse," on the sharing of cabinet posts, Patrick Chinamasa told AFP.

"The three principals in the negotiations, Prof. Arthur Mutambara, Morgan Tsvangirai and Robert Mugabe met on Friday with a view to resolve the difference regarding the allocation of ministries. Regrettably, they were unable to come to an agreement. Within the context, they then agreed that the facilitator should come and help them resolve their difference," said Edwin Mushoriwa, a spokesman for the smaller Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) faction led by Mutambara.

He added that "the facilitator, former president of South Africa Thabo Mbeki, is therefore expected in the country early next week with a view to resolve the difference."

Earlier Friday, state-run Herald newspaper quoted Chinamasa as saying that the political leaders did not need to invite Mbeki -- who had brokered a power-sharing accord -- to mediate again over the composition of the new government.

"We should learn to overcome our challenges and as negotiating parties we feel that we should not find easy ways to avoid taking hard decisions," Chinamasa was quoted as saying.

Tsvangirai's MDC has consistently called for the mediation of the southern African regional bloc, SADC, which mandated Mbeki, to resolve the political deadlock.

On Thursday, Tsvangirai denounced the logjam in talks with the ruling party on the composition of a new government.

Since the power-sharing accord was signed on September 15 in Harare, the ruling Zanu PF and the MDC have met several times without resolving the key issue of the allocation of ministries.

Mbeki's spokesman Mukoni Ratshitanga, told AFP earlier Friday that "he (Mbeki) has accepted that he is going to continue with the mediation efforts," either in South Africa, in Harare or over the telephone.

Ratshitanga, however, did not say when Mbeki's fresh intervention would begin.

Mbeki painstakingly got the power-sharing accord signed last month between Mugabe, Tsvangirai and the head of a smaller MDC faction, Arthur Mutambara to end the country's ruinous and dragging political crisis and economic meltdown. - AFP/Staff Reporter
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