Tsvangirai rejects unity government
Zimbabwe's opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai rejected calls on Tuesday for a national unity government instead of a presidential runoff vote and said his party was sure to win the election despite government violence. Tsvangirai told a news...
Zimbabwe's opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai rejected calls on Tuesday for a national unity government instead of a presidential runoff vote and said his party was sure to win the election despite government violence.
Tsvangirai told a news conference Zimbabwe had suffered a de facto coup and was being run by a military junta.
Some 66 supporters of his Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) had been killed since disputed March elections, he said.
Simba Makoni, a defector from the ruling ZANU-PF party and a former finance minister, said earlier the June 27 run-off between President Robert Mugabe and Tsvangirai must be called off because a free and fair vote was impossible.
"Following the announcement of the date for the run-off, no one can change that due process unless Robert Mugabe concedes defeat, or collapses. It therefore means that a government of national unity negotiated before the runoff does not arise," Tsvangirai said.
U.S.-based Human Rights Watch also said brutal intimidation and murder by Mugabe's supporters made normal campaigning impossible.
"As a people we have been exposed to state-sponsored brutality. The violence continues unabated," Tsvangirai said.
He said 3,000 MDC supporters had been injured and more than 25,000 displaced but the MDC would win even if ZANU-PF prevented them campaigning.
"As far as I am concerned I can stay home from now on until the election, Mugabe will lose. It's just a formality to go and campaign, the people have already decided."
An EU-U.S. summit in Slovenia on Tuesday called on the Zimbabwe government to end what it called state-sponsored violence and urged U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to send monitors to deter further violence.
Makoni, who challenged Mugabe in disputed March 29 elections, told reporters in Johannesburg that Tsvangirai must negotiate a five-year transitional government.
"Normal political conduct and behaviour is not possible in the circumstances within Zimbabwe at the moment. I don't believe we can have free elections under these circumstances, that's why we are suggesting that the run-off will not place," he said.
Makoni came a distant third in the March election in which Tsvangirai beat Mugabe but failed to reach the absolute majority needed to avoid a second round.