Harare - Zimbabwean Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's
cabinet ministers launched a boycott of cabinet meetings Monday and
said they were 'disengaging' from the coalition government with
President Robert Mugabe created earlier this year.
Deputy prime minister Thokozani Khupe announced the move after
Mugabe, apparently due to leave the country on Tuesday for a trip
abroad, rescheduled Tuesday's regular cabinet meeting to Monday -
apparently in order to avoid Tsvangirai chairing it.
Khupe said Mugabe and his Zanu-PF party were 'dishonest and
unreliable' partners.
Tsvangirai and Mugabe formed a power-sharing government in
February, following a disputed presidential election and widespread
violence.
Tsvangirai returned to Harare from a tour of donor countries
shortly after midday.
Tsvangirai's return meant, said Khupe, that Tsvangirai would have
chaired the meeting of the country's most powerful body on Tuesday
for the first time since he and Mugabe established a power-sharing
transitional government in February.
Khupe said they had boycotted the meeting because Mugabe was
'seeking to deny recognition of the prime minister' as an equal
partner. 'It reflects disrespect and contempt,' she said.
She would not say how long the 'disengagement' would continue for,
but said the MDC, which won parliamentary and the first round of
presidential elections last year, was expressing its 'constitutional
right' to disengage, although the party remained committed to the
coalition agreement they signed in September.
'It's time insanity and toxicity were removed' from the coalition
government, she said. 'For a long time we have remained the polite
and subservient upholders of the ... agreement, against clear
evidence of the absence of a reliable and honest partner.'
Khupe cited the lack of progress on issues like Mugabe's
unilateral appointments of his colleagues to top posts and renewed
arrests and violence against MDC parliamentarians and white farm
invasions.
Zanu-PF also continued to frustrate the agreement's commitment to
establishing democracy, and 'aborted' attempts to end the country's
repressive media controls. 'There is no movement on the fundamental
issues of the promotion of freedom of assembly of speech and
expression.'
Observers say the ministers' action is an expression of their
suppressed anger over what is widely seen as the determination of
Mugabe, who has been in power for 29 years, to block attempts at
democratic reforms that might weaken his grip on power.
At the weekend, the MDC held meetings to mark the anniversary of
the bloody second-round presidential election campaign that ended
with Mugabe's win of a one-person race after Tsvangirai withdrew over
the murder of about 200 MDC supporters.
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