Harare - A day before Zimbabwe's opposition votes on whether
to join President Robert Mugabe in government, the United States
ambassador to Zimbabwe expressed hope Thursday that a government
would be formed quickly.
'We are hoping to see a government in place, an operational
government in the very, very near future,' ambassador James McGee
told reporters during a visit to a clinic treating cholera patients
in the capital Harare.
After former US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice said late last
year it was 'well past time' for Mugabe, 84, to step down as leader,
the United States now appears to be resigning itself to the prospect
of Mugabe presiding over a power-sharing government.
According to the terms of a September accord, Mugabe would remain
president and Tsvangirai would become prime minister of a government
composed of both their parties.
After holding out for four months for a fairer deal on the way
power will be concretely shared between the two parties, the MDC is
due to vote Friday on whether to throw in its lot with Mugabe.
MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai has tentatively endorsed the move,
pending the resolution of some outstanding demands.
McGee's remarks came as aid agencies again sounded the alarm over
the legions of hungry in Zimbabwe. Over half of Zimbabwe's population
of around 11 million require food aid, but appeals for donations by
the UN World Food Programme, Oxfam and others NGOs are being
increasingly ignored in the West.
The situation is affecting the treatment of cholera patients, over
3,000 of whom have died since August. The outbreak is a manifestation
of the breakdown of state infrastructure as state coffers run on near
empty.
'We are taking good medication but I am starving,' said one
patient who asked to be identified as Spiwe at a clinic in Budiriro
township. 'I could have been discharged long back but I am here since
Monday because I am not eating well.'
'Food is the major problem cholera patients are facing all over
the country,' Oxfam country director in Zimbabwe Peter Mutoredzanwa
told reporters.
Handing over a further 365,000 dollars in US government funding
for cholera to the UN Children's Fund USAID, McGee said: 'I wish
Zimbabwe (government) could do more to help its own people.'
Your Talkback on this Story