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Mugabe resignation, transition deal considered in Zimbabwe***HARARE, Zimbabwe, Jan 12, 2003 (AP WorldStream via COMTEX) -- President Robert Mugabe would resign and a new power-sharing government would be formed under a deal that has been discussed by Zimbabwe's ruling party and opposition officials, mediators said Sunday. The offer was made by two of the ruling party's most powerful figures - Parliament speaker Emmerson Mnangagwa and armed forces chief of staff Gen. Vitalis Zvinavashe - and was an effort to help Zimbabwe regain international legitimacy and renewed aid and investment during a period of transitional rule, the mediators said. The mediators, fearing allegations of treason if the deal collapses, said assurances Mugabe would step down were conveyed to the opposition Movement for Democratic Change.

A power-sharing government would try to end an economic meltdown that has sent inflation soaring, caused a massive fuel shortage and left at least half Zimbabwe's population on the verge of starvation. Mugabe, who led the nation to independence in 1980, won a new six-year term in elections last March that independent observers said were deeply flawed. The MDC, along with Britain, the European Union and the United States, have refused to accept results, saying voting was rigged and influenced by violence and intimidation.

The early retirement of Mugabe, once seen as a towering African statesman, has long seemed inconceivable. MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai confirmed receiving the offer and, in a departure from recent opposition policy, told the AP his party's lawmakers were ready to vote with the ruling party for a constitutional amendment allowing the creation of a caretaker government once Mugabe stepped down. Any agreement would include guarantees of immunity for Mugabe, 78, from prosecution over alleged misrule and human rights violations during his 23 years in power, Tsvangirai said.***

371 posted on 01/13/2003 1:11:51 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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Mugabe: 'I will be buried on Zimbabwean soil' - Zimbabwe Rumors Persist Despite Denials - [Full Text] HARARE, Zimbabwe - Reports of a deal to end Zimbabwe's political crisis by having President Robert Mugabe retire have struck a chord in this beleaguered nation. But Mugabe, who is on a visit to neighboring Zambia at the end of a two-week vacation in Asia on Tuesday, denied again he agreed to step down. "Only a few months ago, the people of Zimbabwe elected me to serve them and it would be absolutely counterrevolutionary for me to step down," he said in Lusaka, Zambia. He was elected to a new six-year term in March.

Though both the government and the opposition have strenuously denied the reports, many Zimbabweans were unwilling Tuesday to dismiss them so easily. "It has caused a glimmer of hope," said Brian Raftopoulos, a political scientist at Harare University.

Mugabe, 78, led the nation to independence from Britain in 1980. But after 23 years of his authoritarian rule, many of his compatriots say they would not be sorry to see him step down. "If it's true, the old crocodile must go. Now," said Moses Bangure, a store clerk in Harare told shoppers at his checkout counter.

The leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, Morgan Tsvangirai, has confirmed what he called a "clandestine" plan by independent mediators in which Mugabe would step down to clear the way for a caretaker government followed by presidential elections within two years. The mediators were representing two of the most powerful figures in the ruling party, Parliament Speaker Emmerson Mnangagwa and Gen. Vitalis Zvinavashe, chief of staff and commander of the armed forces. According to Tsvangirai, mediators said they had promised to deliver Mugabe's resignation.

"My own view is the offer could not have been made without Mugabe's knowledge and it is the beginning of a process," Raftopoulos said. Whatever the case, the idea won't go away easily. "There's a political stalemate in Zimbabwe, creating an ideal ground for a new initiative," Raftopoulos said. That was clearly the case Tuesday for a group of young doctors at a state hospital in Harare where basic drugs, surgical gloves and other supplies are in short supply. "Times are hard and it would be wonderful to see some changes," said one of several doctors gathered around a single copy of the state Herald newspaper. He said he did not want his name used.

Businessmen and factory owners also reported an atmosphere of anticipation and excitement. Hopes ran high that Mugabe's departure could lead to economic reforms that would end the now commonplace long lines for food and gasoline. Mugabe won a new six-year term in March elections. Independent observers said the elections were deeply flawed and the opposition, along with Britain, the European Union and the United States, said the voting was rigged and influenced by violence and intimidation. The political chaos and the government's isolation internationally has caused shortages of hard currency and essential imports. Disruptions in the agriculture-based economy and a severe drought have caused acute shortages of food.

During the past three years, Mugabe's government has seized most of Zimbabwe's thousands of white-owned commercial farms, calling it a justified struggle by landless blacks to correct colonial-era injustices that left 4,000 whites with one-third of the farm land. Mugabe's ruling party, Zanu-PF, has become almost dysfunctional but the opposition lacks the muscle and experience to confront it. Tsvangirai has said the opposition would not insist on Mugabe going into exile if he steps down. Malaysia was said to have offered Mugabe sanctuary.

But in Lusaka, Zambia, Mugage denied he would go into exile. "I was born in Zimbabwe and I won't go anywhere in exile. "I will remain in Zimbabwe and I will be buried on Zimbabwean soil,." Mugabe said during a ceremony honoring former Zambian President Kenneth Kaunda for his work to liberate southern Africa from colonial rule. However, U.N. officials have confirmed that World Food Program chief James Morris is scheduled to visit Zimbabwe next week and has been told he cannot see Mugabe - who would still be on vacation. Earlier, the government had said Mugabe was due back this week. [End]

372 posted on 01/15/2003 1:24:25 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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