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Mugabe vows new Zimbabwe government by week's end
Posted: 29 September 2008 2358 hrs

  Robert Mugabe
 
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HARARE: Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe on Monday said a new unity government would be formed by the end of the week, denying a deadlock in talks with the opposition over key ministries.

"We will be setting up government by the end of the week," Mugabe said on his return from the United Nations general assembly meeting in New York.

"We never said there was a deadlock."

Speaking to supporters at the airport, Mugabe said four remaining ministries were referred to negotiators before he left Zimbabwe on September 19.

"We discussed the ministries the day before I left. There were four left which we referred to our negotiators to discuss," he said.

The 84-year-old veteran leader also warned against outside interference in Zimbabwe's affairs, days after he called in the UN general assembly for "illegally imposed sanctions" to be lifted.

"We should never tolerate interference in the domestic affairs of our country. We will be very strict, no outsiders will be allowed to follow parties and politics. Any country which does that declares itself an enemy of Zimbabwe," he said.

The main opposition leader and designated prime minister Morgan Tsvangirai said on Saturday it was "urgent" the country form a new government to ensure food supplies and prevent starvation.

"We need to respond to this crisis with utmost urgency. It is therefore imperative that a government be formed in the next few days and begins to implement plans to ensure that our people have food and do not die of starvation," Tsvangirai said at a press conference in Harare.

The leader of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) said the food security situation needed urgent attention as there would be "disastrous consequences if we take too long to attend to the crisis."

Mugabe, in power for nearly three decades, signed an historic accord on September 15 with the opposition that allows him to remain as head of state while Tsvangirai takes up the new post of prime minister. - AFP/de

 


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