Wed 17 Dec 2008
“We are hopeful that such an inclusive government will be put in place this week,” Kgalema Motlanthe said.
He added that the regional body, SADC, was launching an urgent aid appeal to deal with
More than 18,000 people have developed the disease and aid agencies are warning that with heavy rains further infections are set to rise.
After disputed presidential elections in March, President Robert Mugabe’s ZANU PF party and the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) agreed to form a power-sharing government.
But implementation of that agreement, reached in September, has been dogged by disagreements over whose supporters would get key ministries.
Months of negotiations brokered by former South African President Thabo Mbeki on behalf of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) have failed to break the deadlock.
Earlier, the
This could allow a transitional administration to implement political and economic reforms, it said.
The proposal would also give the president and his generals immunity from prosecution.
But BBC Africa analyst Martin Plaut says it is unlikely either side would take up such an idea.
President Motlanthe told journalists in
African countries like
But the South African leader said the power-sharing deal was about to be implemented, which would see Mr Mugabe stay on as president and Mr Tsvangirai become prime minister.
However, the MDC told Reuters news agency it knew nothing about any imminent breakthrough.
“Maybe the president knows something we don’t know, but we are not aware of any plans to form a government this week. It’s certainly news to us because the outstanding issues we have outlined remain,” MDC spokesman Nelson Chamisa said.
President Motlanthe said the Sadc appeal was being launched “for the people of
The BBC’s Karen Allen, who recently travelled to
The epidemic has so far claimed nearly 1,000 lives, but the official figure of infections could be just the tip of the iceberg, she says.
In Mashonaland - where Mr Mugabe’s party commands some support, she found patients with the disease housed in makeshift clinics.
Drugs were in short supply, clean water was scarce and many young children had succumbed to the disease - dying of dehydration in just a matter of days.
Our reporter says cholera is a potent symbol of
Piles of burning rubbish in the streets of the capital,
Last week, Mr Mugabe maintained his country had contained the cholera outbreak.
(Source)
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