Tsvangirai rejects Mugabe talks

MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai gestures during a media briefing in Harare, Zimbabwe.

MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai gestures during a media briefing in Harare, Zimbabwe.

Published Aug 14, 2013

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Harare - Zimbabwe's defeated opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai claimed on Wednesday that veteran President Robert Mugabe had attempted to talk to him after last month's disputed elections.

Tsvangirai, who has dismissed the July 31 election as a “farce” after it extended Mugabe's 33-year rule by another five years, appeared to reject any such talks.

“After stealing the vote, they don't even know where to start.”

“They are now asking 'where is Tsvangirai, so that we can talk?' Talk about what?” he said at the burial of a party activist who died last week.

But Mugabe's ZANU-PF party denied ever approaching him for talks.

“There is nothing like that,” ZANU-PF spokesman Rugare Gumbo told AFP. Tsvangirai “was never approached and if he is saying that, it's a lie and (that's) ridiculous and mischievous.”

Mugabe was declared the winner with 61 percent of the ballots, against Tsvangirai's 34 percent.

Tsvangirai, who took part in a power-sharing government with Mugabe over the past four years, has said he will only settle for a vote re-run.

He has filed a petition at the country's top court which he vowed will expose “glaring evidence of the stolen vote”.

Added to the crushing defeat at the polls, he said the party had suffered a double blow following the death of party activist Rebecca Mafikeni in a state hospital where she was transferred from remand prison.

“We are mourning the loss of Rebecca and we are also mourning as a nation because of someone who says he has won fairly in an election which should be the biggest fraud the world has ever seen,” Tsvangirai said.

Mafikeni who was 29 at the time of her death, was among 29

activists from Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) party detained since May 2011 on allegations of killing an officer as riot police broke up an MDC rally. She had been awaiting trial.

“Rebecca's death is an indictment of our prison system, an indictment of our justice system.” Tsvangirai said.

“How can one spend two years in remand prison. This is totally intolerable. People are being arrested for political reasons while criminals are going scot-free.”

He said the outcome of his court challenge against Mugabe's win was predictable but urged his supporters to remain calm.

“We should not set our own house on fire,” he said.

Mugabe on Monday vowed never to let go of his victory telling Tsvangirai and his party to “go hang”.

Sapa-AFP

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