ZANU PF and the Government of National Unity 2009-2012

Historian Gerald Mazarire gives us a helpful contemporary history of the splits both in the MDC and ZANU-PF that many people outside of Zimbabwe may not fully understand. He starts by providing a summary of the somewhat questionable MDC and ZANU-PF versions of the story. Based on Prime Minister Morg...

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Main Author: Mazarire, Gerald C.
Format: Book chapter
Language:English
Published: Weaver Press 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11408/1459
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author Mazarire, Gerald C.
author_facet Mazarire, Gerald C.
author_sort Mazarire, Gerald C.
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description Historian Gerald Mazarire gives us a helpful contemporary history of the splits both in the MDC and ZANU-PF that many people outside of Zimbabwe may not fully understand. He starts by providing a summary of the somewhat questionable MDC and ZANU-PF versions of the story. Based on Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai’s own account of it in his autobiography, Mazarire suggests that then South African President Thabo Mbeki, along with “the support of some Western embassies in Harare”, had been involved in splitting the MDC in favour of Welshman Ncube’s faction and ZANU-PF in favor of Emmerson Mnangagwa. This strategy ultimately failed in 2004 but it did lead to major conflicts in both parties. Mazarire explains that Mbeki returned to intervene in Zimbabwean politics during the violent crisis of 2008, and the resulting Unity Accord was “hurriedly concluded” by Mbeki so that he could “attend to a crisis at home that led, in September 2008, to his own ouster from the leadership of the ANC and the South African presidency.”
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spelling ir-11408-14592022-06-27T13:49:05Z ZANU PF and the Government of National Unity 2009-2012 Mazarire, Gerald C. Zimbabwe - Politics Government of national unity Historian Gerald Mazarire gives us a helpful contemporary history of the splits both in the MDC and ZANU-PF that many people outside of Zimbabwe may not fully understand. He starts by providing a summary of the somewhat questionable MDC and ZANU-PF versions of the story. Based on Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai’s own account of it in his autobiography, Mazarire suggests that then South African President Thabo Mbeki, along with “the support of some Western embassies in Harare”, had been involved in splitting the MDC in favour of Welshman Ncube’s faction and ZANU-PF in favor of Emmerson Mnangagwa. This strategy ultimately failed in 2004 but it did lead to major conflicts in both parties. Mazarire explains that Mbeki returned to intervene in Zimbabwean politics during the violent crisis of 2008, and the resulting Unity Accord was “hurriedly concluded” by Mbeki so that he could “attend to a crisis at home that led, in September 2008, to his own ouster from the leadership of the ANC and the South African presidency.” 2016-05-23T12:52:06Z 2016-05-23T12:52:06Z 2013 Book chapter 10: 1779222165 http://hdl.handle.net/11408/1459 en The hard road to reform. the politics of Zimbabwe's global political agreement; open Weaver Press
spellingShingle Zimbabwe - Politics
Government of national unity
Mazarire, Gerald C.
ZANU PF and the Government of National Unity 2009-2012
title ZANU PF and the Government of National Unity 2009-2012
title_full ZANU PF and the Government of National Unity 2009-2012
title_fullStr ZANU PF and the Government of National Unity 2009-2012
title_full_unstemmed ZANU PF and the Government of National Unity 2009-2012
title_short ZANU PF and the Government of National Unity 2009-2012
title_sort zanu pf and the government of national unity 2009-2012
topic Zimbabwe - Politics
Government of national unity
url http://hdl.handle.net/11408/1459
work_keys_str_mv AT mazariregeraldc zanupfandthegovernmentofnationalunity20092012