Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe yesterday swore in his main rival, Morgan Tsvangirai, as the country’s prime minister in a unity government that took months of hard negotiations to achieve.
Several regional leaders attended the swearing in, which is expected to end months of wrangling between the government and the opposition over an inconclusive election held early last year.
Tsvangirai, a longtime rival of Mugabe, was sworn in together with two deputies, one drawn from his party and the other from a smaller opposition party.
The government and the opposition agreed, under the mediation of the Southern African Development Community (SADC), to share power via a coalition government.
Under the agreement, the two sides will share cabinet portfolios and other levers of power, until fresh elections are held.
The agreement followed months of hard negotiations that almost collapsed over the share of cabinet portfolios.
Tsvangirai, taking the oath of office, said he would ‘bear allegiance to Zimbabwe’, contrary to frequent accusations by Mugabe that he was a front for Western powers seeking to oust him from office.
The new government, which is due to be sworn in on Friday, will be immediately confronted by a multitude of crisis, including a raging cholera outbreak, closed educational institutions and severe food shortages.
Over 3,500 people have died of cholera since August last year, and more than 70,000 others infected in an outbreak that has drawn the attention of the world.
Even more worrying is a food crisis affecting over half of the country’s 14 million people.
United Nations agencies said unless international food aid is mobilised soon, millions of Zimbabweans face starvation in coming months.
Poor weather last year and the government’s agricultural policies are widely blamed for the food shortages.
Schools and universities have also been closed because of a long running strike by teachers and lecturers, who are demanding to be paid in foreign currency.
The demand is yet to be met, and the stalemate, which has been running from last year, continues.
Big Western donors, the only hope for the new government to start re-building the country’s shattered economy, have said they will adopt a wait-and-see attitude on the unity government, before unblocking aid and investment.
Earlier this week, South Africa said it would possibly agree to plans by Zimbabwe to use its currency, the Rand, in place of its worthless local dollar.
But large-scale aid from Pretoria, which is also feeling the pinch of the international financial crisis, has been ruled out.
Tsvangirai, whose party controls the key finance ministry, has said his government will target foreign direct investment and aid to revive the economy.
ZANIS/PANA/ENDS