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Desperate Mujuru pushes for Tsvangirai deal

by Staff reporter
12 Mar 2017 at 09:20hrs | Views

Former vice-president Joice Mujuru says she will support any leader chosen to lead a coalition against President Robert Mugabe in next year's elections.

Mujuru made the declaration in an interview with the BBC during her recent visit to Britain. The interview will be screened tomorrow under the respected programme, HardTalk.

The National People's Party (NPP) leader said coalition talks with former prime minister Morgan Tsvangirai were progressing well and they were now drafting a memorandum of understanding (MoU).

"We have been in talks for the coalition with Morgan Tsvangirai," Mujuru said.

"It is part of the process we are carrying out now which I can't say who is who, but it is part of the results that are going to come out.

"Between Tsvangirai and myself, we are working together, we have done some addresses together and right now, we are working on an MoU so that we are able to work together."

Mujuru has been in coalition talks with Tsvangirai since last year when she was still Zimbabwe People First leader before the party split last month due to differences with former allies Rugare Gumbo and Didymus Mutasa.

There have been fears that the acrimonious relationship between Mujuru and her former allies would scuttle the coalition talks with the MDC-T leader, who has on the other hand promised to engage both factions.

"Anyone who is chosen according to our discussions, I will be able to work with," she added.

Mutasa has already endorsed Tsvangirai — the only opposition leader to hand Mugabe his first electoral defeat in 2008.

Mujuru was also quizzed on why she intended to forgive Mugabe if she wins in the 2018 general elections after the humiliating way she was haunded out of Zanu-PF.

"My party is not for retribution, but for restitution. We have to encourage people to forgive but not to forget. We cannot continue to lead in the past," she said.

"We should be busy thinking of how best we should move forward."

Source - the standard