Mugabe 'indispensable, irreplaceable'
2009-06-20 14:00
Special Report
The case against Zimbabwean Roy Bennett, is based on false evidence, his lawyers have said in a trial which has raised tensions within the fragile unity government.
Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe says he doesn't expect the US sanctions on his country to be lifted soon.
London - Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai spoke on Saturday about his "extraordinary" working relationship with his one-time bitter enemy President Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe's power-sharing government.
In an interview with the Daily Telegraph, Tsvangirai also appealed to the half a million Zimbabwean exiles in Britain to return home and help rebuild their shattered nation.
Tsvangirai insisted that Mugabe - who previously tried to crush his Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) was an essential part of the country's "transitional solution".
"In fact, he is an indispensable, irreplaceable part of the transition," he said.
He admitted he was surprised that he and Mugabe can meet every Monday and talk constructively about their policies.
"It is a workable relationship, surprisingly. Yes, I am actually surprised. Who would have thought that sworn opponents like us could sit down and talk about what's good for Zimbabwe? It's an extraordinary experience."
Appeal to expats
In an appeal that he is expected to repeat later on Saturday in a speech in London, Tsvangirai said it was time for the men and women who fled Zimbabwe under Mugabe's rule to return as the nation picks itself off the floor.
"The government needs these professionals. We also need whatever savings they made to help economic development. It is time to come home," he said.
The British capital is the latest stop on a tour which has taken in Washington, Berlin, Stockholm and Brussels as he drums up support for the 'new' Zimbabwe - albeit one that still has 85-year-old Mugabe as president.
"We need support if we are to avoid sliding back to where we were. I am telling these leaders that I need to re-establish Zimbabwe's relations with the outside world - we must be part of the community of nations again and not a pariah state," Tsvangirai said.
"Look at what we have achieved in the four months of this coalition government. We have brought inflation down from 500 billion percent to three percent, we have started opening schools that had been closed for more than a year, and we have reopened hospitals."
Death united Zimbabweans
The Telegraph said the only time that the ebullient Tsvangirai's mood darkened was when he talked about the death of his wife Susan in a car accident in March which he himself survived.
Despite immediate suspicions that it was an assassination, Tsvangirai insisted "it was an accident".
"It was a terrible experience. Susan and I had gone through all the trials, the tribulations and the triumphs and she would have loved to have seen this new Zimbabwe.
"There was a great outpouring of grief from the people of Zimbabwe when she died and in many ways her death united Zimbabweans."
- SAPA