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SA to send team to Zim
Article By:
Fri, 02 May 2008 19:33
South Africa will send a team to Zimbabwe to investigate claims of
violence, African religious leaders were told by President Thabo Mbeki
on Friday.
"He assured us that he would do everything to ensure that the
run-off election happens in an atmosphere of peace...," the All Africa
Conference of Churches' president, the Reverend Nyansako-ni-Nku said
after four hours of talks with Mbeki at the Presidential Guesthouse in
Pretoria.
"... In order to achieve that, the president said that right away
they will dispatch a team to check every allegation of violence," he
said.
It was during their talks that the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission
announced that Movement for Democratic Change leader Morgan Tsvangirai
had won 47.9 percent of the vote - not enough to avoid a run-off
election.
President Robert Mugabe, of Zanu-PF, had won 43.2 percent of vote,
while a third candidate, Simba Makoni, had obtained the remaining 8.3
percent.
The
inter-religious group, consisting of religious leaders from
several African countries, said Mbeki was "adamant" that everything
would be done to ensure a peaceful second round of voting, which
included the deployment of a South African team to Zimbabwe.
"A team will leave for Zimbabwe to engage stakeholders, to make them
realise that the peace and progress of Zimbabwe are at stake, and to
make sure everything that can is done to make sure the violence is
under control," Nyansako-ni-Nku said.
The religious leaders were confident that Mbeki’s continued
engagement with Zimbabwe would bear results, he said.
"If we do not have confidence in his leadership we would not have
come here in the first place," he added.
Mbeki did not speak to the media following the meeting and his
spokesman would not comment on the outcome.