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  • Mugabe: Sharing Power Humiliates

    MUGABE: SHARING POWER HUMILIATES

    Philadelphia Inquirer
    Posted on Thu, Sep. 18, 2008
    PA

    In the World

    HARARE, Zimbabwe - President Robert Mugabe told his party yesterday
    that sharing power with rivals is a "humiliation" but that it has to
    be accepted because they lost the March elections.

    Mugabe was shown on state television addressing a meeting of top
    ZANU-PF party leaders called to prepare for dividing the cabinet with
    two opposition factions as stipulated in a deal that was signed on
    Monday. Mugabe loyalists will lose cabinet seats to make room for
    the opposition.

    The statement was a sign Mugabe would not abandon the accord, as some
    feared, and should help calm fears his agreement to cede some power
    for the first time in 28 years might founder. Mugabe aide Patrick
    Chinamasa said the three parties involved would meet today and could
    have a cabinet by the end of the day. - AP

    Thai protesters target new leader BANGKOK, Thailand - Thailand's
    new prime minister, Somchai Wongsawat, showed determination to mend
    political rifts by quickly shaking hands with the opposition leader
    yesterday and appealing for national unity.

    But the gestures did not appease antigovernment protesters, who called
    him unfit for the job because of his familial ties to a disgraced
    former leader.

    Somchai, 61, a former judge, is known as a conciliator. His combative
    predecessor, Samak Sundaravej, was the original target of the
    protesters, for his ties to former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra,
    who was ousted in a 2006 coup. Samak was forced from office last week
    by a court ruling for taking pay to host TV shows.

    But Somchai carries heavy baggage. He is married to the sister
    of Thaksin. "Blood is thicker than water," said Somsak Kosaisuk,
    a leader of the protesters. - AP

    Corruption case in S. Africa is on JOHANNESBURG, South Africa -
    Prosecutors said yesterday that they plan to appeal a judge's ruling
    that set aside corruption charges against Jacob Zuma, the leader of the
    governing party who is in line to become South Africa's next president.

    The decision by the National Prosecuting Authority restores, at least
    for a while, the legal cloud that hangs above the Zuma candidacy. But
    it further infuriates the many Zuma followers who think the prosecution
    is a political vendetta against him by his chief rival and the man
    who once fired him, South Africa President Thabo Mbeki.

    After the announcement, Zet Luzipho, a trade union leader, said in
    Durban that the decision is "a declaration of war on our people"
    and threatened strikes. - AP

    Elsewhere: Iranian rights groups and lawyers say they have stepped
    up a campaign against execution of juvenile offenders, hoping to save
    about 120 minors now on death row.

    Armenia welcomed a new U.S. ambassador, career diplomat Marie
    Yovanovitch. The last envoy was withdrawn in 2006 after referring to
    the World War I-era killings of Armenians as genocide, in defiance
    of U.S. policy. Turkey denies the deaths constituted genocide.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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