POLITICS

News of MDC – Zanu-PF talks leaked

Preliminary discussions between two parties begin in Pretoria.

HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabwe's ruling ZANU-PF party and the opposition MDC on Thursday began their first talks since widely condemned and violent elections last month that returned President Robert Mugabe to power.

Both sides have been under heavy African and world pressure to enter negotiations since Mugabe's re-election in a June 27 poll scarred by campaign violence.

Diplomatic sources in Pretoria said the talks had begun in South Africa without specifying the location.

The Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) opposition, which boycotted the election because of violence that it said killed 103 of its supporters, had until now refused to enter talks.

It said negotiations could not resume until the violence ended and Mugabe accepted the result of the first round of the election in March, won by MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai.

An MDC source in Harare said the talks were preliminary and would discuss ending the violence.

"Our team is in South Africa, where they will have preliminary talks with ZANU-PF, starting today. It means something is happening. So these are not the actual talks, but preliminary discussions on what the talks will focus on," the source said.

"This is where we are going to talk about issues of violence and it is from these discussions that the MDC will decide whether to engage in full negotiations if our conditions for an end to political violence are met. We will also have to agree on the agenda for the talks."

The new talks are being mediated by South Africa, designated as lead negotiator by the Southern African Development Community (SADC). The diplomatic sources said a breakaway faction of the MDC, led by Arthur Mutambara, was also taking part.

Zimbabwe's High Court on Wednesday relaxed bail conditions on MDC Secretary-General Tendai Biti and gave him back his passport, responding to a petition by his lawyers who said he should be allowed to travel for talks in South Africa.

Biti faces charges of treason.

The June 27 election and its condemned outcome have worsened the crisis in Zimbabwe, whose economy has collapsed, sending millions of refugees into neighbouring states including South Africa and increasing pressure for a solution.

The once prosperous nation is crippled by the world's worst inflation rate, estimated to be at least 2 million percent.

Mugabe, 84, has been in power since independence from Britain in 1980.

The African Union, at a summit last month, called for talks leading to a national unity government.

Western nations led by former colonial ruler Britain and the United States are pushing the U.N. Security Council this week to impose sanctions on Mugabe's inner circle, as well as an arms embargo on Zimbabwe.

A G8 summit in Japan this week supported sanctions.

South Africa, backed in the past by veto wielding council members Russia and China, opposes sanctions.

Word of the new talks in South Africa may weaken support for the Western-sponsored resolution.

South African President Thabo Mbeki has mediated unsuccessfully in the Zimbabwean crisis for more than a year, drawing increasing criticism. The MDC say he favours Mugabe and has called for expanded mediation from the AU and the United Nations.