The Zimbabwe Mail
By Patience Nyangove
12 September 2011
DEFENCE minister Emmerson Mnangagwa allegedly pleaded with Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai five years ago to include him in a future MDC government, a leaked United States embassy cable has revealed.
According to the secret cable dated June 2006, made public by the whistleblower website WikiLeaks last week, MDC-T secretary general Tendai Biti allegedly told a US embassy official Eric Schultz that Tsvangirai had been secretly discussing a power-sharing deal with Zanu PF officials.
Biti allegedly identified the Zanu PF officials as Mnangagwa and the late former army commander Solomon Mujuru. Mnangagwa could not be reached for comment yesterday.He said while Mngangwa was willing to be Tsvangirai’s subordinate in the proposed government, Mujuru wanted the then popular opposition leader to be a junior partner.
“According to Biti, Mnangagwa was willing to subordinate himself to Tsvangirai in exchange for cabinet slots and protection guarantees for affiliated businesses,†reads part of the cable.
“Biti said Mujuru was only offering to take Tsvangirai in as a junior partner, which he said reflected the Mujuru faction’s continued primacy.†The cable also alleges that MDC leader Welshman Ncube had offered Biti the post of president in his faction before they brought in Arthur Mutambara.
“He said Ncube had offered him the presidency of the pro-senate faction, but that he had no regrets about remaining with Tsvangirai in spite of his faults,†Schultz wrote in the cable.
Biti is also quoted accusing Education, Sport and Culture minister David Coltart of being obsessed with race. Coltart had allegedly written an email to an official at the US embassy accusing the MDC-T faction of being behind the intra-party violence that led to the split of the MDC in 2005.
Biti, who could not be reached for comment, compared Coltart, who could also not be reached for comment, to MDC-T treasurer Roy Bennett, who speaks Shona fluently. “Bennett was culturally Zimbabwean; Coltart, who spoke not a word of the local language, would always be an outsider,†Schultz wrote in the cable.
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Webmaster’s Note:
The original text from the US Cable sent in June 2006 is as follows:
“(C) Biti emphasized the centrality of Morgan TsvangiraiÂ
to the opposition’s political fortunes. Though not withoutÂ
faults, Tsvangirai commanded more respect and enthusiasm fromÂ
the masses than any other figure in either faction of eitherÂ
party. The tens of thousands he drew in rallies across theÂ
country — and the overtures from ZANU-PFQ,s factions — wereÂ
testament to that. TsvangiraiQ,s commitment to non-violentÂ
but open challenges to the regime reflected the desires ofÂ
the country.Â
¶6. (C) Biti was excoriating in his assessment of pro-senateÂ
faction-aligned MP David Coltart’s recent missive (e-mailedÂ
to AF/S) attacking the Tsvangirai faction for violence. HeÂ
asserted that the intra-party violence Coltart raised wasÂ
exaggerated and not encouraged or condoned by the partyÂ
leadership. He noted that those most reviled within theÂ
anti-senate faction — Welshman Ncube and Gift Chimanakire,Â
for example — lived, worked and traveled openly inÂ
vulnerable locations but suffered no harm. “If there wasn’tÂ
a constant and convincing priority from the top onÂ
non-violence, these people would have been attacked,” heÂ
concluded.Â
¶7. (C) Biti he believed Coltart’s stated convictions wereÂ
genuine but naQve and played to his personal aggrandizementÂ
at the expense of the party. Coltart was more concerned withÂ
international audiences more than local ones. Biti saidÂ
Coltart “saw everything in black and white — in a literalÂ
not a figurative sense.” Race and place colored all hisÂ
views. Biti compared Coltart unfavorably with Roy Bennett,Â
the nationally popular party treasurer who “speaks ShonaÂ
better than me.” Bennett was culturally Zimbabwean; Coltart,Â
who spoke not a word of local language, would always be anÂ
outsider. “