From: as on
Jimmy Carter and Elders Urge Full Implementation of Zimbabwe
Power-Sharing Pact

VOA news Benedict Nhlapho & Ntungamili Nkomo |
Johannesburg/Washington31 May 2010

Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter called Zimbabwe a "tragedy still
waiting to be resolved," but cautioned that it would be premature for
the country to try to organize new elections until a number of
measures have been taken

Following a meeting in South Africa, the group of Elders voiced their
great concern on Monday at the slow pace of implementation of the
Global Political Agreement for Zimbabwean power sharing more than a
year after the formation of the chronically troubled national unity
government in Harare.

Struggle icon and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu
said the Elders were disappointed that the Harare political accord
underpinning a government including President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF
and the Movement for Democratic Change of Prime Minister Morgan
Tsvangirai has not relieved the country's impoverished masses.

Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter called Zimbabwe a "tragedy still
waiting to be resolved." Mr. Carter welcomed recent calls from two of
the three parties to the unity government for elections to resolve
the current impasse. But he said a number of measures remain to be
taken to ensure such an election will be a successful one.

The Elders also said they did not take lightly rumors and threats
circulating in South Africa as to a new wave of attacks against
immigrants when World Cup of soccer concludes in mid-July.

Formed in 2007, the Elders comprises former heads of state, Nobel
Peace Prize recipients and prominent defenders of human rights who
seek to support peace-building and reduce human suffering through
moral suasion.

Elsewhere in the region, the Southern African Development Community's
Namibia-based tribunal will consider an application by a group of
Zimbabwean white commercial farmers who are asking it to tell SADC to
suspend Zimbabwe for ignoring tribunal rulings holding that Harare�s
seizure of white-owned farms was discriminatory and illegal.

The application comes amid further farm takeovers around Zimbabwe.
Christopher Jarret, chairman of the Southern African Commercial
Farmers Alliance, told VOA that James Taylor and his son were
arrested Friday for refusing to leave their farm in Nyamandlovu,
Matabeleland North province. The two were released Monday, sources
said.

The applicants want the tribunal to ask SADC to convene a special
summit to discuss farm seizures. They want Zimbabwe suspended from
the bloc for what the group charges have been �prosecutions,
imprisonment and other measures of intimidation which serve to
destroy the lives of farmers.�

Applicant Ben Freeth of the SADC Tribunal Rights Watch civic group
told VOA Studio 7 reporter Ntungamili Nkomo that he and his
co-applicants hope the tribunal will move the question to the level
of SADC heads of state.