2006年VOA标准英语-Zimbabwe's Divided Opposition Holds Congre(在线收听) |
By Tendai Maphosa In Zimbabwe, thousands of delegates loyal to Morgan Tsvangirai, the president of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, are gathering in the capital for the party's congress. The meeting is meant to reinvigorate a party split by division last year. ------------------------------------------- On the agenda of the MDC congress is the election of officers, some of whom will step into positions left vacant by those who broke away from the party. "The turnaround of the economy of this country can only be done by [the] MDC, but we have tried elections -- we have tried everything. I think we have to change the tactic, the road map has got to change and we are going to do it after congress. The people will choose because we are looking at the people's power and the people are the ones who are going to make the change." At first, the MDC had appeared to be united in its opposition to the reintroduction of the senate, fearing it would give the ruling Zanu-PF party even more power. But after ZANU-PF used its parliamentary majority to bring back the senate, the national council of the MDC narrowly voted for participation in the election of senators. Tsvangirai overruled that decision, leading senior party members who favored participation to go to the courts to try to remove him as president. After the High Court upheld Tsvangirai's leadership, the pro-senate faction held its own congress. At that meeting, Arthur Mutambara, a former student activist who had been out of Zimbabwe for the past 15 years, was elected president. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/3/31583.html |