Zimbabwe was plagued by violence in the weeks
before last week's presidential run-off vote. Opposition leader Morgan
Tsvangirai dropped out of the election days before the vote, citing
violence against his supporters.
Mr. Mugabe went ahead with a one-man runoff election, and declared himself the winner.
Mr.
Tsvangirai, the leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change, won the March 29 presidential election, but failed to win
enough votes to avoid a second-round.
He is rejecting an African Union resolution calling for the creation of a power-sharing government in Zimbabwe.
In
a statement released Wednesday from the capital Harare, Mr. Tsvangirai
said the resolution failed to acknowledge the MDC as the winner of the
March elections, and does not adequately deal with the ongoing violence.
South
African President Thabo Mbeki, who is mediating the political crisis in
Zimbabwe on behalf of the AU, is pushing for a power-sharing deal
between Mr. Mugabe's ZANU-PF party and the MDC.
But the opposition party has long criticized Mr. Mbeki as too soft on President Mugabe.
Zimbabwe's
information minister Sikhanyiso Ndlovu welcomed the resolution, saying
Mr. Mugabe is open to dialogue to solve the nation's problems, as he
stated at his inauguration on Sunday.