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If we have differences they are expressed in a respectable way
Tsvangirai says political acrimony is over Jun 04, 2009
We hope the gains we've made so far will convince even the most skeptical this government is consolidated
Tsvangirai says political acrimony is over Jun 04, 2009
This government is broke, and we are only able to pay the $100 allowance
Official: Zimbabwe can't pay workers more May 02, 2009
We have suspended our disengagement from the government with immediate effect
Tsvangirai ends boycott of government Nov 06, 2009
ZANU-PF cadres and securocrats who murdered people in the run-up to the 27 June election are roaming free
Zimbabwe in a state of 'crisis' Mar 11, 2011
Morgan Richard Tsvangirai (/ˈtʃæŋɡɪraɪ/, Shona: ; born 10 March 1952) is the Prime Minister of Zimbabwe. He is the President of the Movement for Democratic Change - Tsvangirai (MDC-T) and a key figure in the opposition to President Robert Mugabe. Tsvangirai was sworn in as the Prime Minister of Zimbabwe on 11 February 2009. He sustained non-life threatening injuries in a car crash on 6 March 2009 when heading towards his rural home in Buhera. His wife, Susan Tsvangirai, was killed in the head-on collision.
Tsvangirai was the MDC candidate in the controversial 2002 presidential election, losing to Mugabe. He later contested the first round of the 2008 presidential election as the MDC-T candidate, taking 47.8% of the vote according to official results, placing him ahead of Mugabe, who got 43.2%. Tsvangirai claimed to have won a majority and said that the results could have been altered in the month between the election and the reporting of official results. Tsvangirai initially planned to run in the second round against Mugabe, but withdrew shortly before it was held, arguing that the election would not be free and fair due to widespread violence and intimidation by government supporters.
Tsvangirai was born in the Gutu area in then-Southern Rhodesia, the eldest of nine children and the son of a carpenter and bricklayer. After leaving school early, in 1974 he started working for the Trojan Nickel Mine in Mashonaland Central. He spent ten years at the mine, rising from plant operator to plant supervisor. His current rural home is Buhera, which is 220 km south east of Harare.