- High-ranking leaders from the ANC held talks with leaders of Zimbabwe's governing Zanu-PF party on Wednesday amid tensions in the southern African country.
- The parties were expected to tackle political and economic woes in Zimbabwe that have worsened in the run-up to recent banned anti-government protests. on 31 July
- Zimbabwe government has vehemently denied that a crisis is unfolding within its borders.
Mediators from the ANC on Wednesday held talks with Zimbabwe's governing Zanu-PF party that were expected to help tackle political and economic woes in the southern African country.
Critics say years of repression in Zimbabwe worsened in the run-up to banned anti-government protests on 31 July during which at least 20 demonstrators were arrested and charged with inciting public violence.
Secretary-general Ace Magashule said at the end of the day-long meeting, there were "challenges that are serious in Zimbabwe, as there are challenges in South Africa... challenges of poverty, hunger which we must address".
"(We) need peace and stability in that" country, he said.
He was speaking to the public broadcaster SABC at an airforce base in Pretoria on return from Harare.
ANC NEC member Tony Yengeni agreed that "there are problems in Zimbabwe, major challenges both of social, economic and to some extent of a political nature".
Zimbabwe government has vehemently denied that a crisis is unfolding within its borders.
South Africa is facing a high number of migrants fleeing from Zimbabwe in search of a better life.
The high-powered ANC delegation - which included Defence Minister Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula - is the second to fly to Harare in a month.
They did not meet with opposition parties, but Magashule said they would return to Harare within weeks or invite them to South African for talks.
Magashule said in Harare:
A statement issued after the meeting did not offer concrete solutions to address the myriad troubles facing Zimbabwe.
The southern African country has been crippled by decades of mismanagement, and inflation is raging at over 800 percent.
President Emmerson Mnangagwa has grown increasingly hostile towards critics since he took over from his despotic predecessor Robert Mugabe, ousted by a coup in 2017.
In July he vowed to "flush out" the "bad apples" attempting to "divide our people" - stoking concern among social activists and opposition figures already targeted by the government.
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