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Mugabe 'preparing to wage war on his people'

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Published Date: 06 April 2008
PRESIDENT Robert Mugabe was yesterday accused of planning a "war against the people" to reverse his election defeat as pressure grew for international intervention.
Zimbabwe opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the Movement for Democratic Change, will todayseek to prove his claim that he took more than 50% of the vote by launching a fresh High Court bid for the presidential election results to be publi
shed after armed police initially prevented lawyers from entering the court.

Yesterday, he said that Mugabe's Zanu-PF party was mobilising war veterans and getting the central bank to print money in preparation for a violent second round of elections.

"Zanu-PF is preparing a war against the people," said Tsvangirai. "In the run-off, violence will be the weapon. It is therefore unfair and unreasonable for President Mugabe to call a run-off."

President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa, who is viewed as having influence over Mugabe, insisted the situation in Zimbabwe was "manageable" and appealed to the international community to wait for the full results before considering intervention.

But Gordon Brown, who was with Mbeki at the Progressive Governance Conference in Watford, said international observers should be present if there was a run-off between Tsvangirai and Mugabe and that the results must be announced. "We are monitoring the situation closely," he said. "I think the important thing is that the results have got to be published. They cannot be any longer delayed. They have got to be seen to be fair."

Brown's call for international assistance is echoed by Peter Hain in an article for Scotland on Sunday. The former Cabinet minister calls on the international community to "stand rock solid" and tell Mugabe that his time is up.

"After a colossal failure of diplomacy – for Britain, for South Africa, Europe, United Nations, Commonwealth – for everyone concerned, the international community must insist that the democratic verdict is upheld and that there is an orderly transfer of power, with Mugabe and his elite offered a safe passage if they wish."

The former Africa minister adds: "This is no time for diplomatic niceties or pretence that a re-run election could be a solution. Mugabe needs to be presented with the only language he has ever understood: an uncompromising insistence that he has no alternative."

In an appeal to his friend, Mbeki, Hain also says that Zimbabwe's southern African neighbours must help to seek "an African solution to this African crisis".

Mbeki and Brown are due to have further, one-to-one talks in private today, by which time Brown hopes the full results will be published.

Yesterday, the South African leader appeared exasperated by repeated questions on the crisis, saying: "Zimbabwe is not a South African province."

He added: "I think the situation for now is manageable. I think it is time to wait. Let's see the outcome of the election results. If there is a re-run of the presidential election let us see what comes out of that."

The law requires a run-off within 21 days of the first round of elections. But diplomats in Harare and at the United Nations say Mugabe is planning a 90-day delay to give security forces time to clamp down.

Veterans of the guerrilla war, who were used in the past to beat up opponents, held an intimidating march last week, while opposition party offices were raided and armed police in full riot gear arrested foreign journalists.

Tsvangirai said the violence and intimidation would get worse and appealed to African leaders and the United Nations to intervene to "prevent chaos and dislocation".

Election officials confirmed that Zanu-PF won 30 seats in Zimbabwe's senate, or upper house of parliament, with the combined opposition parties taking an equal number. But control of the senate depends on who becomes president because he and tribal chiefs appoint the remaining 33 seats.

No official results have been published from the presidential elections on March 29 and Zimbabwe's electoral commission would say only that it would release further results "when they are ready".

The MDC says Tsvangirai has won the presidential vote with 50.3%, avoiding the need for a run-off, but an independent projection puts him on 49% and Mugabe on 42%.

Mugabe, 84, has ruled since his guerrilla army helped create an independent Zimbabwe in 1980. But his popularity has been battered by an economic slide –there is 80% unemployment and inflation running at more than 100,000%.

INSIGHT: A broken nation



Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 05 April 2008 11:45 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Zimbabwe
 
1

Reckless,

Lying Labour 06/04/2008 09:36:24
I wonder what Gordon Brown will be prepared to do when he loses the next general election?
2

,

06/04/2008 09:43:20
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
3

Media 1,

cape town 06/04/2008 09:45:07
Reckless

I suppose he will get on with his life and put his degrees to good use. Maybe write a book or take on a position with a world bank or investment bank.
Maybe even go on the road and do speeches.But go he will, there will be no recounting the vote or starving the British people to death.
4

oder,

Scotland 06/04/2008 09:45:59
Mugabe lives by the gun untimately will die by the gun only a fool believes he will step down (election or no election),this man has never believed in the democratic process, only to remove a white government to put in him in power is the full extent of his democracy! Zimbabwe is set for more death and destruction before this Hitler of Africa is no more! this time Zimbabweans will discover that the whites of the west are far worse the the whites they once lived under! a great pity! the Africans of Zimbabwe are the most gentile and friendly
people.
5

Media 1,

cape town 06/04/2008 09:59:47
Oder

How you doing? You know the score and how it works in this neck of the woods.
Day after day, month after month, year after year for 25 years I have watched the black man destroy economic growth, infrastructure and education. I live in a country in which everything is falling apart. I have seen it go from 1st world to 3rd world in a matter of 14 years.
I get stuck in traffic jams everyday for hours because the traffic lights are off due to the rolling black outs/power cuts. And where is this NEW BLACK EMPOWERMENT police force when this is happening? Under the trees at the side of the road scratching their heads and eating strands of grass whilst ticketing people for MINOR offences looking for bribes instead of directing the traffic and sorting out the chaos.
Then you need to listen to the radio in all this chaos only to hear that there has been 50 savage murders in the last 24 hours and 167 ATM bombings since January. The security minister says its no problem, crime is crime if you dont like you can leave.The there is people dying of aids at a rapid rate and the minister of health is saying that western medicine is no good and that beetroot and garlic must be used to cure aids. She says traditional African medicine is more advanced than western medicine. She is also an alcoholic and recently needed a liver transplant, but did she seek the help of a traditional healer for the Liver Transplant? Did she hell.
It is chaos, and slowly slowly after years of this level of intellect, you begin to see black people in a different light. Its unavoidable!
6

Itchy,

06/04/2008 10:51:13
"Mugabe 'preparing to wage war on his people'"

He has already done so for years, as has every socialist.

Note that all those who cheer Castro are silent on Mugabe despite these men's modus operandi being identical.
7

Jay Kay,

06/04/2008 11:43:12
Would the Americans do us all a favour and drop a smart bomb staight onto Mugabe and all his cronies. Please lets have some return to order in Zimbabwe.
8

Jay Kay,

06/04/2008 11:44:12
You can even try out your new fangles Laser weapon, go on give it a field try.
9

oder,

Scotland 06/04/2008 11:44:26
Media 1,cape town

doing well thanks! how you doing?

for the thirty years I lived there its like you say! if you`ve never experienced it, its hard to believe! where it was and were its heading, yet the world watches! apologists say if Smith had done this or that things would be better! not true, the hasty retreat by the British before making certain the the African was ready to govern is the epitaph of British rule all over Africa! more African deaths have happened under Black African rule the under white colonial rule! or British expansionism.
It appears that African lives only have value to the outside world if its a white government,African governments can operate with impunity. all the positives that the Europeans brought to Africa are at best down played or ignored!if your white in Africa your wrong! the new Black empowerment is as racist if not worse than anything under Apartheid! Black Apartheid is OK its only white apartheid that's wrong!
No outcry from the international community or the politically correct brigade, wheres Peter Hain when you need him? a apologist appeaser!
Sad to say the outlook for SA isn't much better in the long run!

the minister didnt she jump the queue for a transplant? I am sure I read something to that effect.
they were still building the Lesotho highland project was it ever finished or was that stop by the ANC too.

The west is paralysed with fear of being condemned to intervene in Southern Africa, the other favourite is that Africa has no oil, No it doesn't it has much much more in mineral wealth, much needed by the west! and overlooked by apologists until the west get out of their feeling sorry for the past, the trend looks set to continue.
10

Jay Kay,

06/04/2008 11:44:36
fangled, sorry
11

antifa,

06/04/2008 15:49:26
"Note that all those who cheer Castro are silent on Mugabe despite these men's modus operandi being identical."

Even if this made sense, which it doesn't, it would still be a really stupid generalisation.
12

Media 1,

cape town 06/04/2008 17:34:17
Oder

You summed it up perfectly, I cant add anything to your comments. But you understand it because you lived it, the rest cannot begin to even comprehend what its like to live in Africa under African rule.
European people who live, work and socialise with black European people dont understand that it all works well because the governments in these nations are white and well managed. But put a black government in place, change the ratio to more black and less white and suddenly white Europeans will begin to see their economies, infrastructures and services reduced to a third world nightmare. When that happens your mindset changes, it is unavoidable.
I will check out the Lesotho highland water project, but I am sure it went ahead with new funding. Not sure though!
I want the WORLD CUP here in 2010 banned. Not for political reasons, or because the racist ANC are contrevening the olympic charter by insisting that black players play before whites in all national sport. But because many innocent people WILL BE MURDERED for their cell phones when they come here in 2010. More people will be slaughtered here than in any other host nation ever, yet FIFA are still backing SA.
Africa and the handouts she receives for her constant faliure is outrageous. NEVER in the history of mankind has one continent and people received so much for nothing in return.Unbelievable!
13

Media 1,

cape town 06/04/2008 18:43:23
Mugabe! I hope you die you f@cking useless good for nothing pig.
EVERYTHING you have eaten and drank in the last 80 years was given to you by the colonials. You are a useless shortsighted idiot who has taken a nation of abundance under the Ian Smith government, to a nation of nothing under your pathetic leadership!
People will bin your posters, burn your posters and remove your name from every single part of Zimbabwean life, AND THEN they will shake hands with Gordon Brown and Zimbabwe will recvover without you. You will be remembered as a sick f@cking nothing.
14

oder,

Scotland 06/04/2008 20:02:10
12 Media 1,cape town

I agree with you about many innocent people will be killed during the world cup, Fifa wanted to give it to Africa for quite sometime! I suspect that they had a political motive for doing so probably to give credibility to the ANC government, and its to an ex white country that should get anyone wondering why not a black country? like Nigeria because they recognise that South Africa was the only African country that has any hope of staging such an event!(thanks to white rule) but let them put it on! the western political
movers and shakers and Fifa need to learn the hard way, at least it will be interesting to see who will be blamed for the chaos of Africa`s first World Cup!
so while I say let them put it on, on the other hand
I would tell supporters for your own safety do go!
There will be more deaths associated with the 2010 world cup than any previous.
Another first for African rule!
15

oder,

06/04/2008 20:03:48
sorry that should be dont go!
16

Itchy,

06/04/2008 20:07:09
11 What's not to understand? Both Castro and Mugabe have enforce Marxist-Leninsm on their people and blamed others for their failure.

Castro still has lots of enthusiastic cheerleaders who think he is great. They never post on Mugabe news though.

 

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