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AP
Interview: Zimbabwe President Mugabe: Controversial policies will
succeed
Associated Press
September 20, 2006
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2006/09/21/news/UN_GEN_UN_Zimbabwe.php#
UNITED NATIONS
President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe defended his record as the head
of the southern African country now reeling from runaway inflation
and unemployment — saying drought and sanctions were the cause of
the country's problems, not his policies.
In an interview
Wednesday with the Associated Press, Mugabe also absolved police
forces that last week violently suppressed labor
demonstrators in the capital Harare. He said his controversial
land reform program, in which white farmers were forced to turn
over their land six years ago, would yet prove successful.
Speaking in
the late afternoon shortly after delivering his country's address
at the annual opening of the General Assembly of the United Nations,
the 82-year-old president, who assumed power in 1980 in what had
been the last British colony in Africa, appeared weary and reflective.
He wore an elegant
charcoal suit, set off with a deep red tie and handkerchief, and
leaned back in his chair. His voice was soft as he spoke of still
having some "muscle" in him.
Once hailed
as a freedom fighter, Mugabe in recent years has been pilloried,
particularly in Europe, for what critics call erratic and despotic
management and the denial of human rights.
Unrest in Zimbabwe,
where annual inflation reached a record 1,204 percent in August,
the highest in the world, erupted again over the weekend. Police
and soldiers broke up a march by unionists planning anti-government
marches across the country.
Asked about
police actions, Mugabe said he did not know the details but blamed
"overzealousness of one or two police, exaggerating their role."
The country's
economy is on the mend, he said. "Our inflation, we are fighting
that, and there is no hunger anymore, and we have a bumper harvest,
so there is enough maize in the country," he said.
He also said
that his government remains popular and the world should not believe
the critics inside Zimbabwe, whom he accused of being in the pay
of outside governments, making a pointed reference to Britain. "I
don't know what they tell the world, but — take care — I do not
think they are telling the whole truth, just as their master at
No. 10 Downing Street."
In the interview,
he said: "We are more democratic than the average country in the
developing world. We are very, very democratic."
Of his political
opponents, he said: "Oh they are in parliament and they should do
their business in parliament, criticize government as much as possible.
We don't hate them."
But he did direct
verbal fire at the United States, which he had described in his
speech as a Goliath, adding "Every Goliath has his own day."
He said the
world is growing angry at the United States and Britain for the
war in Iraq.
"You cannot
go out on a campaign of aggression with impunity. One day obviously
there will be the reaction."
He also accused
the United States of fanning the recent war in Lebanon between Israelis
and Hezbollah guerrilla fighters. "I think someone was pushing Israel
from behind, it was the United States and naively also Britain acquiesced
in it, and now (Prime Minister Tony) Blair is in trouble for having
done that."
In comments
to the Associated Press last year, Mugabe said that he planned to
leave the presidency in 2008. On Wednesday, however, he declined
to specify when — only that "I think the day will come soon."
Asked what he
wanted his legacy to be, Mugabe said: "That of an independent country
that will be defended against outsiders and that also ensures the
people derive maximum benefits from it.
"We want a state
that is developed, so that is the legacy I want, the road to a Zimbabwe
that is highly developed."
He said that
he is becoming hardened to criticism and would never be driven from
power except in a democratic vote. He also laughed about the hatred
he inspires among some media, especially in Britain.
"Oh goodness
me. I don't know a person they hate more than they do me," he said.
"I don't know what I have done. They never were in love with me,
from Day One, even as we were waging our struggle," he said.
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