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No sign of let-up for Zimbabwe
Mail
& Guardian (SA)
December
11, 2006
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=292975
Zimbabwe's political and economic crises
show no sign of abating, Commonwealth Secretary General Don McKinnon
said in Cape Town on Monday.
"We would all like to think there could
be productive change in Zimbabwe to see all these economic indicators
move the other way, but there is no sign of that happening at all,"
he told reporters on the fringes of a Commonwealth education ministers'
meeting.
On leadership, too, there were few
signs of President Robert Mugabe, who has ruled the country since
its 1980 independence from Britain, being replaced.
"A lot of people talk about a post-Mugabe
plan. We certainly have ideas. But we don't see anything coming
out that suggests change is really imminent."
McKinnon referred to plans to postpone
Zimbabwean presidential elections by two years to 2010 and underscored
that repeated efforts by the Commonwealth, the United Nations, the
Southern African Development Community and nations such as Britain
and the United States had failed to stem Zimbabwe's economic slide.
"Everyone has tried and all of us have
failed," he said. "With all the effort we put into it we didn't
get any result at all."
Asked if he had given up, McKinnon
said: "We would like to see them come back into the Commonwealth.
I'm looking for ... new ideas."
McKinnon said he had evidence that
every African leader of a Commonwealth nation had publicly criticised
Mugabe at one time or another, including South Africa, which has
been repeatedly chastised over its policy of "silent diplomacy"
towards its northern neighbour.
"The anxiety is there but clearly no
one was going to want to take him head on publicly," he said, adding
Mugabe's popularity on the continent should not be under-estimated.
Zimbabwe's collapse was putting pressure
on its neighbours, McKinnon added, with an estimated three million
expatriates thought to be living in South Africa.
Zimbabwe currently faces four-digit
inflation, massive joblessness and growing poverty.
Once a regional breadbasket, the country
has increasingly relied on food aid and imports since 2000 when
the government launched controversial land reforms evicting white
farmers to make way for landless black people. -- AFP
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