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Split
looms over invitations to Mugabe regime looms
Mail
& Guardian (SA)
February 02, 2007
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=297734&area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__africa/
A new split is developing within the European Union over sanctions
on the Zimbabwean government, with both France and Portugal considering
summit invitations to President Robert Mugabe that would weaken
the diplomatic isolation of his regime that Britain is trying to
maintain.
European officials
said there is an agreement in principle to continue five-year-old
EU travel sanctions against senior Zimbabwean officials, and a formal
decision is due to be announced on February 20. However, loopholes
in those sanctions could allow France and Portugal to invite Mugabe
or his aides to summits in Europe, undermining British efforts to
keep the Zimbabwean leader under pressure for human rights abuses.
A French official
said on Thursday he could not confirm whether President Jacques
Chirac had invited Mugabe to a France-Africa summit in Cannes on
February 14. "The invitations are still being sent. The list
will be published only later."
Portugal is
also hoping to invite Mugabe to Lisbon for an EU-Africa summit in
November. Both Lisbon and Paris are concerned that if he is excluded,
other governments from the region, particularly South Africa, might
boycott the meetings. Neither France nor Portugal has so far applied
for exemptions to the sanctions regime to issue invitations on the
grounds that the meetings they are planning will address human rights
issues. But British officials and human rights groups have argued
that Zimbabwean participation in such high-profile events would
make sanctions all but meaningless.
The Harare government
has denounced the sanctions as illegal. Nathan Shamuyarira, a spokesperson
for the ruling Zanu-PF party, said recently: "Britain is pursuing
a colonial practice, repression of other nations, and I hope other
countries will not be dragged in its sinister agendas."
Any watering
down of the sanctions regime would accentuate differences between
the EU and the Commonwealth, which indefinitely suspended Zimbabwe's
membership in 2003, prompting Mugabe's complete withdrawal.
Donald McKinnon,
the Commonwealth secretary general, told the Guardian on Thursday:
"If the EU was to change its stance totally, you're virtually
accepting the nature of the government in Zimbabwe, which I think
would be sad."
The group Action
for Southern Africa is to protest outside the French embassy in
London on Friday over France's refusal so far to pledge not to invite
Mugabe. - Guardian Unlimited © Guardian News and Media Limited
2006
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