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Tutu:
Mugabe needs face-saving options
David Clarke, Mail & Guardian (SA)
June 28, 2007
http://www.mg.co.za/articlepage.aspx?area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__national/&articleid=312535
London - South
African Nobel peace prize laureate Desmond Tutu said on Wednesday
Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe needed face-saving options for
there to be a chance of him stepping aside. Tutu said the replacement
of Tony Blair by Gordon Brown as prime minister of Britain, Zimbabwe's
former colonial ruler, could help the situation but much depended
on negotiations to resolve the crisis being mediated by South Africa.
"A change of cast might have an important bearing on how things
develop," Tutu told Reuters in an interview. "I would
hope that there might just be a way of providing face-savers that
would enable people to exit without feeling that they had lost a
great deal of personal stature," he said. "We need to
provide that for the sake of the people and it may be that [Britain's]
new prime minister just might have a way of saying things that would
be slightly more acceptable." Relations between Britain and
Zimbabwe have reached a low. Mugabe (83), in power since independence
in 1980, has accused Britain of trying to overthrow him and he threatened
on Wednesday to seize foreign companies. Britain has criticised
Mugabe for his crackdown on the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change and accused him of driving the Southern African state to
economic ruin.
Tutu, who has been an
outspoken critic of human rights violations by Mugabe's government,
was not specific about the kind of face-savers that might work.
He said: "I think they have to go and speak with the actors,
but it is finding a way of letting him maybe step down in a way
that still leaves him with some dignity and self respect."
While Western nations have called for a tough African response to
end the crisis, the Southern African Development Community (SADC)
has plotted its own diplomatic course, calling for more dialogue
and an end to Western sanctions. "[South African] President
[Thabo] Mbeki is the facilitator, the mediator, appointed by SADC
and he's had some of [the Zimbabweans] come to Pretoria and they've
had exchanges," said Tutu. "I have been told on very good
authority that I think the two sides set themselves June 30 as the
deadline for something significant," he said. "It's a
delicate thing and you are constantly having to determine whether
it is better to keep quiet for a while so that you don't muddy the
waters. "And so much hinges on how President Mugabe reacts
and then you know that the fate of many, many, many hangs on how
he operates. So I wouldn't want to jeopardise the whole thing. Let's
wait."
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