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Archbishop
Ncube says stronger nations should invade Zimbabwe in worst-case
scenario
Violet Gonda, SW Radio Africa
July 02, 2007
http://allafrica.com/stories/200707021707.html
Pius Ncube, the outspoken
Catholic Archbishop of Bulawayo is making headlines in the western
press over reports that he is 'calling on Britain to invade
Zimbabwe to remove Mugabe from power.' There has been mixed
reactions to the Archbishop's words. Some say the statements
are damaging for the Archbishop and that they play into Mugabe's
hands while others say it's a statement of frustration that shows
how desperate things are in the country. They say the Archbishop
is one of the few leaders who see the suffering at first hand and
is brave enough to speak his mind. SW Radio Africa caught up with
the Archbishop and asked him to explain what he meant. He said if
the present government continues to cause suffering on the people,
and people are not allowed to elect a government of their own choice,
"then it will be justified to raid them and bring them down."
He said if the worse comes to the worst stronger nations should
not just stand around and let people die when a government goes
against its own people.
He gave the
example of Former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic who started
killing his own people. He said it was justified for Europe to go
in and protect the innocent. On the BBC Today programme on Monday,
he also gave the example of Rwanda, where 800,000 people were murdered
while the world looked on. The Archbishop said many African heads
of state and renowned church leaders have attempted to talk to the
83-year-old leader but to no avail. "We have Thabo Mbeki, Chissano,
Muluzi, Mkapa, we have Obasanjo and he (Mugabe) hasn't listened.
Churchmen like Archbishop Ndungane - the successor to Archbishop
Desmond Tutu in Cape Town - have talked to him but he didn't
listen. The Catholic Church, The Evangelical
Fellowship of Zimbabwe, The Zimbabwe Council of Churches, and
the Pope have tried to talk with him, all to no avail. Ambassadors
of different countries, human rights organizations have talked with
this man all to no avail."
Ncube added: "I
am simply saying if the worse comes to worst, we haven't come
to the worst yet, but if it continues this way and people's
lives are at risk and this man continues being intransigent then
it is justified to bring him down through invasion." But the
cleric was quick to point out that he was not in favour of violence
or armed intervention. He said the international community should
perhaps think about giving the regime deadlines for it to put its
house in order. He said there should be a bottom line. "There
must be a kind of a line to be drawn. If you are no longer serving
your people and are choosing death for them then certainly the other
stronger nations have a right to put you down."
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