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Zimbabwe
should be at EU-Africa summit-commissioner
David Brunnstrom, Reuters
September 05, 2007
http://africa.reuters.com/wire/news/usnL04817136.html
A senior EU official
has suggested Zimbabwe be represented at a long-delayed EU-Africa
summit at lower level than President Robert Mugabe to resolve objections
some EU states have about sharing a table with him.
But other EU officials
said reaching a compromise to allow the summit to go ahead as planned
in December could be difficult given broad African support for the
presence of Mugabe, whom the West and rights groups accuse of human
rights violations.
In an interview published
on Tuesday, European Union External Relations Commissioner Benita
Ferrero-Waldner suggested "a high-ranking government minister,
like the foreign minister" could attend the summit and represent
Zimbabwe.
"I understand that
the British naturally have a big problem (over this issue) but we
should not let our political relationship with Africa fall apart
because of Mugabe," she told the German daily Financial Times
Deutschland.
Summit plans have been
on hold since 2003 as Britain and several other EU states have refused
to attend if Mugabe did.
Portugal, current holder
of the EU presidency, has been seeking a compromise.
The European Union and
Southeast Asian countries resolved a similar problem over military-ruled
Myanmar when it was agreed that the country would attend summits
at a lower level.
However South Africa
and other African states are expected to insist Mugabe be allowed
to attend the EU-Africa meeting.
"Almost all Africans
want Mugabe to be present," an EU official said. "The
Africans are really making this an issue. It could be difficult
to sort this out."
A spokeswoman for Portugal's
foreign ministry said no invitations had yet been sent. Portuguese
officials have said privately one had been extended to the African
Union, which would then decide who to invite.
A spokesman for the EU's
executive Commission said there were differences among the 27 EU
states as to what level of invitation should be sent to Zimbabwe.
EU officials said it
was unclear whether a compromise could be reached.
Diplomats have said Britain
would not veto a summit over an invitation to Mugabe, but analysts
said it would be impossible for Prime Minister Gordon Brown to attend
if the Zimbabwean president did so.
European Commission spokesman
Amadeu Altafaj said there was increasing competition for influence
in Africa.
"In the last three
years China has held three summits with Africa, and very business-minded
summits with a lot of concrete outcomes. Our main concern is to
hold the summit in December without any delay," he said.
Mugabe blames Western
sanctions for hyper-inflation, food shortages and an economic crisis.
Critics say Mugabe has destroyed the economy with his policy of
farm seizures. (Additional reporting by Sylvia Westall in Berlin,
Ingrid Melander in Brussels and Axel Bugge in Lisbon)
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