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China's
'ship of shame' offloads
Dumisani
Muleya, Hopewell Radebe and Chantelle Benjamin, The Weekender
May 17, 2008
http://www.businessday.co.za/weekender/article.aspx?ID=BD4A768171
The weapons
destined for Zimbabwe have arrived in Harare — allegedly with
some help from SA.
The Zimbabwean government has confirmed that 3-million rounds of
assault rifle ammunition, 3000 mortar rounds and 1500 rocket-propelled
grenades - ordered from the Chinese government - have arrived in
Harare. The South African government flatly denies media reports
that it assisted in the delivery of the 77 tons of arms by providing
fuel for the Chinese vessel, An Yue Jiang, that was transporting
the arsenal. There is fear that Robert Mugabe is planning to use
force to storm back to power in the presidential runoff election
that will be held on June 27. He has already deployed the army,
police and intelligence units across Zimbabwe to campaign for him
through intimidation and coercive tactics. The Movement for Democratic
Change says at least 40 people, mainly its supporters, have been
killed in violence since the March 29 elections. The Zimbabwean
government disputes this figure, but has promised to curb the violence.
On Friday Mozambican
online newspaper Canal de Moçambique reported that the "ship
of shame" had been refuelled by the SAS Drakensberg off the
coast of SA before sailing north to offload its deadly cargo. It
reported that the ship was offloaded at Ponta Negra in the Democratic
Republic of Congo. However, Zimbabwean government officials say
it was offloaded in Angola. Canal de Moçambique reports that
President Thabo Mbeki gave "a direct instruction" to Deputy
Defence Minister Mluleki George to send the SAS Drakensberg to refuel
the An Yue Jiang. It claims the SAS Drakensberg used its electronic
equipment to jam radar and satellite communications while the ship
was being fuelled as the An Yue Jiang was being tracked by Lloyds
of London. Last month the Durban High Court granted an interim order
preventing the unloading of the ship in SA. It did not prohibit
the government from providing assistance to the vessel.
Presidential spokesman
Mukoni Ratshitanga dismissed the reports of the ship's refuelling,
saying "it seems that the season of propaganda is upon us".
George says he had no instructions from Mbeki to dispatch the SAS
Drakensberg and that the allegations " have no substance whatsoever".
However, the Canal de Moçambique article also says the arms
were flown to Harare in an Ilyushin Il-76 belonging to Avient Aviation,
a freight charter airline based in Zimbabwe but registered in the
UK. This was confirmed by government officials in Harare. Two senior
Zimbabwean ministers and army officers went to Angola three weeks
ago to negotiate the offloading of the weapons , which were then
flown to Harare. Zimbabwe's Deputy Information Minister Bright
Matonga confirms the weapons have been delivered.
The Angolan
government's assistance comes after an appeal by the Southern
African Development Community (SADC) chairman, Zambian President
Levy Mwanawasa, to member states to bar the delivery of the ammunition
to Zimbabwe, saying the arms could deepen the country's election
crisis. The US and British governments had also exerted concerted
pressure on the SADC and China to stop the ship from docking in
the region. Trade
union members in SA and Mozambique had vowed not to offload
the shipment. South African Transport and Allied Workers'
Union general secretary Randall Howard says unions and civil society
organizations that succeeded in getting the ship out of South African
and Mozambican waters would be disappointed if the reports that
the weapons were offloaded in Angola and sent to Zimbabwe were true.
"If it is true,
that would show a serious lack of respect for international solidarity
(by Angola) and an injustice to the people of Zimbabwe," Howard
says. "Both the Chinese government and Cosco (the ship's
owners) have regrettably demonstrated that profiteering remains
the overriding consideration, over human solidarity and saving lives."
Nicole Fritz, director of the South African Litigation Unit, who
went to court to impound the cargo, says she would be surprised
if the arms were offloaded in Luanda, as human rights activists
were at all times monitoring the ship's activities. She believes
if the weapons were offloaded, this probably happened at Lobito,
Angola, where there was less scrutiny by rights organizations and
unions. "We know the ship stopped off at Luanda to refuel and
to load food for the crew," she says. "Human rights experts
were monitoring the ship's activity to ensure that the weapons
were not offloaded." The ship has been spotted off the coast
of Port Elizabeth.
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