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Robert
Mugabe threatens to expel US Ambassador
Jan Raath, The Times (UK)
May 26, 2008
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article4004120.ece
President Mugabe
threatened to expel the US Ambassador yesterday after accusing him
of interfering in domestic politics and promised to give land to
Zimbabweans fleeing xenophobic violence in South Africa. "I
am just waiting to see if he makes one more step wrong. He will
get out," Mr Mugabe told a rally as he stepped up campaigning
for a second-round run-off in presidential elections. "As tall
as he is, if he continues to do that I will kick him out of the
country." Mr Mugabe accused James McGee of meddling after the
US Ambassador publicly called on Morgan Tsvangirai, the opposition
leader, to return home to contest the run-off on June 27. The President
also made the offer of land to thousands of Zimbabweans fleeing
violence in South African townships that has killed 50 foreign
nationals and displaced tens of thousands more. "We have land
for our people in South Africa who may want to return home,"
he said. Mr Mugabe's comments followed the return of Mr Tsvangirai
after a six-week absence abroad. His first stop after arriving at
Harare airport - unhindered by authorities - was at a hospital to
visit victims of savage assaults on supporters of his Movement for
Democratic Change (MDC) that began soon after the first round of
elections on March 29.
"I have
seen people in hospital with scars and wounds and they say to me,
Mr President, now we will finish him [Mr Mugabe] off," he said.
"If Mugabe thinks he has beaten people into submission, he
will have a rude shock on June 27. They [the Government] have beaten
themselves into serious rejection by the people of Zimbabwe."
The MDC inflicted the first election defeat since independence in
1980 on Mr Mugabe and his Zanu PF party. While abroad Mr Tsvangirai
lobbied widely to bring international pressure on Mr Mugabe's regime
to stop the violence and allow independent international observers
and peacekeepers, including the United Nations, into the country
well before the elections. He said that southern African leaders
were appalled at what was happening in Zimbabwe, particularly the
violence. Churches, human rights organisations and diplomats have
evidence that at least 26 people have been murdered - the MDC
puts the number at 43 - and about 2,000 have been treated in
hospital for assault; thousands more have fled their homes. They
confirm that all but a handful are victims of Mr Mugabe's party
and militias.
In the past
week the Government has mounted a publicity drive to portray Mr
Mugabe as striving for a non-violent campaign. "Such violence
is needless and must stop forthwith," he says in a full-page
advertisement in local newspapers. "It's nonsense," a
Western diplomat said. "Mugabe can switch it on and off at
will." Last week he was quoted telling his party's politburo
to form "warlike structures" to fight the run-off, saying
that the party faced "a situation like all-out war" to
survive the vote. The past fortnight also has seen the emergence
of death squads that seek out key MDC activists. Last Monday the
body of Tonderai
Ndira, a senior MDC youth official, was dumped in a Harare government
hospital a week after he had been snatched
from his home here by eight men armed with pistols. His body was
so mangled that his father, Raphael, was able to identify him only
by a scar on his elbow, a bracelet and his shorts, which were tied
around his head. Also last week police discovered the bodies, abandoned
in the bush near Harare, of three other activists, all of whom had
been abducted a week earlier. At the burial on Wednesday of two
of the victims, people
fled as 100 Zanu PF youth invaded Harare's Warren Hills cemetery
and attacked the mourning party. "What has happened to people
in our country?" asked an elderly woman. "Respect for
the dead is the most profound part of our culture."
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