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Mbeki
tells Bush to 'butt out'
News24 (SA)
May 29, 2008
http://www.news24.com/News24/Africa/Zimbabwe/0,,2-11-1662_2331378,00.html
Cape Town - President
Thabo Mbeki has accused US President George W Bush of interfering
in Zimbabwe, telling the US to "butt out, that Africa belongs
to him", according to a US official.
Mbeki reportedly sent
the four-page letter to Bush in late April, following the Zimbabwean
elections, criticizing Bush for taking sides against Robert Mugabe's
government and disrespecting the views of the Zimbabwean people,
according to Washington Post columnist Michael Gerson.
In his column, Gerson
quoted a US official who said Mbeki had written that "it was
not our business", and another official as saying that "Mbeki
lost it; it was outrageous".
"Rather than co-ordinating
strategy to end Zimbabwe's nightmare, Mbeki criticized the United
States in a text packed with exclamation points," Gerson wrote.
White
House working on a response
A
US embassy official in Pretoria confirmed to News24 on Thursday
that the White House had received the four-page letter, and that
President Bush's office was working on a response to it.
The official said she
hadn't seen the letter and could not comment on its contents personally,
but said she understood the White House disagreed with certain points,
and felt that the US could play an important role in the region
and in Zimbabwe.
Repeated attempts to
get comment from the Presidency failed, as Mbeki and his spokesperson,
Mukoni Ratshitanga, are out of the country, but the Star reported
that Ratshitanga said he had no knowledge of the letter.
SA a
'rogue democracy'
In
his column, Gerson also said South Africa has actively blocked United
Nations discussions on human rights abuses in Zimbabwe - as well
as in other countries such as Belarus, Cuba, North Korea and Uzbekistan.
South Africa was the only democracy to vote against a resolution
over Myanmar, he added.
South Africa is increasingly
becoming a rogue democracy, and along with China and Russia, makes
the United Nations impotent, and sides with despots, Gerson wrote.
"South Africa remains
an example of freedom - while devaluing and undermining the freedom
of others. It is the product of a conscience it does not display,"
Gerson said.
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