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Tsvangirai
says Mbeki 'no longer fit' to be Zimbabwe mediator
The Guardian (UK)
June 02, 2008
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/jun/02/zimbabwe.southafrica
The Zimbabwean opposition
leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, has told South Africa's president, Thabo
Mbeki, that he is no longer fit to serve as the region's mediator
in Zimbabwe's political crisis owing to a "lack of neutrality",
and that "there will be no country left" if Mbeki continues
to side with President Robert Mugabe.
The warning
comes in a letter
from the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) leader to Mbeki made
public just days after it was revealed that the South African president
had written
a four-page letter to George Bush demanding that the US president
stop criticizing Mugabe.
In his letter, Tsvangirai
accuses Mbeki of colluding with Mugabe to play down the deepening
political crisis, of blocking UN security council discussions on
Zimbabwe and of trying to facilitate a controversial weapons delivery
from China to the Zimbabwean military.
But some of the strongest
criticism is over Mbeki's reaction to the escalating state-sponsored
campaign of murder, violence and arrests against the opposition
in the run up to the run-off presidential election between Mugabe
and Tsvangirai at the end of this month. At least 50 people have
been killed and thousands beaten.
The letter, dated May
13, accuses South Africa's president of ignoring evidence that Harare
was planning the violence, including a leaked Zimbabwean military
document outlining the strategy that Tsvangirai personally handed
to Mbeki.
"When you started
mediating, Zimbabwe still had a functioning economy, millions of
our citizens had not fled to other countries to escape political
and economic crisis, and tens of thousands had not yet died from
impoverishment and disease. In fact, since the March 29 election,
Zimbabwe has plunged into horrendous violence while you have been
mediating. With respect, if we continue like this, there will be
no country left," writes Tsvangirai.
"As you know, when
MDC attempted to appeal to the UN Security Council to investigate
and help stop the carnage, it was you, the so-called 'neutral' mediator,
who blocked a possible road to resolution of the crisis."
Tsvangirai says Mbeki
continued to act as if everything was normal, even after the Zimbabwean
government blocked the release of poll results showing that Mugabe
and his Zanu-PF party had lost.
"Your lack of neutrality
became increasingly evident when I arrived to the Lusaka summit
to see you and Mr Mugabe on television together proclaiming there
is 'no crisis' in Zimbabwe," the letter says.
Tsvangirai also
accuses the South African government of facilitating the delivery
of weapons via Durban from a Chinese ship that was eventually turned
away by dock workers and legal action.
"Not only have you
been unable to denounce the well-documented post-election attacks
on our people, but your government even played a role in Zimbabwean
government procurement of weapons of repression ... and agree to
allow passage of arms of war purchased by the same government through
South African territory during the troubled post-election period,"
he writes.
The letter demands Mbeki
step down as the Southern African Development Community mediator
on Zimbabwe, as the MDC no longer has confidence in him.
His spokesman, Mukoni
Ratshitanga, has denied knowledge of the letter even though the
MDC says it has a receipt showing it was delivered to Mbeki's office.
Ratshitanga has also denied knowledge of the letter to Bush revealed
by the Washington Post last week in an article which quotes an unnamed
US official as saying Mbeki told Bush to "butt out" of
Zimbabwe.
But the US embassy in
Pretoria confirmed that Mbeki's letter existed and was delivered
to Bush.
Yesterday, the
leader of a breakaway MDC faction, Arthur Mutambara, was arrested
and charged over a newspaper column criticizing Mugabe's handling
of the economy, with inflation now above 1,000,000%, and accusing
the security forces of abuses.
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