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Obama
extends sanctions against Zimbabwe's Mugabe
US Department of State
March 02, 2010
http://www.thezimbabwetimes.com/?p=27669
The United States
extended sanctions on President Robert Mugabe's regime for
another year, saying that Zimbabwe's political crisis is unresolved,
President Obama announced.
The United States
has imposed travel sanctions and a freeze on the financial assets
of President Mugabe, his family and closest political aides; a freeze
on all non-humanitarian government-to-government aid; and a freeze
on any transfer of defense-related items and services to protest
a disputed presidential election and human rights abuses by President
Mugabe's government, the White House said in a message to
Congress March 1. The European Union has also imposed targeted sanctions
on the country.
"I am
continuing for one year the national emergency with respect to the
actions and policies of certain members of the government of Zimbabwe
and other persons to undermine Zimbabwe's democratic processes
or institutions," Obama said.
"The crisis
constituted by the actions and policies of certain members of the
government of Zimbabwe and other persons to undermine Zimbabwe's
democratic processes or institutions has not been resolved,"
Obama said.
Former President
George W. Bush imposed the original sanctions with the declaration
of a national emergency in 2003, saying that the actions by the
Zanu PF regime had "contributed to the deliberate breakdown
in the rule of law in Zimbabwe." There are no trade sanctions
against Zimbabwe and the country does not qualify to participate
in the U.S.-sponsored African Growth and Opportunity Act because
of poor economic management and human rights abuses.
According to
a 2009 report from the U.S. Congressional Research Service, the
United States froze the financial assets held in the United States
of 75 high-ranking Zimbabwe officials and President Mugabe's
wife, Grace. Nine companies and farms were added in 2004, and the
list was further expanded in November 2005 to block the assets of
128 individuals and 33 entities. And more names were added to the
list in December 2007 and again in November 2008, the CRS report
said.
President Mugabe
has ruled the country since its independence in 1980. But after
the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) won the majority
of Parliamentary seats in the March 2008 election, tensions began
rising. Mugabe's re-election as president in a June runoff
was regarded as illegitimate by the United States and U.N. Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon. In September 2008, after weeks of negotiations, Mugabe
and MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai signed a power-sharing arrangement
aimed at resolving the political standoff. Tsvangirai had won more
votes for president than Mugabe, but not more than the 50 percent
needed to avoid a runoff.
Tsvangirai became
the Prime Minister of a new coalition government following the power-sharing
arrangement, and Cabinet positions have been filled among the nation's
political parties.
President Obama
and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton welcomed Prime Minister
Tsvangirai to Washington in June 2009, praising the progress made
"in very difficult circumstance" since he joined the
unity government with political rival Mugabe. Speaking after their
meeting, Obama said Zimbabwe's power-sharing
agreement "shows promise" and the United States
is looking for ways to help Tsvangirai and the Zimbabwean people
improve the country's democratic and economic future.
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