|
Back to Index
Bush:
Mugabe has ruined Zimbabwe
Voice of America (VOA)
February 14, 2008
http://voanews.com/english/2008-02-14-voa66.cfm
President Bush
says he is disappointed that South African mediation
has failed to ease Zimbabwe's political divisions. VOA White House
Correspondent Scott Stearns reports, Mr. Bush spoke to radio reporters
on the eve of his second trip to Africa.
Political instability
in Zimbabwe was a big issue during the president's first trip to
Africa five years ago. Mr. Bush embraced South African President
Thabo Mbeki as an honest broker in the political standoff between
Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe and opponents in the country's
pro-democracy movement.
Mr. Mugabe is
now looking to extend his 28 years in office in elections next month.
The opposition has failed to come together in a unified campaign.
Mr. Mugabe's most serious challenger,
Simba Makoni, is a former member of his own party.
President Bush says the
United States will continue to support freedom in Zimbabwe, denouncing
Mr. Mugabe as a "discredited dictator" who has brought
misery to his people.
During a White House
interview with radio reporters, Mr. Bush was asked by VOA about
Zimbabwe's rapid economic decline.
"Zimbabwe used to
be a net exporter of food," he said. "Today it is a net
importer of food. Mr. Mugabe has ruined a country."
Zimbabwe's official inflation
rate, already the world's highest, has now risen to more than 66,000
percent. Price controls introduced last June have had little effect
in a country with chronic food and fuel shortages and an unemployment
rate of about 80 percent.
Critics blame President
Mugabe for economic mismanagement and the poorly handled seizure
of white-owned commercial farms. Mr. Mugabe blames sabotage by Western
governments led by Britain.
Stephen Morrison is co-director
of the Africa Program at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies, a private policy research group in Washington. He says
President Bush's decision to enlist the aid of the South African
leader has failed to change Zimbabwean politics.
"In '03, there was
the handoff to Mbeki on Zimbabwe at the very close of the trip,
and of course now we're approaching the countdown towards the March
elections, and what that will mean, and of course [what] Mbeki's
achieved - as we can tell right now - [he] has achieved nothing
in terms of getting resolution of that," he said.
President Bush told radio
reporters that he is disappointed that the situation in Zimbabwe
has gotten worse since his first visit to Africa.
"I was hoping that
the South African government would have been more pro-active in
its intercession to help the people of Zimbabwe," he added.
"It's not anti-anybody. It's pro-people. And that has yet to
happen."
The president is scheduled
to leave for Africa Friday with stops in Benin, Tanzania, Rwanda,
Liberia, and Ghana.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|