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World ready to help Zimbabwe if democracy respected: Milliband
Agence-France-Presse
September 27, 2008
http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5glxxaOYq20fNMCudPKcekNYYobxw
British Foreign Secretary
David Milliband on Saturday said the world stood ready to assist
in Zimbabwe's reconstruction but only if a new government reflecting
the will of its people is formed.
Commenting on
Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe's call for a lifting of what
he called "illegally imposed sanctions" on his regime,
Milliband said: "the world stands ready to help with the reconstruction
of Zimbabwe" in the wake of the September 15 power-sharing
deal in
Harare.
But the British top diplomat
said this would happen only if "the democratic process is respected,
the new government is formed reflecting that process and action
on the ground reflects a new approach."
He said financial and
travel sanctions imposed by European countries and the United States
targeted only "individual members of the (Harare) regime."
"The parlous state
of the Zimbabwean economy is not the result of the international
community. It is the result of mismanagement by the Mugabe regime,"
Milliband told reporters after attending a ministerial session on
Myanmar hosted by UN chief Ban Ki-moon at UN headquarters.
He advised Mugabe to
return home soon and "follow through on the words he has given
and the signature he has made on the deal with (opposition leader
Morgan) Tsvangirai."
"It is very important
that a clear message goes out that there are definite expectations
of a significant transfer of power reflecting the results of the
parliamentary and presidential elections which were won by the
(Tsvangirai-led) opposition," Milliband said.
In the wake of the power-sharing
accord he signed with his opposition, Mugabe told the UN General
Assembly Thursday: "I would like to appeal to those members
of the international community who have imposed illegal sanctions
against Zimbabwe to lift them so that my country can focus, undisturbed,
on his economic turn-around."
"We deplore the
vindictive approach which often is characterized by self-righteous
finger-pointing, double standards and the imposition of unilateral
sanctions to coerce smaller and weaker countries to bow to the wishes
of militarily stronger states," Mugabe added.
It took months of tough
negotiations for Mugabe and his prime minister-designate Morgan
Tsvangirai to hammer out a peace deal.
The deal was
clinched after the world community slammed the Mugabe's' re-election
last June as unfair. Tsvangirai pushed Mugabe into second place
in the March first round of the presidential vote, but he pulled
out of the June run-off vote after a wave of deadly attacks
against his supporters.
Mugabe's ZANU-PF party,
Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) and a smaller
MDC opposition faction have yet to agree on who will hold certain
key ministries in the new cabinet.
The United States and
the European Union have slapped targeted sanctions, including travel
and financial restrictions, on the Harare regime, arguing that Mugabe
has crushed human rights and ruined his country's once prosperous
economy.
Zimbabwe's economy has
been in decline for a decade with sky-high unemployment, devastating
food shortages, crippling poverty and the world's highest rate of
inflation.
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