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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Britain
drags Zimbabwe to UN Security Council
New
Zimbabwe.com
July 28, 2005
http://www.newzimbabwe.com/pages/un15.12908.html
THE U.N. Security
Council Wednesday barely overcame objections of African members and Brazil,
China and Russia to hear a briefing on evictions in Zimbabwe.
Last week Anna Tibaijuka,
head of UN-HABITAT and U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan's special envoy,
to report on the evictions, said 700,000 people were left homeless in
the southern Africa nation because of the government's evictions and demolitions
of illegal housing and businesses.
Britain's Ambassador
Emyr Jones Parry called for Tibaijuka to brief the council and answer
questions. But, Algeria, Benin and Tanzania objected, saying it was not
a matter of international peace and security and should be left to the
African Union to handle. China, where Zimbabwe's President Mugabe was
on an extended official visit, and Russia agreed.
Brazil abstained.
Diplomats said Brasilia is courting support from African nations for its
quest to get a permanent seat as part of Security Council reform.
But the necessary
minimum of nine members agreed and the briefing was held.
Zimbabwe's Ambassador
Boniface Chidyausiku said Harare didn't feel the situation "warranted
the attention it was receiving."
Mugabe is in China
this week where he obtained the full support of Chinese leader Hu Jintao
who has vowed to veto any UN resolution o the southern African state.
China is said to be
keen to extend its tentacles across the African continent to achieve its
projected domestic economic growth.
The Chinese government
has agreed to prop up Mugabe's regime through a combination of financial
and developmental packages in return for mining rights, according to economic
commentators.
Observors say the
UN report into the Zimbabwean slum blitz will not be wished away, and
is likely to be revisited by the United States and Britain in a shortwhile
as they seek to find a permanent solution to the Zimbabwean crisis.
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