|
Back to Index
Cosatu
dropped at border
News24
October 27, 2004
http://www.news24.com/News24/South_Africa/News/0,,2-7-1442_1611308,00.html
Johannesburg
- Delegates from the Congress of SA Trade Unions mission to Zimbabwe
were left at the Beitbridge border post by Zimbabwean police early
on Wednesday morning.
After being
taken to the border by bus overnight, without being told where they
were going, they were escorted into South Africa, and then left,
said head of the delegation, and Cosatu deputy president, Violet
Shibone.
"We are arranging
transport to Johannesburg for ourselves. We don't know when we will
get there," she told Sapa.
Sounding relaxed,
she said the delegation felt they had accomplished their mission:
"We spoke to the ZCTU (Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions) and their
affiliates. We did not get to speak to any civil groups but it shows
that the people shared something with us."
Shibone said
she did not want to comment on the Zimbabwean government's treatment
of the delegation, which was expelled from the country on Tuesday,
despite a court order preventing the deportation.
Zimbabwean authorities
first tried to get the 13 members of the delegation on a flight
back to South Africa.
However, when
this plan failed, they put the delegates on a bus, telling them
they were taking them to the hotel, and drove them to the border
under police escort.
The delegation
was on a fact-finding mission, and had planned to meet with Zimbabwe's
labour movement, civil society groups, and had also requested a
meeting with government.
However, last
week the Zimbabwe ministry of public service, labour and social
welfare said the mission was "not acceptable" because they planned
to hold meetings with groups who were critical of the government
of Zimbabwe.
Cosatu decided
to go ahead with the mission, and flew into Zimbabwe on Monday evening.
This was received
as "a direct and most frontal challenge to the sovereignty of the
Republic of Zimbabwe", by Zimbabwe's information minister, who claimed
they were "working with Tony Blair".
South Africa's
foreign affairs department responded to the deportation by saying
Zimbabwe had a right to determine and apply its own immigration
laws "as it may deem appropriate".
Meanwhile, Prof
John Stremlau, an expert in international relations of the University
of the Witwatersrand, said the latest complication has created a
"serious diplomatic headache" for President Thabo Mbeki, Beeld reported.
"President Mugabe
has shot himself in the foot again. Cosatu's deportation is a slap
in Mbeki's face and there is no simple solution to this one. Mbeki's
options are becoming fewer and fewer and quiet diplomacy will probably
not work this time."
Stremlau believed
Cosatu's fact-finding mission to Zimbabwe was exactly the type of
action expected from South Africa.
"The world will
keep a close eye on Mbeki. Remember, this is also about Mbeki's
plans to secure a seat for South Africa on the United Nations' security
council. How he handles the Zimbabwean situation could play a major
role in this."
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
|