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'Fearful'
Zimbabwean MP Bennett joins queue
Cape Times (SA)
By Boyd Webb and Sapa-AFP
April 25, 2006
http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=84&art_id=vn20060425002904933C515625
The department
of home affairs has confirmed a request for asylum from Zimbabwean
opposition party MP Roy Bennett who fears the Mugabe regime wants
to kill him.
But department spokesperson Nkosana Sibuyi said Bennett was at the
back of a long queue and was not sure when his request would be
attended to.
"I can confirm we have received his request but there is a backlog
of 103 000 applications for asylum and he is not going to jump the
queue simply because of his status," Sibuyi said.
A home affairs initiative designed to expedite the backlog in immigration
and asylum seeking requests was implemented early this year, but
Sibuyi refused to estimate when Bennet's application was expected
to be reached.
"We are making headway," he said.
Bennett, a senior member of the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) was released from prison in June last year after serving
eight months for shoving the justice minister during a heated parliamentary
debate.
He fled Zimbabwe last month after police said they wanted to question
him following the security services' discovery of an arms cache
in eastern Zimbabwe that they claimed was to be used to overthrown
President Robert Mugabe's government.
"It's true he is looking for political asylum in South Africa,"
said MDC spokesperson Nelson Chamisa. "The regime is after his head.
We cannot afford to have a dead hero," Chamisa said Bennett was
last month elected treasurer of one faction of the split MDC led
by Morgan Tsvangirai.
"He (Bennett) will continue to serve as the treasurer of the party"
from South Africa, Chamisa said.
"Location is not a factor, but the critical thing is the contribution
to the struggle."
In October 2004, Bennett was jailed after he pushed Justice Minister
Patrick Chinamasa to the floor during a rowdy exchange over land
reform in parliament.
Bennett lost his large coffee plantation in eastern Zimbabwe during
Mugabe's land reform programme launched in 2000, which saw nearly
4 000 of the 4 500 white Zimbabwean large-scale commercial farmers
evicted from their land, which was then given to landless blacks.
The lawmaker was in trouble again last month after the discovery
of a huge arms cache. Former soldier Mike Peter Hitschmann was identified
as the kingpin of an alleged assassination plot, and fled the country
to avoid arrest.
State authorities said Hitschmann, whom they described as a member
of a shadowy organisation called the Zimbabwe Freedom Movement (ZFM),
was involved in stashing arms at various locations in the country.
Media reports said an AK-47 assault rifle, seven Uzi machine guns,
four FN rifles, 11 shotguns, six CZ pistols, four revolvers, 15
teargas canisters and several thousand rounds of ammunition were
found at Hitschmann's home.
The MDC has denied any links to Hitschmann and claims he is a member
of the police reserves.
Zimbabwean Home Affairs Minister Kembo Mohadi said there were no
grounds for South Africa to grant Bennett political asylum.
"We have never persecuted anybody in Zimbabwe," Mohadi said, adding
it was "peculiar" that Bennett was seeking asylum abroad "yet his
boss Tsvangirai is in the country making all the useless noise".
*This article
was originally published on page 6 of Cape
Times on April 25, 2006
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