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ZIMBABWE'S MUGABE CONDEMNS BUSH AND THE WEST

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ZIMBABWE'S MUGABE CONDEMNS BUSH AND THE WEST


[+] serious ballot by EUROTOPIA
ACTIVE Thu Sep 27, 07 - Fri Sep 26, 08

"Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe on Wednesday delivered a particularly bitter denunciation of Western critics in the United Nations General Assembly, lashing out at U.S. President George Bush for what he called "hypocrisy" in describing his Harare government as "tyrannical," and denouncing U.S. policy in Iraq and elsewhere.

Mr. Mugabe accused the United States and Britain of seeking to maintain neo-colonial control over Zimbabwe and of attempting to engineer "regime change" there. "I am termed (a) dictator because I have rejected this supremacist view and frustrated the neo-colonialists in their endeavor to keep us as slaves in our own country."

Mr. Mugabe took exception to President Bush's reference to his government as a "tyrannical regime" in a speech Tuesday to the General Assembly.

President Bush said Mr. Mugabe's "tyrannical regime" was "an assault on its people and an affront to the principles of the (U.N.) Universal Declaration" of Human Rights.

Mr. Mugabe responded that Mr. Bush "has much to atone for and little to lecture us on (regarding) the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. His hands drip with blood of many innocent nationalities, and today with the blood of the Iraqis."

Mr. Mugabe dwelt on the U.S. detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, for terror suspects. "At that concentration camp, international law does not apply...laws of the United States of America do not apply. Only Bush's law applies."

He accused Britain and the United States of pursuing "a relentless campaign of destabilizing and vilifying my country." He said the two nations "sponsored surrogate forces to challenge lawful authority in my country," this a reiteration of the charge, often lodged by Harare, that the opposition is Western-sponsored.

"They seek regime change," he said. "They seek regime change - not my people."

Mr. Mugabe said Zimbabwe "will not allow a regime change offered by outsiders. Mr. Bush and Mr. Brown have no role to play in our own national affairs. They are outsiders and mischievous outsiders and should therefore keep out."

Mr. Mugabe expressed "gratitude" toward South African President Thabo Mbeki for his mediation of talks between the ruling ZANU-PF party and opposition Movement for Democratic Change which in recent days has yielded a compromise constitutional amendment which President Mugabe said "paved the way" for 2008 elections.

"Consequently, we will be holding multiple democratic elections in March" next year, Mr. Mugabe told the General Assembly. "Indeed, we have always had timeous general and presidential elections since our independence."

Zimbabwean elections since 2000 have been marred by allegations of ballot-rigging and official intimidation of voters. Sanctions targeting Mr. Mugabe's inner circle were imposed by Western countries after the contested 2002 presidential election.

The Southern African Development Community asked Mr. Mbeki to mediate crisis talks between the ruling ZANU-PF party and the opposition Movement for Democratic Change in late March after Mr. Mugabe's government launched a crackdown on opponents in which an opposition activist was shot to death March 11.

Photographs of the badly beaten opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai emerging from police custody galvanized world opinion and led Southern African leaders to convene an extraordinary summit at which Mr. Mbeki was handed his mediation brief.

Earlier Wednesday, Mr. Mugabe met with U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon in an encounter sources said was less than cordial. Mr. Mugabe was said to have refused to accept U.N. humanitarian assistance offered by Ban, and to have expressed himself “forcefully” when humanitarian issues, democracy and human rights came up.

Reporter Carole Gombakomba of VOA's Studio 7 for Zimbabwe reported from the United Nations on the developments in the run-up to Mr. Mugabe's speech."

(Voice of America)


- Okay, let's settle this. Which do you think is really worse: Bush's presidency or Mugabe's presidency?


Bush is worse
Mugabe is worse
Dead heat
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Ballot #118596 : SEE RESULTS

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COMMENTS:
Voted : Mugabe is worse
Mugabe is worse obviously. I don't know why so many far-left Westerners fall for his nonsensical speeches. There is still hope for most of these fools though. Most of them are students and are still undergoing a process called 'maturing'.
by EUROTOPIA on Thu Sep 27, 07 6:31am [+]

Voted : Dead heat
Mister Bush is just killing- er, *operating* on a larger scale/front.
by Truthseeker013 on Thu Sep 27, 07 9:54am [+]

Voted : Dead heat
I can't think of anything good about either of them.
by _Beelzebubba on Thu Sep 27, 07 11:37am [+]

Voted : Mugabe is worse
Zimbabwe: imprisonment and torture of dissidents, human rights activists, trade unionists, no freedom of assembly, forced mass evictions and demolition of housing and property creating mass homelessness and starvation, zero rights to freedom and self-expression, violent persecution and harassment of homosexuals (ten year prison term or worse), etc. Mugabe is WAY worse. Get a clue people.
by FiddleFaddleOnLSD on Thu Sep 27, 07 11:39am [+]

Voted : Mugabe is worse
Ever read Pelton's THE WORLDS MOST DANGEROUS PLACES?

Paul Lukacs (An Amazon review) sums it up nicely.
"Zimbabwe is possibly the most dangerous place on earth, especially if you live there. Almost half of the population is HIV+, with a life expectancy of 34 years for women and 37 years for men, and those numbers are getting worse, according to the WHO. Madman dictator Robert Mugabe blames the crisis on his two favorite bogeymen, homosexuals and the British government, and also, in a charming act of synthesis, on homosexuals in the British government. The country was racked by famine, and Mugabe's response was to order the white farmers to stop growing food and leave. Mugabe capitulated to extortion from marauding thugs claiming to be war veterens and got the payoff money by turning on the printing presses, causing hyper-inflation. "He seems to have gone bonkers in a big way," admitted Archbishop Desmond Tutu.

Zim warlord Chenjerai "Hitler" Hunzvi selected his own nickname, which "pretty much renders any other biographical data redundant." And has there ever been a politician with a name as preposterous as the late Reverend Canaan Banana? (A 1982 law prohibited the making of jokes about his name, according to the Telegraph. Luckily, the law only applied within Zim.)
by elvislennon on Thu Sep 27, 07 12:41pm [+]

Do that many of you truly believe Bush and Mugabe are equally oppressive?

That is an offense to refugees from Zimbabwe. I strongly believe so. Have you ever met any refugees from Zimbabwe? No, I didn't think so!

I know many of you are evidently disillusioned with Bush's policies, but seriously, get real. Open your eyes at the world around you. There is so much oppression and persecution in countries like Zimbabwe. The fact that you suggest that Mugabe's rule is equal to that of Bush is not only ridiculous and offensive to Zimbabwe- it also displays that you don't know what real 'oppression' is.

Really, there is a saying that one should not speak unless they are going to improve on the silence.
by EUROTOPIA on Fri Sep 28, 07 6:33am [+]

Voted : Mugabe is worse
^ Agreed.

It's a slap in the face to those who live through real oppression everyday. Oppression a thousand times worse than what we complain about in the west.

We've got it lucky. Extremely lucky. Many of us though are too damn spoiled and self serving to see it. Especially when the only oppression that some of us actually experience is our fat asses keeping us from getting out of our computer chairs long enough to pay any attention to what others go through on a daily basis.
by Grumpy_Person on Fri Sep 28, 07 6:47pm [+]

Voted : Mugabe is worse
by a mile,man!
by aplmac on Fri Sep 28, 07 9:25pm [+]

Voted : Mugabe is worse
Old Mugabe had a farm, Zimbab Zimbab Wae..
by Andrew_Anorak on Tue Apr 15, 08 12:15pm [+]

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