24 May 2013
   
I told Sally about Grace affair: Mugabe
Mugabes give rare glimpse into home life
MDC-T holds primary elections
Kombayi shooting CIO chief dies
Teachers slam payless promotions
Jilted trooper razes woman’s hut, kills kids
HIV positive woman in hospital suicide
Blair toilet developer wins Swedish award
MORE NEWS
Anglo SA's Gomwe joins Econet board
Mining in Zimbabwe: Where to from here?
MORE BUSINESS
Manatsa to launch New Green Arrows
Mukanya arrives for bank holiday shows
MORE SHOWBIZ
Bosso on top after seven-goal thriller
Dynamos drop points in City draw
MORE SPORTS
Citizenship: Mawere's letter to Mudede
MDC squandered too much goodwill
MORE OPINION
 
Milestones give impetus to life journey
You are your best investment
MORE COLUMNISTS
 
 
Zim, EU resume sanctions talks
06/05/2012 00:00:00
by Staff Reporter
 
Sanctions must go ... Patrick Chinamasa
 
RELATED STORIES
UK 'appalled' by plan to lift Zim sanctions
EU set to lift Zimbabwe sanctions
Sanctions must go: South Africa
Coltart: sanctions long past sell-by date
Mugabe sees EU lifting sanctions
Lift Zimbabwe sanctions: Pillay
US vows to maintain sanctions
MDC-T raises EU sanctions buffer
EU to review sanctions in July
Ministers to meet EU foreign policy chief
Full list: 82 taken off Aussie sanctions
Australia eases Zimbabwe sanctions
EU wants ‘serious political dialogue’
Zanu PF spokesman off EU sanctions
EU to maintain sanctions, clear 51
Elections: EU's cue to extend sanctions

ZIMBABWE will send a delegation of government ministers this week to hold talks with EU officials about the sanctions slapped on President Robert Mugabe and his circle a decade ago.

"We have confirmed the meeting and the ministers will leave on Tuesday for Brussels," foreign affairs secretary Joey Bimha told the state media over the weekend.

He said the officials were travelling at the EU's invitation and would meet Catherine Ashton, EU foreign affairs chief and the vice president of the powerful European Commission.

Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa said the Zimbabwe delegation would push for the removal of sanctions on Mugabe and top officials in his Zanu PF party.

"Our position is that the sanctions should be removed unconditionally and that is what we are going to take to the table," Chinamasa said.

The 27-nation EU removed a visa ban and asset freeze on 51 individuals in February to encourage "further progress" on political reform in Zimbabwe.

It also suspended the travel ban on Chinamasa and Foreign Affairs Minister Simbarashe Mumbengegwi so that they could travel to Brussels for talks, but maintained asset freezes against them.

But 112 people are still subject to the measures.

Human Rights Watch had urged the EU to maintain the travel ban and asset freeze on Mugabe until the country follows through on promised political reforms.

The government insists there is no justification for the sanctions and blames them for the country’s economic problems.


Advertisement


 
Email this to a friend Printable Version Discuss This Story
Share this article:

Digg it

Del.icio.us

Reddit

Newsvine

Nowpublic

Stumbleupon

Face Book

Myspace

Fark
 
 
 
 
RSS NewsTicker