19 May 2013
   
BBA star Wendell faces US$25k fraud rap
Mtetwa plans prison conditions challenge
Gukurahundi: MDC-T pledges compensation
US dollar to remain for 5 years: MDC-T
Mugabe 'rotten donkey' slur lecturer jailed
Zim likely to miss gold output target
PM hits back over ‘psychiatric case’ jibe
Four cadets die in training, half quit
MORE NEWS
Zimplats’ Mhembere new Chamber boss
New Dawn ownership proposals uncertain
MORE BUSINESS
Has Lady Squanda landed Big Brother role?
Macheso cancels gig - to give others chance
MORE SHOWBIZ
Pakamisa turns his guns on United
Highlanders' Diya gets Warriors call up
MORE SPORTS
Indigenisation: why banks deserve caution
Security sector reform: what's at stake?
MORE OPINION
 
Milestones give impetus to life journey
You are your best investment
MORE COLUMNISTS
 
 
South Africa urges West to lift Zimbabwe sanctions
14/06/2012 00:00:00
by Reuters
 
Africa wants sanctions removed ... Lindiwe Zulu
 
RELATED STORIES
UK 'appalled' by plan to lift Zim sanctions
EU set to lift Zimbabwe sanctions
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
Zim, EU resume sanctions talks
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

SOUTH Africa wants Western nations to lift economic sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe and is pressing Harare's power-sharing government to speed up reforms needed to bring about elections in the troubled country.

Zimbabwe plunged into a serious economic recession over the last decade due to what analysts have said is economic mismanagement by President Robert Mugabe and his Zanu PF party and was also hit with sanctions by the West for suspected human rights abuses and alleged vote rigging.

“It's not just Zimbabwe that's saying the sanctions are not working. The entire continent is saying that,” Lindiwe Zulu, South African President Jacob Zuma's top foreign policy advisor told Reuters on Thursday

Analysts say the sanctions have been exploited by Mugabe for his political purposes, blaming them for his party's economic blunders that have caused what once was one of Africa's richest nations to now be among its poorest.

Mugabe insists the sanctions are responsible for teh counntry's economic problems.

Zulu is part of a Southern African Development Community (SADC) initiative led by Zuma aimed at ending the political turmoil in Zimbabwe and holding free and fair elections by next year.

Mugabe, 88, has ruled the country since its independence from Britain in 1980. He was forced into a power-sharing deal with rival and now Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai after a disputed 2008 poll marred violence.

“Now the challenge for us is to speed up the process and have a result that is lasting, or to make sure whatever decisions are implemented, are things that the Zimbabweans themselves must honour,” said Zulu.

South Africa is the country most affected by turmoil in Zimbabwe. Millions flooded across their border due to Zimbabwean election violence in 2008, straining South Africa's schools, housing and health services.

Pretoria has been criticised for not pushing Mugabe hard enough but Zulu said forcing change would not solve its neighbour's underlying problems or bring a stable democracy.

No date has been set for polls but the time frame for the power sharing deal known as the “Global Political Agreement” has key provisions expiring in June 2013 with one stating national elections should take place before the end of the process.

“The fact that the global political agreement does not have an endless life span is pushing them to realise that they don't have the luxury of time anymore,” said Zulu.



Advertisement

Global aid agencies and international businesses are expected to inject billions of dollars once Zimbabwe, which has the world's second-largest platinum reserves, has a stable government.

“We do not want to see a repetition of the 2008 scenario. We know what it looked like. It is a lesson for Zimbabweans themselves to ensure it does not repeat,” Zulu said.

“We are very confident that we still have it in our power, just like the Zimbabweans still have it in their power, to turn the tide and do things better,” Zulu said


 
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