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Merkel says talking to Mugabe better than boycott

MUGABE: Britain wants him barred from summit

Kgalema Motlanthe: EU-Africa summit must go ahead, with Mugabe

Africa swings behind Mugabe as Britain turns up heat

Brown wsasting time, Zimbabwe says of boycott threat

Brown threatens summit boycott over Mugabe

Commonwealth wants Mugabe at Portugal Summit

AU insists Mugabe should attend EU-Africa Summit

Rodgers Svosva: Sickened by Australia's child cruelty

Zimbabwe welcomes Portugal's decision on Mugabe

Australia cancels visas of students linked to Zanu PF

Gideon Gono: How sanctions are ruining Zimbabwe

Portugal says Mugabe not welcome

Bloch's deception, lies about economic sanctions

Masiiwa Chisango: MDC must renounce sanctions

EU adds 5 deputy ministers to sanctions list

'Mugabe to be allowed at EU/Africa summit'

Belgium grants visa to banned ex-minister

Bush extends sanctions on Zimbabwe

EU renews Zimbabwe sanctions

Tawanda Hondora: Zim sanctions, are they political or economic

Khanyisela Moyo: US sanctions futile

Dr Alex T Magaisa: On sanctions, Mugabe and the economy

Nobuhle Nyathi: It's Zanu PF not sanctions, stupid!

Tawanda Hondora: Sanctions undermine economy

By Ingrid Melander

CRITICS of Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe should speak out to his face, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Friday, opposing a British threat to boycott an EU-Africa summit in Lisbon if Mugabe attends.

All EU leaders say they want the December summit, the first with Africa for seven years, to take place, but they are divided on how to deal with Mugabe. Other African leaders demand he be invited, despite the objections of some in the EU.

EU nations, promoting human rights and good governance in Africa as a basis for trade and investment, are under pressure from China's "resource diplomacy", which says Africans need material prosperity more urgently than rights and freedom.

"Criticism of Mr Mugabe can be levelled at him when he is there," Merkel told reporters at the end of an EU summit in Lisbon when asked about Prime Minister Gordon Brown's threat to stay away if Mugabe comes.

"I am going regardless," Merkel said. "I think we should have this summit ... it wouldn't be responsible if everyone was interested in Africa but not us."

There has been no EU-Africa summit for years because former colonial power Britain and other EU states refused to attend if Mugabe did, and African leaders would not go if he was barred.

Lisbon says it will invite all leaders, including Mugabe. Portuguese diplomats say the invitations will go out on October 30.

The leaders of Sweden and Finland told Reuters on Thursday that Mugabe should be excluded from the summit, but left open whether they would join Britain in boycotting the gathering.

Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen said he had not decided whether to attend the summit if Mugabe came, but added that serious discussion of Zimbabwe and human rights was a precondition for his attendance.

All three countries, which pride themselves on active human rights advocacy around the world, said the summit was crucial and that they wanted it to take place.

Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Zapatero said on Friday that the summit was crucial for his country.

"This summit is a great opportunity to deepen and go forward so that in the whole EU ... we look at the issue of migration with Africa as an essential, crucial issue for our well-being," he told a news conference in Lisbon.

Zapatero said he wanted the summit to facilitate the repatriation of illegal African migrants to their homes.

Critics accuse Mugabe, 83, of rigging elections, human rights abuses and presiding over the collapse of Zimbabwe's economy, now marked by the world's highest inflation rate of about 8,000 percent and joblessness of about 80 percent.

Mugabe blames Western powers for the economic crisis and accuses them, and former colonial ruler Britain in particular, of plotting with the opposition to oust him. African leaders see him as an elderly hero of the anti-colonial struggle.

Mugabe is subject to an EU travel ban but it can be suspended for the Lisbon summit.

Czech Deputy Prime Minister for European Affairs Alexandr Vondra told reporters last week that his country was also considering boycotting the meeting if Mugabe attends it.

The 27-member EU is Africa's largest trading partner with trade totalling more than 200 billion euros (139.34 billion pounds) last year. But China leapt into third place with trade worth 43 billion euros and has stepped up its aid and investments. - Reuters

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