The best Zimbabwe news site on the world wide web 
 
NEWS
FORUMS
NEWS ANALYSIS
READERS' FORUM

CARTOON

BRITISH FOREIGN OFFICE

NEWS

Zimbabwe is not about to die, in fact it will never die - Mugabe



Analysts back Annan's Zimbabwe plan

Annan to go ahead with Zimbabwe visit

Tsvangirai urges UN intervention in Zim

It is possible to defeat Zanu PF

Mbeki confirms Annan intervention in Zim

Zanu PF, MDC negotiate transition government


Annan snubs Mugabe on Africa tour

Annan 'dismayed' as Zimbabwe rejects aid

Zim pulls out of UN Rights Council

Mugabe compares Bush, Blair to Hitler

US 'amazed' at UN's Rome invite for Mugabe

Mugabe attacks US, UK coalition of evil

Mugabe rescinds Annan invitation

NZ, Australia lobby UN on Mugabe indictment

Zimbabwe blocks UN aid in row

Britain drags Zim to UN security council

China vows to block Zim entry on UN agenda

Zimbabwe death toll rises from slum blitz

UN chief agrees to Zimbabwe visit

Full text of MDC's reaction to UN report

Zimbabwe officials reject damning UN report

Annan 'profoundly distressed' by UN report

By Staff Reporter

PRESIDENT Robert Mugabe on Thursday rejected international mediation in Zimbabwe's political crisis, saying the southern African state was not on the verge of collapse although its economy was in trouble.

Critics accuse Mugabe of running down one of Africa's most promising countries, abusing human rights and hanging onto power by rigging votes in the face of a deepening economic crisis.

Speaking at the funeral of one of his ministers, Mugabe -- under pressure from domestic and Western critics to accept U.N. mediation in a crisis largely blamed on his government -- said Zimbabweans were ready to die fighting for their political rights and would never accept subjugation.

Mugabe, 82, Zimbabwe's sole ruler since independence in 1980, accused former colonial power Britain and the United States of mobilizing "illegal" Western economic sanctions against his government over its seizures of white-owned commercial farms for landless blacks.

Zimbabwe is struggling with the world's highest inflation rate of nearly 1,200 percent and the World Bank says the country has the fastest shrinking economy outside a war zone.

Mugabe's critics want him to accept mediation to facilitate talks with the main opposition Movement for Democratic Change, to write a new national constitution and to organize elections supervised by international observers.

In an apparent reply to suggestions that U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan must step in to help, the combative Zimbabwean leader said on Thursday there was no political crisis in the country requiring foreign mediation.

"Lately, we have heard about so-called 'initiatives' to rescue Zimbabwe. We don't need rescuing because we are not about to die," he said.

"We may be suffering, yes, but we will never die. What we need is support for the economy," he said at the funeral of information minister Tichaona Jokonya who died last Saturday and was buried in Harare at a shrine reserved mostly for heroes' of Zimbabwe's liberation struggle.

Without pointing at anyone by name, but in a statement apparently aimed at Britain and South Africa which have both said Annan could play some role in finding a solution to the Zimbabwe crisis, Mugabe said on Thursday:

"We tell the world from this sacred (National Heroes') Acre that Zimbabwe is not about to die, in fact it will never die."

"What Zimbabwe needs is a just and lawful treatment by the Western world, a recognition that it is a full, sovereign country which has the right to own and control its resources, the right to chart its own destiny unhindered," he said.

Both Annan and Mugabe are expected to attend an African Union summit in Gambia this weekend, and South African officials say this could provide a forum for launching discussions with the Zimbabwean leader.
JOIN THE DEBATE ON THIS ARTICLE ON THE NEWZIMBABWE.COM FORUMS
newsdesk@newzimbabwe.com


All material copyright newzimbabwe.com
Material may be published or reproduced in any form with appropriate credit to this website