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ANALYSIS |
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Zuma corrects Brown misrepresentations By Alex
Barker The British Prime Minister's comments in parliament on Zimbabwe included not one, but two embarrassing blunders, according to a foreign office source. Here are his words in full: The Prime Minister: I have not only kept in touch with the President, Thabo Mbeki. I was also in touch on Sunday with the president-elect—that is, the president of the African National Congress, Jacob Zuma. I made it clear to him, and he supported the idea, that there would be 1,000 monitors from the ANC party offered to Zimbabwe, so that they, too, can play their part in the election. So it is not strictly the case that South Africa is not making available election observers or monitors; that is exactly what they are doing. The first error is that Zuma is not the president elect of South Africa; the election has yet to take place. The second, much more serious error, is that Brown incorrectly stated that the ANC would send 1,000 election monitors. Indeed, the ANC have already released a statement denying what Mr Brown claimed: MEDIA RELEASE The African National Congress has noted a report on Reuters suggesting that the organisation will send a contingent of 1,000 people to observe the Zimbabwean run-off elections. The ANC wishes to correct this report. The ANC will be sending observers as part of the 400-strong SADC observer mission. The ANC’s contribution to this mission includes 14 Members of Parliament and 15 others. The ANC remains committed to contributing in whatever way it can, within the ambit of multilateral institutions like SADC, towards a sucessful and credible run-off election. This appears to be a serious mistake at sensitive moment in the Zimbabwe crisis. Brown must know that revealing the details of conversations with world leaders — elected or not — is a big blunder. Spreading misinformation about private conversations with world leaders is an absolute howler. I’m told that Zuma is not happy, with some justification. This error comes days after Brown upset relations with the EU, Iran and the US by announcing sanctions that do not exist. Some diplomats are
beginning to see a pattern of unhelpful and distinctly undiplomatic
interventions by the prime minister. It is not making their job any
easier. - Financial Times Blogs |
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