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US Frustrating Re-engagement Efforts – Gvt

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By Anna Chibamu


THE deputy minister of Home Affairs David Musabayana has accused the United States (US) of shifting goal posts in a bit to frustrate President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s re-engagement efforts.

Responding to senators during the Thursday question and answer session, Musabayana alleged government was doing all it can to engage the Western bloc of states to remove sanctions, but the US was stifling to process.

The US renewed sanctions against Zimbabwe for another year in March this year, citing continued human rights abuses, corruption and lack of political and economic reforms which are a pretext to the removal of sanctions.

Musabayana claimed that opposition parties were advocating for continued imposition of sanctions.

Currently, United Nations special rapporteur Alena Douhan is on a 10-day visit in the country to assess the impact of sanctions.

“As far as the United States is concerned, at the beginning, the US got themselves unnecessarily involved in this issue. It was more or less like acting in solidarity with their kith and kin,” Musabayana said.

“Although we may not lay too much blame on them, the problem is Zimbabwean citizens who went to the United States to beg for the imposition of those sanctions so that the leadership that was in the country at that time, which was based on liberation struggle ideologies, is removed,” he said.

“Like what we did in an endeavour to normalise relations with the European Union, where we formed dialogue, we are now working on formalising and making a platform by having dialogue between Zimbabwe and the US. What is disturbing us is that right now, they are changing goalposts, but that is simply due to the fact that some of our citizens are continuously disrupting our efforts by sending bad signals.”

Relations between Zimbabwe and the US have been frosty since Washington imposed sanctions on Harare in 2001 under the Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act following allegations of human rights abuses and electoral theft.

Musabayana also claimed that sanctions were retribution by the US for the land reform programme, under which government took farms belonging to whites to resettle landless blacks.

“The fact that we have sanctions is not good at all. It deters potential investors because it is a bad omen to the country. As we speak, the Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Trade (Frederick Shava) spent three weeks in Europe discussing the issue of sanctions, normalising and restoring relations. That is what they were discussing.

“As we speak and before I came here, he was also updating me on the fact that there is good news coming from Europe, especially from the European Union.”