HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
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http://sg.news.yahoo.com/020924/1/333g2.html


[Pardon the source and the tone, but in the current
era of colonialism revived, with French and US troops
at the moment subjugating Cote D'ivoire, this is as
good as one could expect.]
  

Agence France-Presse
Tuesday September 24, 6:35 PM 


Zimbabwe hails Commonwealth reprieve as 'victory over
colonialism'


The Zimbabwe government greeted with triumph news that
a Commonwealth troika had decided to spare it from
further sanctions, calling the decision a victory over
colonialism.
Tuesday's edition of the official Herald newspaper
said the two African members of the troika, Presidents
Olusegun Obasanjo of Nigeria and Thabo Mbeki of South
Africa "did Africa proud" by out-voting Australia's
Prime Minister John Howard.
The troika met in Abuja, Nigeria on Monday, six months
after it partially suspended Zimbabwe from the
Commonwealth over flawed elections that returned
President Robert Mugabe to power.
Howard backed full and immediate suspension of
Zimbabwe, while Obasanjo and Mbeki wanted to continue
to monitor the southern African country for another
six months.
The three agreed that nothing had been done yet to
address Commonwealth concerns that Mugabe had been
re-elected undemocratically.
The Herald, which closely reflects government
thinking, claimed Howard's agenda was "not to discuss
the situation in Zimbabwe but to prescribe punishment
to a country that had dared challenge colonial
hegemony."
Zimbabwe has accused white Commonwealth countries of
trying to undermine a controversial land reform
programme. 
The government-backed scheme is aimed at redressing
colonial imbalances in land ownership by the
compulsory acquisition of white-owned farms, which are
redistributed to landless blacks.
Aid agencies warn that the programme, which has
resettled some 300,000 black families and aims to
resettle many more, will aggravate a famine that
threatens over half the country's 12 million people,
because the new landowners are not trained commercial
farmers.
Zimbabwe's main political opposition Tuesday
criticised the troika for being too lenient on Mugabe.
Welshman Ncube, the Secretary General of the Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC) told AFP the Commonwealth
had missed "an opportunity to take firm action."
He said Obasanjo and Mbeki had given their assent to
an "unrepentant and unreforming" Mugabe and given him
"another six months to destroy the country."
"Right now it (the government) is doing everything to
subvert democratic processes in Zimbabwe," he charged.
The Commonwealth suspended Zimbabwe from its political
councils after its observer mission to the March
presidential polls produced a report saying the
election did not reflect the will of voters.
The Zimbabwe government rejected that report, which it
described as flawed and one-sided, and accused the
troika of acting unilaterally when it partially
suspended Zimbabwe.
Masipula Sithole, a political science lecturer at the
University of Zimbabwe, said the reprieve had not
totally let Zimbabwe off the hook. 
If there was no improvement in the next six months,
the country could expect the ultimate censure --
sanctions and full suspension from the body -- he
warned.
"I believe we have been given a long rope," Sithole
said. He described as "premature" the glee in
government circles over being spared further
sanctions.
"We know what is coming," he said. "If we don't
improve within the next six months, we're doomed."


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