South African President Thabo Mbeki has highlighted big differences with the
UK over Iraq and Zimbabwe.
Mr Mbeki, speaking after meeting British Prime Minister Tony Blair at his
Chequers country retreat, said war with Iraq would create a crisis in the
Middle East.

Action could be in 'weeks not months'
He also said that sanctions against Robert Mugabe's regime in Zimbabwe were
not working.
After the talks on Saturday Downing Street refused to give details other
than to say they were "cordial".
Speaking ahead of the talks, Mr Mbeki's predecessor Nelson Mandela accused
Mr Blair of arrogance and short-sightedness and labelled him "the foreign
minister of the United States".
Enormous crisis
Mr Mbeki told Sky News' Sunday with Adam Boulton that Mr Mandela's comments
reflected South Africa's concern that regime change was one of the goals of
the US and UK in Iraq "suggesting whatever happens there will be war".
South Africa had been speaking to Iraq, said Mr Mbeki: "They have been
saying to us that they are indeed very keen and very willing to co-operate
fully with the inspectors."
This is a great opportunity for the government to show it can be strong on
Zimbabwe
-------- 
Michael Ancram
Shadow foreign secretary

Of war with Iraq, Mr Mbeki said: "It would create an enormous crisis in the
Middle East. I don't think there is any way in which you could quarantine
that with Iraq."
Rising oil prices sparked by the crisis would hit the African economy, he
added.
Mr Mbeki conceded, on Zimbabwe, that "clearly something went wrong" with the
often violent land seizures.
Disarmed by force
On Commonwealth sanctions when they come up for renewal he said it would be
a matter for discussion.
"But they have not produced any change and the European Union-imposed
sanctions have not produced any change," he said.
On Friday in a joint press conference with Mr Bush, Mr Blair warned that if
Iraq did not disarm through the UN route they would have to be "disarmed by
force."
In contrast South Africa's ruling party, the African National Congress (ANC)
is adopting an anti-war stance.
It has signed up to a Stop The War campaign saying war would be a disaster -
escalating the price of oil and condemning the African continent to a deep
economic crisis.
Nelson Mandela
The South African leader's predecessor, Nelson Mandela has accused the prime
minister of arrogance and short-sightedness.
He said Mr Blair was "no longer prime minister of Britain" but instead "the
foreign minister of the United States".
Shadow foreign secretary Michael Ancram said he hoped Mr Blair would use the
meeting to persuade Mr Mbeki to "stand up" to the Zimbabwean dictator.
"This is a great opportunity for the government to show it can be strong on
Zimbabwe," he said.
Mr Mbeki flew from London to the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa for a meeting of the African Union.

       The Mulindwas communication group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Uganda is in anarchy"

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