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East/Subsaharan Africa
Mbeki will tell Mugabe that regime must change
2003-05-05
EFL
Three African presidents will fly to Zimbabwe's capital, Harare, today in the most serious attempt so far to persuade Robert Mugabe to step down. Thabo Mbeki, President of Zimbabwe's powerful neighbour South Africa, will be joined by Bakili Muluzi of Malawi and the Nigerian leader, Olusegun Obasanjo. They are now said to accept that Mr Mugabe's departure is the only possible starting point for resolving the Zimbabwe crisis.
Took 'em long enough. Don't they read Rantburg?
They only read the dirty parts...
Although few Zimbabweans are expecting an announcement of regime change at the end of the one-day visit, many regard the mission as the beginning of the end of Robert Mugabe's uninterrupted 23-year reign of ineptitude rule. Senior officials in Mr Mbeki's government insist that the South African President is finally ready to work hard to secure Mr Mugabe's departure from office. Mr Mbeki knows his plans depend on Mr Mugabe's co-operation and so he will try not to annoy the Zim-Bob-We leader.
Just how does he propose to tell Bob to leave and yet not annoy him?
The United States, backed by Britain, is pushing for a solution that would see Mr Mugabe replaced by a member of the ruling Zanu-PF party. The new President would then call a constitutional conference and organise elections to be monitored by the international community. America, Britain and South Africa have indicated that the country's former finance minister, Simba Makoni, is a suitable interim figure to take over from Mr Mugabe. A constitutional amendment for Mr Mugabe to retire without an immediate election would require the opposition to co-operate. Mr Mbeki and his colleagues will also meet the main opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, of the Movement for Democratic Change. Mr Mbeki may have kind words for Mr Mugabe in public but his officials insist that in private he will encourage him to quit. To heighten the pressure, President George Bush is sending Walter Kansteiner, his special adviser on Africa, to the region this week.
Are we finally getting beyond lip service? Will Dominique fly in to sit and Bob's side and help him negotiate his way out of stepping down?
Mr Mugabe, 79, has hinted that he might step down in favour of a member of his own party. Quoting an unnamed analyst, a practice often used to air the views of the Information Minister, Jonathan Moyo, the Zimbabwean Sunday Mail newspaper said Zanu-PF had the credentials to rule, while the opposition was "choice of the people of Zimbabwe" "a British creation". Embattled Zimbabweans have pinned their hopes on Mr Mbeki providing a mechanism to end their political and economic misery. "We want to look back at Mbeki and say this great man became our saviour," said Lovemore Madhuku, chairman of Zimbabwe's largest civic group, the National Constitutional Assembly. "No one wants history to record Mbeki as the greatest betrayer of the Zimbabwean people."
You might consider doing the job yourself, Lovemore. Fortune favors those ....
Posted by:Steve White

#6  Hey, I just got a note from Mugabe. If I give him an account number for him to transfer the money to, he'll give me 20%.
Posted by: Denny   2003-05-05 21:42:35  

#5  Did all the white farmers who knew how to really farm and did not go on the original "chicken run" stay? You know, the ones that stayed on post-Ian Smith but were finally booted off their lands by Mugabe and the War Veterans. They are the ones needed to pick up the pieces and get food crops back growing again in Zimbabwe.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2003-05-05 20:36:38  

#4  Most of Zimbabwe's wealth is in the land and in the people. First get rid of Mugabe any way possible. Then give the country a reasonable system of laws, impartial judges, and a reasonably free system of economy, and Zimbabwe will once again be the pride of Africa.
Posted by: RB   2003-05-05 16:12:38  

#3  Lemme conjecture where Mugabe would go if he were to leave? I bet a nice pension on the left bank of the Seine? Jacques can stop by on the way to work in the morning and share a cup of cafe au lait with Bob.
Posted by: ColoradoConservative   2003-05-05 11:29:36  

#2  R McLeod - you're right, but I'm afraid it's already too late. Most is probably stashed in Swiss banks. It would be a damn shame if Bob and Grace are able to escape a Ceausescu or Mussolini ending
Posted by: Frank G   2003-05-05 08:48:55  

#1  Right Lovemore, and you can bet if Bob "retires" he's going to take a helluva lot of your country's wealth with him.
Posted by: R. McLeod   2003-05-05 04:11:21  

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