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Old 07-10-2009
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Arrow President Mugabe Attends AU Summit in Libya, Hails China For Assistance

President Mugabe Attends AU Summit in Libya, Hails China For Assistance

MDC-T boycott: President speaks out

PRESIDENT Mugabe was in Sirte, Libya, for the 13th Ordinary Session of
the African Union General Assembly this past week. He fielded questions
from Zimbabwean journalists on the outcome of the summit, the US$950
million Chinese facility to Zimbabwe, his meeting with the US Assistant
Secretary of State for African Affairs and the MDC-T boycott of the last
Cabinet meeting, among other things. Here, we reproduce the full
transcript of the interview held at Al Kabir Hotel in Tripoli, the
Libyan capital.

Question: Your Excellency, you had three days of intensive discussions
in Sirte, we recollect sometimes you had to go to sleep in the early
hours of the morning. What came out of Sirte (venue of the just-ended AU
Summit)?

Answer: Well, quite an exercise it was, but at the end of the day we are
happy about the result, we are very happy with the result indeed.

The entire exercise was about the transformation of our body, we have
moved from the OAU (Organisation of African Unity) to the AU (African
Union), then its administrative body as the Commission.

True we have had alternating chairpersons, but overall it was the
administrative organ that determined the levels that we were going
through.

Whether those levels were qualitative or transformative enough to enable
us to say we are moving towards the goal of a real Union with political
power or not, it remained to be decided. But this time, a definite
decision was made to turn the organisation now into an authority.

And so you have now these levels that have been built; right at the top,
the president and the deputy president, and, of course, you have the
administrative subordinates, and each subordinate in charge of a
different function.

Previously there were commissioners, about eight of them.

Just now the commissioners are secretaries responsible for the various
portfolios assigned to them, but we have added two more: defence and
foreign affairs, but coordinating functions only.

Co-ordinating defence and co-ordinating foreign affairs, that means
consulting with, firstly the regional bloc organisations, and then, in a
subsidiary way of course, with the nations themselves in regard to those
portfolios.

They are sensitive ones, as you might have heard or seen.

Of course, countries were very sensitive about defence, the area of
defence being completely an area where total authority was ceded to the
new African Union Authority, and countries would not want that.

But they would want certain aspects of defence in the event, of course,
of our taking action as the Authority, an African Authority, to
naturally be coordinated somehow by an authority hence the creation of
that portfolio, as well as the creation, of course, of the foreign
affairs portfolio.

Q: We collect that the operationalisation of this new animal (AU
Authority) has got to have ratification by individual parliaments of the
53 member-states. Does it still hold that we have to go to our
parliaments to ratify this?

A: I suppose that’s purely now the arrangement to ensure that there is
concurrence on the part of everybody, we have all voted for it, we have
all agreed and ratification is a matter of procedural nicety, it’s a
technicality so I think countries will ratify.

Q: Still in Sirte, agriculture was at the centre of your discussions?

A: Yes, we had agriculture; that was a project that was meant to be
discussed, yes.

Q: Any experiences drawn from the Zimbabwe Land Reform Programme?

A: Well, we are not the only ones who have had experiences, other
countries had their own experiences.

But it was a combination of experiences that we were pooling together,
and, of course, taking into account also the climatic vicissitudes that
we have now which have yielded for us in Zimbabwe more drought seasons
than rainy seasons and what we should do in those circumstances.

What it meant was we must gather the water that falls, little though it
may be, and be able to conserve it, and then from it naturally we can
gain the life of our crops through irrigation and utilisation of that
water in various other ways.

So that is irrigation, mechanisation of our agriculture and making our
agriculture really, really the basis of the transformation of our
economy.

And you noticed that FAO was there also.

The Food and Agriculture Organisation, yes, it’s Food and Agriculture
Organisation, but food comes from agriculture.

Q: We came to Sirte, but we could have been in Antananarivo where a coup
happened, and you had to change the venue of the summit. Any hotspots
you discussed, Madagascar for example?

A: Madagascar, you recall that Sadc decided there should be mediation,
mediation through a facilitator and we chose former president Chissano,
former president of Mozambique to be the facilitator of the mediation
that we believe will bring about some understanding between the two
sides; that of former president Ravalomanana and the other rebel,
Rajoelina, who is only 35 years old and is barred by the constitution
from assuming that role as the president but he has the support of the
army.

We said it’s not yet a moment for us to think of military intervention,
let’s try a peaceful thrust and that thrust should be regulated,
supervised by a facilitator. Chissano is the right man because not only
is he fluent in Portuguese and English, but he also speaks French
fluently as well.

Q: Your Excellency, what is happening in Africa seems to be a
realisation of the Pan-Africanism ideology. Would you say that, that
idealism about bringing Africa together is still alive or it’s something
that is being pushed by what is happening somewhere else?

A: I think over the recent few years gone by there has been a
development, a development I think which was more determined by the
economic situations of our countries and a situation that greater
reliance on Western funding would assist our economies in transforming,
and because of that naturally if you are a beggar, you cannot at the
same time prescribe, you see, the rules of how you should be given
whether it’s food or any items at all.

So we were subjected to certain conditionalities as a basis on which
whatever was paid, be it food, be it humanitarian aid in other
directions, was sent to us.

And in some countries, you see, they did not have even the necessary
economic capacity, which could enable them to sustain their civil
service, their security arms — the army, airforce and the police force —
without outside help.

And once you are inadequate in terms of funding yourselves monetarily
and you have got to look outside for someone to assist you, and that
someone outside naturally dictates conditions on you, and the moment
that happens you have lost a bit of your own sovereign right to
determine how you run your affairs.

Those who give you money will naturally determine how you should run
your country, and through that we tended to subject ourselves to the
will of outsiders, to the will, even, of our erstwhile colonisers. It
was neo-colonialism back again, what Nkrumah called neo-colonialism.

There it was, it was crammed into our system, they were deciding how we
should run our elections; who should be in government, who should not,
regime changes, that nonsense.

So our Pan-Africanism was lost because Pan-Africanism was based on the
right of Africa determining its own future, the right of Africa standing
on its own, and being the master of its own destiny, master of its own
resources that had been lost.

But I think it is coming back because many countries have now realised
that the West does not give money to enable us to build the capacity we
require to be independent.

They will give you little funds, you know. ‘Yes, you are afflicted by
this epidemic, we will give you a bit of help here and there.’

‘You are suffering from the effects of drought, yes, a bit of food here
and there et cetera, et cetera’, but with conditions that you run your
system in a given way.

That now is our realisation. The funds we have been getting are, by and
large, little humanitarian bits and pieces of funds. This has not helped
Africa to industrialise. Just look around and tell me which country in
Africa has industrialised?

Yes, you have South Africa, which has inherited that system of
development, but the rest of Africa; we are still where we were.

There is no funding with an investment capacity from the West that will
enable us to move from primary agriculture to secondary stages of
development. They do not want us, the West, to be that.

They do not want us to be their equals, they enjoy being masters over us
and this is what Zimbabwe rejects.

Q: Zimbabwe recently got an injection from the Chinese facility. How far
do you think it will go for us?

A: Well, it’s a fund that was negotiated long ago, and all that nonsense
that it’s the MDC and so on is just politicking.

It’s a fund also that is targeted, it will come variously. There are
amounts for the various sectors, for agriculture, for health, for
mechanisation et cetera and so on, and they will cover energy as well
and so we are happy.

But you don’t get the political conditionalities from the E ast. Look at
what has happened?

Look at the fund, that US$950 million, and we know there is more, there
will be more; is given in circumstances quite different from what the
West prescribed for the mini-funds that attended, you know, all that
venture that the Prime Minister went on from the Netherlands to the
United States, the United States back to Europe.

And they treated him in a mean way, very, very mean way even to the
extent of trying to divide the inclusive Government as happened in
America where they wanted just the non-Zanu-PF side, which meant the MDC
side led by the Prime Minister, to accompany him to a meeting with
Obama.

Fortunately, that did not happen elsewhere in Europe, but still in
Europe look at the little funds that they were giving, and giving mainly
for humanitarian purposes.

And how given?

Through NGOs and what do NGOs mean in our own situation where Government
is running a country, running a country with definite demands, you see,
in various sectors?

What they think of first is their own NGOs so that the money is absorbed
by their own agents in the first place. Or it comes in a crooked way to
serve their own political objectives in our country.

The Chinese fund does not come in that way. It has been targeted
rightly, it’s a fund coming to Government not NGOs, to Government, an
inclusive Government, towards development and will assist us in turning
around the economy, and that is the kind of help we would want to get,
and not the Western dictates.

Q: Do you think there has been a realisation within the parties in the
GPA that the West is only there to dictate the pace at which Africa
develops, especially when you consider that the Prime Minister had gone
for two weeks in Europe and America and got back with virtually nothing?

A: The lesson is there for everyone with a bit of brains to learn, and
those who have not learnt the lesson that the West is always up to
mischief, if they have not learnt that lesson, then they won’t have any
lesson to learn or they are hand-in-glove with the enemy.

Q: The American Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs sought
an audience with you in Sirte. Anything which came out of that meeting?

A: No, you wouldn’t speak to an idiot of that nature. I was very angry
with him, and he thinks he could dictate to us what to do and what not
to do in the inclusive Government.

We have the whole of Sadc working with us, and you have the likes of
little fellows like Carson, you see, wanting to say ‘you do this, you do
that’.

Who is he? I hope he was not speaking for Obama. I told him he was a
shame, a great shame being an African-American, an Afro-American for
that matter.

Q: On Monday, just the day before you left for Sirte,you had a Cabinet
meeting which was boycotted by a section of the MDC-T. Any lessons which
they learnt from that boycott, probably?

A: We talked a bit about it with the Prime Minister and he apologised
for it, and thought they should have come and if they had any
grievances, aired their grievances in the meeting.

It was a surprise to me to tell you the truth. I don’t know whether this
is going to be the order of doing things.

It’s insolence on one hand, but it’s also abysmal ignorance on the
other.


President hails China aid

Deputy Editor

PRESIDENT Mugabe has applauded China for unconditionally extending a
US$950 million credit facility to help Zimbabwe’s economic recovery
programme and blasted the West for insisting on conditions even as they
render bits and pieces of aid to their agencies under the guise of
assisting the people of Zimbabwe.

Speaking to journalists in Libya, President Mugabe said the Chinese
package was negotiated long before the formation of the inclusive
Government and all those trying to credit it to MDC-T were merely
politicking.

Sources say the US$950 million is the first tranche of an expected US$5
billion bridging package that was negotiated four years ago by teams
from the ministries of Foreign Affairs, Industry and International
Trade, and Finance, and at one time involved the Presidency through Vice
President Joice Mujuru.

The inclusive Government says it needs US$8,3 billion to bankroll the
Short-Term Emergency Recovery Programme, and the Chinese facility is the
biggest package the Government has received to date.

‘‘Well, it’s a fund that was negotiated long ago, and all that nonsense
that it’s the MDC and so on is just politicking, it’s a fund also that
is targeted, it will come variously.

"There are amounts for the various sectors, for agriculture, for health,
for mechanisation etcetera and so on, and they will cover energy as well
and so we are happy. But you don’t get the political conditionalities
from the West,’’ President Mugabe said.

The President took a swipe at Western nations for being mean to Prime
Minister Tsvangirai when he embarked on a tour of Europe and the United
States, with a brief from the President and Cabinet to call for the
removal of sanctions and seek a financial package for Zimbabwe.

The countries the Prime Minister visited — among them the Netherlands,
United States, Germany, Norway, Sweden and the United Kingdom — only
pledged about US$202 million to be channelled through their NGOs and
lectured him on how the inclusive Government should be implemented.

‘‘Look at the fund, that US$950 million, and we know there is more,
there will be more; is given in circumstances quite different from what
the West prescribed for the mini-funds that attended, you know, all that
venture that the Prime Minister went on from the Netherlands to the
United States, the United States back to Europe.

‘‘And they treated him in a mean way, very, very mean way even to the
extent of trying to divide the inclusive Government as happened in
America where they wanted just the non-Zanu-PF side, which meant the MDC
side led by the Prime Minister to accompany him to a meeting with
Obama,’’ the President said.

The Chinese package, the President said, was well meant as it was coming
to Government not NGOs, to assist in national development and economic
revival.

‘‘That is the kind of help we would want to get, and not the Western
dictates,’’ he said.

The President said Western countries never give the developing world
development funds that promote economic growth and prosperity as that
would put them at par with the West and negate grounds for dominance.

‘‘There is no funding with an investment capacity from the West that
will enable us to move from primary agriculture to secondary stages of
development. They do not want us, the West, to be that. They do not want
us to be their equals, they enjoy being masters over us and this is what
Zimbabwe rejects.’’

He, however, expressed optimism that the developing world had seen
through the West’s designs and would strive to uphold the ideals of
pan-Africanism that advocate economic independence.

Meanwhile, President Mugabe yesterday left for Malawi to attend that
country’s 45th independence anniversary, which will be celebrated today.

Vice President Mujuru will be the Acting President during President
Mugabe’s absence.

The independence festivities come less than two months after President
Bingu wa Mutharika and his Democratic Progressive Party romped to
victory in May’s presidential and parliamentary elections.

President Mugabe was also among leaders who witnessed the inauguration
of President Mutha-rika for a second term in May.

Malawi became independent from Britain on July 6, 1964.
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Aragorn (07-11-2009)
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Old 07-11-2009
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China is definately better invester than the west can ever be

The West doesn't invest-it colonizes and exploits and calls it "investment".

China may not be perfect, but the world should nonetheless recognize China's more equatable and honest approach towards trade issues.

I'd much rather see China investing in African nations and hope they not only continue to do so, but also greatly increase investments in Africa.

We have four hundred+ years of reasons why the West should NEVER be trusted again.
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