World Condemnation Of Zimbabwe Grows
As Opposition Leader Calls For Peacekeepers, World Leaders Lament "Sham" Elections
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Play CBS Video Video World Leaders Rebuke Mugabe Leading African statesmen Nelson Mandela rebuked Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe for his "failure of leadership," while Queen Elizabeth stripped Mugabe of his knighthood. Katie Couric reports.
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Video Nicholas Kristof On Zimbabwe "Only The Web": Katie Couric speaks with New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof about the deepening crisis in Zimbabwe and what the international community should be doing in response
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Video Political Crisis Hits Zimbabwe Katie Couric takes a closer look at the once-promising regime of Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe and the political turmoil that is threatening to rip the impoverished African nation apart.
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Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe delivers a speech at a campaign rally in Banket, about 60 miles west of Harare, June, 24, 2008. (AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi)
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Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the main opposition party in Zimbabwe at a press conference in Harare, June, 25, 2008. (AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi)
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Fast Facts Zimbabwe Learn about the people, economy and history.
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Timeline Zimbabwe History Key dates in the history of the former British colony in southern Africa.
Nelson Mandela spoke Wednesday in London at his 90th birthday celebration and lamented "the tragic failure of leadership in our neighboring Zimbabwe" - a stunning indictment of his old friend Mugabe, reports CBS Evening News Anchor Katie Couric.
President Bush said Friday's run-off elections "appear to be a sham," and a meeting of Southern African regional leaders normally strongly sympathetic to Mugabe said the runoff should be postponed.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice warned Mugabe on Thursday against declaring victory in what she said would be an illegitimate run-off vote.
With the opposition boycotting Friday's election due to ruling party violence and intimidation, Rice said no outcome would be acceptable and that Mugabe must allow a legitimate government to take power.
"Clearly, no run-off election that doesn't have the participation of opposition... can be considered legitimate, no outcome can be considered legitimate," she said in Kyoto, where she was attending a meeting of foreign ministers from the Group of Eight industrialized nations.
Tougher sanctions, sporting bans, even economic boycotts could be next - and world support may build for Zimbabwe opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai's pleas for U.N. peacekeepers.
Tsvangirai made the call for peacekeepers in a commentary published in British newspaper The Guardian Wednesday. Asked about that at a news conference later in Harare, Tsvangirai said: "What do you do when you don't have guns and the people are being brutalized out there?"
He stressed he was not calling for military intervention.
Deploying peacekeepers requires an international consensus that can be hard to build, and efforts can be blocked by governments expected to host contingents. South African Deputy Foreign Minister Aziz Pahad noted Wednesday that efforts to deploy an AU-UN peacekeeping force for Sudan's Darfur have been stalled.
The international community, though, has been considering, and taking, other actions on Zimbabwe.
The unusual move from Queen Elizabeth puts Mugabe in the company of the late Romanian leader Nicolae Ceausescu, who was stripped of his title in 1989 at the height of the Balkan nation's revolution. The queen acted on the advice of her Foreign Secretary David Miliband, who has pointed to widespread violence and intimidation of the southern African country's opposition ahead of the presidential runoff in which Mugabe was the only candidate. Scores of opposition activists, including high-ranking party members, have been attacked or killed.
Mugabe was made an honorary knight in 1994, when he was considered an anti-colonial hero.
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown's spokesman Michael Ellam said sanctions against Zimbabwe are under review, but said Britain wanted to guard against hurting the population.
"We are mindful of the humanitarian impact on Zimbabwe, but we would not want to see anything that would prop up the regime in any way," Ellam told reporters on Wednesday.
European Union leaders last week threatened Zimbabwe with more, unspecified sanctions. Brown said then that could include more targeted sanctions against members of Mugabe's regime.
There will definitely be elections on Friday.
Bright Matonga, Zimbabwean Deputy Information MinisterThe England and Wales Cricket Board on Wednesday severed all bilateral ties with Zimbabwe's cricket authorities after Brown insisted Zimbabwe's team should be banned from entering the country. Earlier, Cricket South Africa imposed sporting sanctions on Zimbabwe.
In South Africa, there are increasing calls to try to force South African President Thabo Mbeki to take a tougher stand on Zimbabwe. Some ask whether a country seen as appeasing a dictator should be hosting the 2010 soccer World Cup. South Africa could face a public relations disaster similar to the criticism China has faced over Tibet as it prepares to host the Olympics.
Companies with Zimbabwe links are under pressure. After British media raised questions about its mining interests in the southern African country, Britain's Anglo American issued a statement Wednesday expressing "deep concern" about Zimbabwe and condemning violence there.
In a measure of the continuing tension, opposition leader Tsvangirai returned to the Dutch Embassy in Harare following a news conference Wednesday. Tsvangirai first fled to the embassy on Sunday following his announcement he was withdrawing from the runoff. He sought refuge after getting a tip that soldiers were headed to his home.

At Wednesday's news conference, Tsvangirai, seen at left, called on African leaders to guide negotiations to end the crisis. The goal of the talks would be to form a coalition transitional authority in Zimbabwe.
He said discussions could not begin until there was an end to attacks on his supporters. Tsvangirai also wants a release of "political prisoners," including the MDC's No. 2 official Tendai Biti, who has been jailed since earlier this month on treason charges that can carry the death penalty.
Zimbabwean Deputy Information Minister Bright Matonga reacted with derision: "Is he out of his mind?"
Matonga said the government and Mugabe's ZANU-PF were focused on the election. Tsvangirai was to be on the ballot, electoral officials said Wednesday, saying his withdrawal came too late to be valid.
"There will definitely be elections on Friday," Matonga said.
Tsvangirai said he was asking the African Union, whose heads of state hold a regular summit in Egypt next week, to take over mediation, which so far has been in the hands of South African President Thabo Mbeki and a southern African regional group.
Tsvangirai had previously called on Mbeki to step aside, accusing him of bias in Mugabe's favor and saying his "quiet diplomacy" was not working. Mbeki has refused to publicly denounce Mugabe - Friday, South African government spokesman Themba Maseko once again refused to refer to Zimbabwe as being in "crisis."
Regional heads of state, meanwhile, met in Swaziland in hopes of finding a solution for Zimbabwe. Their meeting ended with a call for the runoff to be postponed until conditions permitted a free and fair vote.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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See all 44 CommentsTalks about how Zimbabwe is a "sovereign state" & will do what it wants while his idiot supporters cheer. Mugabe against the world. The black man will triumph!
All the while inflation heads towards 400,000 percent. Unemployment = 80%. Virtually no agriculture any more. People starving. Pro-Mugabe thugs running wild. Opposition running scared. Another case of black Africans doing it to their fellow black Africans.
But these are minor details. Time to polish Mugabe''s car & get his seven-course dinner ready!
Zimbabwe suffers from an 80 percent unemployment rate and, according to the International Monetary Fund, an inflation rate exceeding 150,000 percent. Since 1994, the average life expectancy for women in Zimbabwe has fallen from 57 years to 34 years; among men it has dropped from 54 years to 37 years. Some 3,500 Zimbabweans die every week from the combined effects of HIV/AIDS, poverty, and malnutrition. Half a million Zimbabweans may have died since 2000, while some 3 million fled to South Africa alone.
A country that used to be called the %u201Cjewel%u201D and the %u201Cbreadbasket%u201D of Africa is now an Orwellian nightmare. With the economy in ruins and political freedom eviscerated, Zimbabwe%u2019s state-run media rail against a phantom international conspiracy consisting of Western powers and led by %u201Cliar%u201D George Bush, %u201Cgay%u201D Tony Blair, %u201Cuncle Tom%u201D Colin Powell, and %u201Ca slave to white masters%u201D Condoleezza Rice.
http://www.american.com/archive/2008/may-05-08/botswana-and-zimbabwe-a-tale-of-two-countries
As Opposition Leader Calls For Peacekeepers, World Leaders Lament "Sham" Elections
Mugabe%u2019s Muslim Thugs Raid Christian Offices
Well, let%u2019s see; Zimbabwe%u2019s Muslim President, Robert Mugabe, has %u201Ccured AIDS,%u201D expelled ALL gayys, and now is cracking down on Christians%u2026 I smell genocide in the air%u2026
Zimbabwe Police Raid Christian Offices
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
Police raided Zimbabwe Christian Alliance offices on Monday and arrested five staff members for interrogation, the group reported.
Faced with the very real prospect of losing power, the 84-year-old Mugabe and his party the Zanu-PF party has resorted to violence, including an alleged plan to assassinate Tsvangirai and other key leaders of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change Party.
Under Mugabe, Zimbabwe which was once dubbed the breadbasket of southern Africa, has spiraled into an economic meltdown that includes an unemployment rate of about 80 percent and inflation at more than 100,000 percent.
http://doctorbulldog.wordpress.com/2008/06/11/mugabes-muslim-thugs-raid-christian-offices/
CONDEM FASCIST NAZI TERRORISLAM FOR PUTTING THIS TYRANT IN POWER!
you and what army is going to arrest them nancy,,, LOL
hahaha
COULD THIS BE A WARNING???
Islamic terrorists back Mugabe
Zanu-PF plots with a South African outlaw group to bring more terror to the country.
Four members of the military junta now ruling Zimbabwe in Mugabe''''''''s name are holding secret meetings with representatives of PAGAD, the notorious Islamic terrorist organisation based in Cape Town, South Africa.
http://www.zimbabwetoday.co.uk/2008/06/islamic-terrori.html
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Posted by diatreme
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Ever visit a ghetto? They feel at home that way.
Bright Matonga, Zimbabwean Deputy Information Minister
Not likely, but just by chance what happens if Morgan Tsvangirai wins? He dropped out so does he still win and take office? In the U.S. I don''t think he would be allowed to take office if he won but dropped out, so Robert Mugabe can''t lose even if he loses with no legal opposition!
a vote for hussein is like a vote for the new black panther party,,,
a vote for hussein is like a vote for the the nation of terrorislam,,,
helll you may as well vote for anti jew racist david duke as vote for anti jew racist hussein,,,
a vote for hussein is a vote for fascist nazi terrorislam,,, as can be seen by the hamas and hezbollah endorsements,,,
sleep well america,,, sleep well,,,
it''s sad , really...to read these posts and know that there is nothing on in these rants but a blatant fear of an educated independent black man holding office.
now i will say something that will really scare u.
vote 4 obama, because we can''t afford another war in the middle east. we''re already losing the two wars that bush got us into. and 9-11? bush was either asleep at the switch, or he was part of the plot.
it''s that simple... have a nice day , u guys...
it''s sad , really...to read these posts and know that there is nothing on in these rants but a blatant fear of an educated independent black man holding office.
now i will say something that will really scare u.
vote 4 obama, because we can''t afford another war in the middle east. we''re already losing the two wars that bush got us into. and 9-11? bush was either asleep at the switch, or he was part of the plot.
it''s that simple... have a nice day , u guys...
Posted by hunterdon6 at 07:13 AM : Jun 26, 2008
Where do you Klan People come from? I''m serious!! What kind of slime produces creatures like this!! Sieg Heil Grand Wizard!!
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See all 44 Comments