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Mugabe must go - Clinton
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Thu, 21 May 2009 12:01
The departure of Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe would be in
"the best interests of everyone," US Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton said in an interview distributed here Wednesday.
Clinton also told South African state television that the United
States would not resume aid to the Zimbabwean government as long as
it could not be sure it would reach the people concerned.
"We're encouraged by the new unity government that has been
created. We are not yet ready to change our policy, but it is under
review," Clinton said when asked about whether the United States
would support the new government financially.
"It's important to us that any aid from any source get to the
people of Zimbabwe," Clinton said in the interview given Tuesday
but distributed by the State Department on Wednesday.
Relations still tense
President Mugabe and his rival Morgan Tsvangirai on 11 February
formed a power-sharing government tasked
with steering Zimbabwe
back to stability after disputed elections last year plunged the
country into crisis.
Relations within the government remain tense.
Under the fledgling government's watch, more than $800-million
in credit lines have been secured to rebuild the shattered
economy, and the International Monetary Fund has said it will
resume technical aid to Harare.
But that is still a fraction of the $8.5-billion dollars the
government says it needs, and private firms say they want more
guarantees that the rule of law will be respected before they
invest.
Clinton's interviewer asked if she would "like to see President
Mugabe go first before you can come in?" The chief US diplomat
replied: "I think that would be in the best interests of everyone."
It was the first time that she had spoken about the fate of the
aging leader. Former president George W. Bush had called for
Mugabe's departure.
SA has role to
play
The secretary of state called on South Africa to apply more
pressure on the Zimbabwean government.
"I think it's up to the people and the government, and, frankly,
the neighbors. South Africa has a big role to play in this," she
said.
She recognized Mugabe's "historic contribution" to Zimbabwe in a
way that suggested she believed time was up for the man who came to
power in 1980 when the country formerly known as Rhodesia gained
independence from Britain.
"No one questions his early commitment to freedom and to an end
of colonialism and oppression... But for whatever reason, the last
years of his rule have hurt so many of his people," she said.
"So it is not for us to make that determination, but we hope
that the government, whoever is running it, will be devoted to
reconstructing that country with its extraordinary potential and
taking its rightful place as a developing country that holds such
promise," Clinton
said.