Zim to demand EU apology
Fri, 11 Sep 2009 12:00
Zimbabwe will demand an apology from the European Union for
imposing sanctions on President Robert Mugabe and his inner circle,
when an EU team visits the country this weekend, state media said.
EU aid commissioner Karel de Gucht will lead a team to Zimbabwe
on Saturday and Sunday to meet with Mugabe and Prime Minister
Morgan Tsvangirai ? the highest-level EU mission here in seven
years.
Government officials said in the state-controlled Herald
newspaper that the government would demand an apology for the
sanctions, imposed over human rights abuses and flawed elections in
Zimbabwe.
"There can be no ties where one nation is treated as inferior.
It is not in our national interest to allow foreigners to dictate
to us how we should govern ourselves," an information ministry
official said in the paper.
"The starting point would then obviously be that the EU has to
admit that sanctions are wrong and that land reform in Zimbabwe is
irreversible," the official said.
A foreign ministry official told the paper that Zimbabwe wanted
"to establish how genuine the EU is in improving ties."
"Are they here on a public relations exercise or they are here
because they realised they erred in imposing sanctions?"
Western nations have imposed an asset freeze, travel ban and
other measures against Mugabe and his inner circle.
Mugabe's campaign to have the sanctions lifted received renewed
support from fellow leaders in southern Africa, when a regional
summit this week said the measures should be removed in order to
support the unity government.
But Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt, whose country
holds the rotating EU presidency, said Thursday that the bloc was
not prepared to remove the restrictions.