Mugabe defiant as African leaders converge on Malawi for SADC summit

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Robert Mugabe, president of Zimbabwe – Photo: news

By PANA

Lilongwe, Malawi – As southern African leaders converged on Malawi Friday for the annual Southern African Development Community (SADC) summit, veteran Zimbabwean president Robert Mugabe has restated that he remains unfazed with the British and American governments maintaining sanctions against his country.

“I have nothing to do with the British, nothing to do with Americans and so we say well those are their decisions, we take our own decisions as African people and those are the decisions we go by,” he told journalists on arrival in the Malawi capital, Lilongwe, for the two-day SADC summit.

Mugabe acknowledged that the West abhors him as an individual, not necessarily the Zimbabwean people. He, however, added: “But Robert Mugabe happens to be a Zimbabwean, an African.”

Mugabe, 89, has just won a controversial election which has widely been endorsed as ‘credible’ by his SADC colleagues, save for Botswana who called it a “fraud”.

Batswana leader, Lt. Gen. Seretse Khama Ian Khama, arrives for the Lilongwe summit Saturday.

But Mugabe, in a jovial mood after being welcomed by his Malawian counterpart Joyce Banda, accused the West of trying to think for Africans.

“You know what the West is like. They want to think for us, take decisions for us and even direct us as to which way we want to go,” he said. “What we decide as a correct course and correct decision they by and large will not agree to with that, unless that charted path or that direction is in their interest. It is always their own interest.”

South African president Jacob Zuma also backed the Zimbabwe polls as ‘credible’. He told journalists on arrival for the summit in Lilongwe: “We were working for the elections to be peaceful, to be free and I think that this has happened.”

The Zimbabwean election is not officially on the agenda but the Southern Africa People’s Coalition Solidarity Network (SAPSA), a coalition of NGOs, is set to petition the summit on Saturday to discuss what it called “loopholes” in the elections.

Mozambican president Armando Guebuza, the outgoing SADC chairman, also hinted that the summit will review the Zimbabwe election on arrival for the summit on Thursday.

The SADC summit ends Sunday after which southern Africa’s first female president Joyce Banda will assume the chair of the 14-member economic bloc.

 

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