Tsvangirai, Britain secretly pressure Aussie govt to change stance on Zimbabwe
THE ruling Australian labour party is divided over Zimbabwe with some members seeking regime change and others supporting the sovereignty of the country, and the opposition MDC is the catalyst in this split, the Zimbabwe Guardian can reveal.
The new Australian ambassador to Zimbabwe, who is reported to be openly supportive of the sovereignty of Zimbabwe, is said to have clashed with the country’s new foreign minister who seeks regime change in Zimbabwe.
According to sources, Australian Ambassador to Zimbabwe John Courtney ─ who is supportive of positive engagement with Zimbabwe and respective of Zimbabwe's sovereignty ─ has clashed with Stephen Smith, the new Australian foreign minister, over Zimbabwe.
Courtney told journalists at the beginning of March that the new government will not meddle in Zimbabwe’s internal affairs.
He also refuted claims that the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) was being sponsored by his country.
However, a recent statement by Smith ─ who is now Australia’s foreign minister ─ on Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) Radio is said to have infuriated Ambassador Courtney who preferred a more diplomatic approach with Zimbabwe.
Smith said he has “very, very grave concerns” that elections in Zimbabwe this weekend will not be democratic and that the Australian Government seeks regime change in Zimbabwe.
Smith issued this statement two days after Morgan Tsvangirai met in secret with an ABC journalist, whom the opposition MDC had secretly sneaked into the country ─ in defiance of media laws banning all Western journalists from reporting in Zimbabwe.
“I think the sooner we see the end of the Mugabe regime, the better,” Smith told ABC Radio.
“But I have very, very grave reservations and am very and deeply cynical about the capacity for a full and free election in Zimbabwe.”
Relations between Australia’s new labour government led by Kevin Rudd and Zimbabwe have since improved as Rudd has not pursued the “deportation policy” and the regime change agenda pursued by the previous far right government ─ preferring to use diplomacy in his relations with the government of Zimbabwe.
However, the new utterances by Smith are likely to sever relations between Australia and Zimbabwe.
A former lawyer with little experience in politics, Smith, at first, seemed more patient and more modest than his predecessor Alexander Downer who was a harsh critic of President Mugabe.
Reports from Australia suggest that Smith’s recent statements are a result of intense pressure from the United Kingdom who were not happy with the new government’s stance on Zimbabwe and Zimbabwe’s opposition MDC.
“There has been intense lobbying by the British government to change the new government’s [of Australia] stance on Zimbabwe. This was after press reports in Zimbabwe had suggested that relations between Australia and Zimbabwe were improving. Britain does not want any country in the West to maintain cordial relations with Zimbabwe,” said a source.
“The British government has been putting pressure on Australia for a long time, to shift its position on Zimbabwe.”
A western diplomatic source told the Zimbabwe Guardian, “There has been some excitement about how Australia has changed since Kevin Rudd won office on many fronts. There have been some alterations, especially in style and empathy. However, foreign policy is best judged with respect to continuity rather than change, so this might be the reason why Smith is making these statements.”
You can see evidence of that continuity also on Iraq. Australian combat forces will soon be withdrawn from the south of Iraq but the rest of the deployment will stay. And Australia will remain part of the US-led, and United Nations-endorsed, Multi-National Force – Iraq,” said our source.
The opposition MDC leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, is also said to be secretly lobbying the Australian government to shift its position on Zimbabwe. He is said to be aided by ‘sympathetic Western governments’ in this endeavour.
Tsvangirai met in secret with ABC Africa correspondent Andrew Geoghegan, whom he slipped into the country to cover his election campaigns, according to our source within the opposition MDC.
“Andrew Geoghegan defied President Mugabe’s government’s ban on western media organisations and slipped into the country to meet the opposition leader and report on the pre-election situation. Morgan helped slip him into the country to cover his campaigns,” said our source.
The MDC source also confirmed that Tsvangirai met the journalist after he addressed a rally in Kwekwe, a town south of the capital Harare.
A report by ABC News confirmed this meeting where Tsvangirai said, “The last three elections, I won them. There is a difference between winning an election and winning power. And this election we’ll win it, but the circumstances may be Mugabe will steal it.”
“We expect the Australian government to shift its position on Zimbabwe,” said Tsvangirai.
President Mugabe has maintained that the opposition MDC is a puppet of regime change in Zimbabwe and are working with various western governments to discredit his government.
British pilot arrested
Zimbabwe police yesterday arrested a British pilot after landing at CharlesPrinceAirport in Harare while doing work for the MDC Tsvangirai faction. It is not clear if the pilot was authorised to fly in Zimbabwe.
Mugabe over confident of win
Meanwhile President Mugabe has criticised western governments saying they do not give investments to Africa, but only give little amounts ─ by way of NGOs ─ that are not sufficient to develop the economies of the South.
Speaking to Al Jazeera Television Network on the sidelines of his election campaign president Mugabe said he was ‘over confident’ he will win the March election.
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READER OPINIONS
samas • n/a Subject: n/a Thu, 27 Mar 2008 09:44:03 • Mhofu how do you explain one person in power for nearly 30years, what has that to do with platinum? Vamwe munugowawata muri kunze kwenyika. Come and witness the once beautiful country now run down. Sewage, rubbish, no water etc.
Alisadar Budd • airbud@tisali.co.uk Subject: What? Thu, 27 Mar 2008 04:12:23 • If you've quite finished ranting, printing race hate and failing to mention that the Platinum is now going to the Chinese, who are the most racist country in the world, classifying its citizens on ethnicity.
Would you like to consider that the Australians are now more sympathetic to the plights of the straving Black, dispossessed poor, rather in the same way they recently apologised to the Blackfellas in their native population?
Or are you totally ignorant of the newly elected Australian govt policies to those who try to deny Black natives their human rights and a life of dignity, unlike Mugabe and the rest of those driving Toyotas amongst the starving of Zimbabwe.
Mhofu • n/a Subject: n/a Wed, 26 Mar 2008 21:35:01 • Morgan makes me sick, he's just there to sell off the country once again. It's sad that it has to get to a level where people vote on the basis of their stomachs, caused by all these sanctions. The new Australian PM appeared to have been peaceful, in relation to his predecessor, John Howard, who refused to apologise to the Aborigines. The new PM gave an apology, the first step in trying to heal the wounds. Dialogue is the key to problem-solving. Bush was in Africa at the beginning of the year. Do you know that it would have been easy for him to call Mugabe and say hey, geezer, can I stop over for a day or 2 and talk? Imagine how different the world would be if people learnt to talk? It's sad that the world has become a place of condemnation. It is a fact that had there been no colonisation, none of this would be happening.
Lets ask ourselves why it took the UN over a week to intervene in the Rwandan genocide, answer - there are no resources of note there so almost a million people were killed whilst the US were watching. Is the noise in Zimbabwe all about the farms, no, Zimbabwe has vast resources of platinum, the new metal on demand in the world today, the second largest reserves in the world after South Africa's. Most South African reserves have already been bought, the remaining ones are expensive, so bully Zimbabweans into submission, get Tsvangirai into power and lets get cheap platinum. Zimbabwe's just a sad situation.
n/a • n/a Subject: know your history!!!!!!!!!! Wed, 26 Mar 2008 19:41:20 • I think knowing history is great,there is no colonisation in this day and age but there's democracy saka that's history.
Omugabe • dziva@sanandresano.com Subject: Africa for Africans Wed, 26 Mar 2008 17:05:18 • There is no way that Zim Patriots will allow a re-colonizing of African people.
It is time that arrest and confine the so-called leaders of those who are Mentally Deluded by Colonialists (MDC).
The treasonous and traitorous activities of members of the MDC can no longer be tolerated, as they continue to consort with the relentless and racist European enemies of African people.
Africans do not get this kind of racist grief from Chinese.
Africans do not get this kind of racist grief from Indians.
It is only the racist and beastly Europeans that seek to rampage across the planet to create all kinds of destructions.
Those European beast MUST be caged, at least!
samas • n/a Subject: Bob is too old Wed, 26 Mar 2008 15:06:33 • The tea boy is coming into office. You are going to serve him with coffee. Your old man will have to stomach the.
Rungano Madori • rungano20@btinternet.com Subject: Makoni is the Key. Wed, 26 Mar 2008 13:34:20 • To all zimbabweans, the message is clear, Simba is the Main Man! He has the experience, the education, the expertise, the seasoning, the ability to make decisions for zimbabwe and zimbabweans. He has come in at the right time. Mugabe is going---,--- and we will soon say gone!. To the army and other alleged security forces use your God given brains don't let Mugabe rape the zimbabweans again. For Tsvangirai , not a problem as long as he is not gona run the country himself. H should realise his limitations himself.
Nduna Nduku • nduna@hotmail>com Subject: Lies Wed, 26 Mar 2008 13:20:01 • This is blatant lies. Of course the old man is going to go sooner and his party will disintegrate. No matter how you defend his misrule and evilness.
nyonyo • xb2@hotmail.com Subject: regime change Wed, 26 Mar 2008 12:50:45 • Heya talkzimbabwe is internet wing ye Zanu bc.
Paida Moyo • N/A Subject: Regime Change Wed, 26 Mar 2008 12:46:21 • By reading this article, one would think that he is reading the Zimbabwe Herald due to the way the word regime change is used. The prurpose of the opposition is to effect regime change. Who does not know that Australia wants regime change in Zimbabwe? If MDC does not want regime change, then what is its purpose? Who is this Nkomo fellow anywhere, a Zanu apologist?
Mdhara • Ini@gmail.com Subject: Regime change Wed, 26 Mar 2008 10:39:12 • Whoever said a regime change is not good for Zimbabwe? Whoever appointed the likes of Floyd as the spokesman for Zimbabwean? Let's meet in the ballot box iwe nevote yako ini neyangu!
N/A • N/A Subject: morgan is a pupet Wed, 26 Mar 2008 10:11:50 • you see now this tea boy is a puppet. if we let him win these elections, i tell u that in less than 5 years we will be back in the bushes for our liberation again. its better the eletions to be rgged than to let a confused pupet rule the country. Zimbabwe will never be a colony again never!!!!
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