Mugabe urges lifting of sanctions

President Robert Mugabe today called for the West to lift sanctions against Zimbabwe, saying "neo-colonialist enemies" were trying…

President Robert Mugabe today called for the West to lift sanctions against Zimbabwe, saying "neo-colonialist enemies" were trying to make his land reform fail and his country dependent on food imports.

Mr Mugabe, speaking at a UN food summit in Rome, denounced what he called the "punitive policies of certain countries" whose interests he said were opposed to the success of his farm and food policies.

But compared with his firebrand attacks on the United States and Britain, he struck a relatively moderate tone in his speech.

"We face very hostile interventions by these states which have imposed unilateral sanctions on us," Mr Mugabe said. "This has had a negative impact on our farmers who, according to our neo-colonialist enemies, must fail as to damn the land reforms we have undertaken," he added, without naming any country.

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He added that Zimbabwe had also "seen a wish to make us dependent on food imports as opposed to enhancing our capacity for production".

Mr Mugabe, in power since independence from Britain in 1980, has long been a pariah in the West. Critics blame him for plunging his country, once the bread basket of southern Africa, into poverty through mismanagement and corruption.

He has repeatedly accused his Western foes of ruining the economy through sanctions in retaliation for a policy of seizing white-owned commercial farms for landless blacks. Those countries say the sanctions only target him and close associates.

"May Western countries please remove their illegal and inhuman sanctions on my country and its people," he said at the end of his speech in Rome.

Since forming a unity government with opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai this year, Mr Mugabe has made some overtures for better ties with the West, drawing a cautious reaction from London and Washington.

At the UN summit, Mr Mugabe defended his land policies, and said reversing them would create bitter conflicts. "Zimbabwe will not allow land alienation from the indigenous farmers by a new class of imported would-be land owners," he said.

Reuters