Fri 30 Oct 2009
Manfred Nowak had flown to
“The invitation by the prime minister was a nullity,” he told a news conference in
Tsvangirai was not immediately available for comment, but the development raises further questions about how much power Tsvangirai wields in the perilously fragile unity government. The longtime opposition leader joined the government with President Robert Mugabe in February but withdrew from Cabinet earlier this month after accusing Mugabe’s party of human rights violations.
Mugabe, who has been in power for nearly three decades, is accused of trampling on human rights and democracy and holding the international community in contempt.
The U.N. investigator said he had a meeting scheduled Thursday with Tsvangirai, even though other Zimbabwean officials had told him he was not welcome and should come later.
“What he did is unprecedented in the history of U.N. protocol by forcing himself on a country,” said Mumbengegwi, a ranking ZANU-PF member. “They wanted to create a diplomatic incident.”
Upon returning to
Tsvangirai has stuck with the so-called unity government, saying it is the only way to rescue
Amnesty International’s
On Friday, foreign ministers from
“I don’t believe that the problem has gotten out of hand,” Kabila told reporters in
Tsvangirai’s party has reported a recent surge in political violence, allegations that Mugabe’s party denies. Mugabe’s party has accused Tsvangirai’s party of not doing enough to persuade Western nations to lift travel and financial sanctions targeted at ZANU-PF leaders and their business allies.
(Source)

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