July Vol 2, National News
Zimbabwe PM says Western tour a success
Zimbabwe's Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai Saturday said political and economic reforms were gathering pace in the shattered African state, a key prerequisite for much-needed Western aid.
Zimbabwe's Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai Saturday said political and economic reforms were gathering pace in the shattered African state, a key prerequisite for much-needed Western aid.
Tsvangirai also said a just-ended three-week tour to London, Washington, Berlin, Stockholm, Brussels and Paris to drum up support for the "new" Zimbabwe was a success.
"The reforms are not stopping, they are accelerating," the former opposition stalwart and once an arch-foe of veteran Zimbabwean leader Robert Mugabe told a news conference in Johannesburg.
"I'm happy with the pace," he said. "It has to take into consideration the local realities, the sensitivities. We have to navigate through a lot of problems."
The country's unity government was formed on February 11 and tasked with steering Zimbabwe back to stability after disputed elections last year plunged the impoverished country even deeper into crisis and world record inflation.
It has appealed for 8.3 billion US dollars to rebuild the shattered economy but the assistance has so far come in dribs and drabs.
Tsvangirai's European tour -- which saw the first official talks with the European Union in seven years -- did not see wide aid pledges and he was told repeatedly that Zimbabwe needed to improve its rights record and deepen reforms.
French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner had told Tsvangirai: "The international community remains concerned about the rule of law in Zimbabwe" and about the areas of security, media freedom and respect for private property.
"An independent judiciary should go hand in hand with the state's respect for the rule of law," Kouchner said.
But Tsvangirai on Saturday put a positive spin both on his European tour and the situation in the country.
"This transition is irreversible," he said. "We are taking measures to reform the political and economic situation in the country.
"We are implementing constitutional reform...we are reforming the security sector... we are reforming the reserve bank, we are reforming the investment laws.
"In general, the trip has been very successful," he said, adding that its objective was to "redefine Zimbabwe policy in terms of re-engagement ... to seek transitional support."
During Tsvangirai's tour, former colonial master Britain pledged an extra five million pounds (8.2 million dollars, 5.9 million euros) in aid but urged more reform.
The United States offered 73 million dollars but President Barack Obama cited concern "about consolidating democracy, human rights and rule of law."
Despite Tsvangirai's optimism, divergences between his appeal to the West and Mugabe's stand came into sharp focus on the last day of his European trip.
Mugabe mocked the West for refusing to lift sanctions against him and his inner circle until the country's unity government introduced tangible reforms.
"'We will not lift sanctions', they say, and 'we will not give money except the little pieces of silver for cholera and humanitarian assistance'," Mugabe told members of his party's consultative assembly in the capital Harare.
"'As long as that man is still there, as long as Mugabe is still there, you will not get that money from us, you Tsvangirai,'" Mugabe said, mimicking Western leaders during a speech broadcast on state television.
