September 8, 2007
Mwanawasa’s Brilliant Stance Irks Mugabe - He Stormes Out!!!
Posted by brainsplus under Africa's President of Year (2007) Award, African nation, Blogroll, Global Peace Index, Levy Patrick Mwanawasa, President Mbeki, President Robert Mugabe, President Thabo Mbeki, SADC, South Africa, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, zambiaChoose Your Language Of Preference Below
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Mugabe Tantrum at SADC Comes to Light
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Business Day (Johannesburg)
7 September 2007
Posted to the web 7 September 2007
Dumisani Muleya
Johannesburg
ZIMBABWEAN President Robert Mugabe stormed out of the recent Southern African Development Community (SADC) summit after an explosive clash with Zambian President Levy Mwanawasa during a closed session, it has emerged.
Mugabe’s confrontation with Mwanawasa and his subsequent indignant departure from the meeting raised fears that the already divided regional bloc could be further weakened by further infighting and divisions.
The SADC is riddled with geo-political and personal rivalries among leaders which threaten to make it difficult to deal with internal conflicts and rein in rogue states. Mugabe’s fracas with Mwanawasa was reminiscent of his row with former South African president Nelson Mandela during a SADC meeting in Angola in 1997.
Diplomatic sources who attended the summit revealed this week that Mugabe walked out of the meeting after a row with Mwanawasa over Zimbabwe’s political and economic crisis.
The sources said Mugabe went off in a huff after the unprecedented confrontation. Mwanawasa was chairing the meeting, which ended on a sour note.
The wrangle was caused by an attempt by Mwanawasa to table Zimbabwe for discussion, a move which enraged Mugabe.
Mugabe arrived home early looking glum after hurriedly leaving the summit. Upon his return, he said the meeting went well but made it clear his regime would continue with its own programmes, regardless of what the SADC leaders were saying.
The SADC said it was preparing an economic recovery package for Zimbabwe, but Mugabe’s spokesman, George Charamba, said in his anonymous column in the government-controlled daily Herald that Zimbabwe did not need help from the region because “no aid cent will come from SADC countries”, reflecting Mugabe’s attitude after the summit.
This was contrary to President Thabo Mbeki’s claims that there were no divisions over Zimbabwe at the summit and that the SADC was committed to helping Zimbabwe out of its crisis. He had described reports of division as “fictional” and said SADC leaders were not at odds over Zimbabwe.
But information gleaned from senior SADC diplomats indicates there were not just divisions, but a fierce clash between Mugabe and Mwanawasa that left the regional leaders shocked. They say the trouble started after Mbeki del-ivered his report on talks between the Zimbabwean ruling party Zanu (PF) and the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).
Mbeki had earlier given the report to Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete, the chairman of the SADC organ on politics, defence and security. Mbeki briefed the summit on Zimbabwe in his capacity as an SADC-appointed mediator .
Mbeki said in his briefing there was progress in the talks, although parties needed to intensify negotiations.
“After Mbeki delivered his report to the summit, Mwanawasa, as the chair of the meeting, said there was an urgent need to discuss Zimbabwe because the situation there had become ‘unacceptable’.
Kikwete said there was no need to discuss it because talks were in progress and Mbeki concurred,” a senior diplomat said.
“Kikwete then suggested Mugabe should be asked what he thought about Mwanawasa’s proposal.
When Mugabe was given the platform to speak he launched an angry tirade, attacking Mwanawasa left, right and centre before walking out in protest.”
The diplomat said Mugabe angrily asked: “Who are you, Mwanawasa? Who are you? Who do you think you are?”
“Mugabe also said he was aware of Mwanawasa’s recent meetings with western intelligence agencies on Zimbabwe. He said he would ‘not allow Mwanawasa to sell out Zimbabwe as he has done to Zambia’,” the diplomat said.
“During the process Mwanawasa was shaken and he kept on saying: ‘Mr President I didn’t mean to say that; you misunderstood me. No, Mr President, that was not my intention’ .”
Sources said Mugabe, after blasting Mwanawasa, walked out and did not return.
Efforts by colleagues - including Kikwete and Mbeki - to persuade him to return to the meeting failed.
http://allafrica.com/stories/200709070163.html

September 10, 2007 at 4:07 am
Mr. President,
… your performance was splendid, keep it up and we are behind you on this. Next time no apologies allowed, if Mugabe stands up and starts telling you off – go ahead and tell him off as well.
Tell him that you are not the one whose people are being beaten up for belonging to opposition parties, tell that you are not the one whose country’s inflation is so high it is not only unprecedented but also pathetic, tell him to look at himself and ask himself who the hell he is to keep so many people under shackles …
Tell him for once to do something for the common Zimbabweans and not just want is good for himself; tell him to put humankind ahead of self interest … you did it once again, calling it what it was, a sinking titanic … thanks a trillion.
June 15, 2008 at 11:11 am
To ask Mwanawasa about who the hell he is, Mugabe must have a very short length of memory, shorter than a chickeN. Zambia literally liberated that fool’s country and it was KK who negotiated his and Nkomo’s release from prison and yet he does not know who Mwanawasa is. Well, maybe Mugabe only knows Herbert Chitepo and Tongogara, because they died at his behest and their ghosts are busy hauting him.
June 15, 2008 at 11:18 pm
Mugabe’s missiles on Dr. L. Mwanawasa are a sign of frustration and dissapointment. He expected Presindent Mwanawasa to support him in his crusade against his own people, its not the Zambian way to solve problems through brutality and our President has demonstrated that. When Zambians don’t like something they will say it out, that is our nature. We rarely resolt to fighting and brutalising others no. I have evidence, for example USA donates GMO to Zambian whether our Government was wrong or right the general feeling and the advise which was given from experts at the National Institute of Scientific and Industrial Research Centre was No… the President refused to accept them, well he was misinterpreted by many including the Americans. Last month they where strange killings in Livingstone, the people cried to the Government… the Police sent in a Paramilitary Unit to solve the problem, they unit started brutalising Innocent residents in the name of Curfew…. Zambians came out and spoke strongly against the Police. My point is Zambians will Never keep quiet when they know something is wrong somewhere.. Mugabe should know that Zambia is more matured than Zimbabwe and South Africa, therefore they should trust our Judgement. Umukulu mukulu