A hero’s welcome was being prepared on Monday for Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, with state media portraying his visit to Portugal for a weekend summit as a triumph despite the criticism he faced there over his human rights record.
Mugabe, Zimbabwe’s only ruler since independence from Britain in 1980, was ”an indisputable icon of African nationalism” who took centre stage at the summit and made ”some of the European heads of government and his detractors, including Angela Merkel, look like dwarfs”, Information Minister Sikhanyiso Ndlovu, the chief government spokesperson, was quoted as saying in state media on Monday.
Official media in Zimbabwe reported that Mugabe ”stole the show” in Lisbon. On Monday, busloads of supporters were seen being driven to the main Harare airport, evidently to welcome him home.
German Chancellor Merkel had said, as the special European Union-Africa summit opened on Saturday, that the EU was ”united” in condemning Mugabe for what critics inside and outside Zimbabwe view as his economic mismanagement, failure to curb corruption and contempt for democracy.
That prompted the Herald, the Zimbabwean government mouthpiece, to call her a ”Nazi remnant”. The Herald quoted Ndlovu as accusing her of ”racism of the first order”.
Ndlovu had racially charged criticism for Baroness Valerie Amos, who represented Britain in Portugal after British Prime Minister Gordon Brown stayed away to protest Mugabe’s attendance.
”If she [Amos] has a soul, she would understand that she is being used by her master against her own people,” Ndlovu said.
At the summit, Amos, who is black, ”emphasised the importance of the summit’s goals and set out a number of stark and shocking statistics, such as the average life expectancy for women in Zimbabwe, which is 34”, a Foreign Office spokesperson said, on customary condition of anonymity in line with policy.
In his summit speech, Zimbabwean media reported on Monday, Mugabe described Germany, Denmark, Sweden and The Netherlands as ”a gang of four” that sided with Britain in attacking him.
Mugabe said Italy, Spain, France, Greece, Belgium, Austria, Romania and Finland did not mention Zimbabwe at the summit and ”this confirmed northern Europe as the hardliners while the southerners have a different approach to Zimbabwe”, the Herald reported.
Mugabe accused his critics in the EU of ”arrogance” and said they had been misinformed about Zimbabwe’s situation.
”The fiction they paraded is either a result of British propaganda or perhaps a misguided sense of racial solidarity with the white farmers of my country,” Mugabe said, according to the Herald‘s account of his speech during a closed session.
The government-ordered, often violent seizures of thousands of white-owned commercial farms since 2000 plunged the agriculture-based economy into freefall, leaving the former regional breadbasket with the world’s highest inflation and acute shortages of food, most basic goods, hard currency, gasoline and medicines.
Mugabe’s political opponents, meanwhile, are regularly jailed, beaten and harassed.
Foreign aid and investment have dried up in seven years of political and economic turmoil. — Sapa-AP