Zimbabwe Refuses Entry To Jimmy Carter, Kofi Annan

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CELEAN JACOBSON | November 22, 2008 03:01 PM EST | AP

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Former US President Jimmy Carter, former UN head Kofi Annan, and Graca Machel, wife of former South African President Nelson Mandela, seen from left, during a news conference in Johannesburg, Staurday, Nov. 22, 2008. Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter says he and others have been refused entry to Zimbabwe for a humanitarian mission. Carter says he and other members of The Elders group were informed Friday night by former South African President Thabo Mbeki that efforts to secure travel visas had failed. The Elders group was formed by Nelson Mandela and includes former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan and Mandela's wife Graca Machel, an international advocate for women's and children's rights. (AP Photo/Denis Farrell)

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Zimbabwe has refused to let Kofi Annan, Jimmy Carter and a South African human rights advocate visit the impoverished country for a humanitarian mission, the three said Saturday.

The former U.N. secretary general, the ex-U.S. president and rights advocate Graca Machel had planned to assess the southern African country's needs. They are members of The Elders, a group formed by former South African President Nelson Mandela to foster peace and tackle world conflicts.

Annan said no official reason had been given for the refusal, but Zimbabwe's state-run Herald newspaper reported that the group had been asked to "come at a later date" to accommodate the crop-planting season. It quoted an unnamed source as saying they were seen as antagonistic toward Zimbabwe's government.

Zimbabweans are suffering from disease and hunger while political crisis over a power-sharing government occupies its politicians. A current cholera outbreak has killed nearly 300 people in Zimbabwe, the United Nations said.

But the three were told Friday night by former South African President Thabo Mbeki, who is mediating the political crisis, that efforts to secure travel visas for the a two-day trip had failed.

"We are very disappointed that the government of Zimbabwe would not permit us to come in, would not cooperate," former U.S. President Carter said at a news conference in Johannesburg.

It was the first time the 2002 Nobel Peace laureate has been denied permission to carry out a mission in any country, he said.

Machel, a rights advocate for women and children who is married to Mandela, said she was denied a visa to visit Zimbabwe in July when she had planned to lead a women's delegation.

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Government officials in Harare could not immediately be reached for comment Saturday.

The Elders had said the trip was entirely separate from regional attempts to get Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe and his rivals to implement a power-sharing agreement stalled since September.

Later Saturday, Zimbabwe's main opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai met the group at a hotel in Johannesburg, saying he was disappointed they could not meet under "better circumstances."

Tsvangirai accuses Mugabe _ who had been in power since Zimbabwe's 1980 independence from Britain _ of trying to hold onto powerful Cabinet posts.

The political impasse has left the country without leadership as its economy collapses, with deadly consequences. Lack of cash to maintain water and sewer systems, for example, has led to the cholera outbreak.

"It seems obvious to me that the leaders of the government are immune to reaching out for help for their own people," Carter said.

Zimbabweans face daily shortages of food, fuel and other basic goods. In the countryside, failed harvests mean that starving villagers compete with jackals, baboons and goats for roots and wild fruits.

As the country suffers from the world's worst inflation, health care has collapsed. Hospitals unable to afford drugs, equipment or staff salaries have been forced to shut down.

There is growing regional concern about Zimbabwe's crisis, as millions have left for neighboring countries in search of jobs and security.

"Any crisis that creates millions of refugees is regional, and everyone should be interested in resolving it," Annan said.

Annan and the group of Elders were determined to continue efforts to address the humanitarian crisis in Zimbabwe, and planned to meet various leaders and organizations in South Africa.

The Elders _ including 12 former world leaders and prominent rights activists _ have mediated in a number of other international crises, such as Sudan and Kenya. The group was launched last year to celebrate Mandela's 89th birthday.

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Zimbabwe has refused to let Kofi Annan, Jimmy Carter and a South African human rights advocate visit the impoverished country for a humanitarian mission, the three s...
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Zimbabwe has refused to let Kofi Annan, Jimmy Carter and a South African human rights advocate visit the impoverished country for a humanitarian mission, the three s...
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- asichii I'm a Fan of asichii 11 fans permalink
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As Mugabe naturally approaches death, one would think that these last days should see him seeking redemption and forgiveness having lived such a life full of avarice, vile and violence. It is bewildering to note that the man is not moved by all the deaths he has caused. Cholera and hunger are just a tip of the iceberg falling in the same matrix of gross negligence by his machinery. I guess it is no big deal for a man who has spent his entire public career as 'the' captain of murderous thugs.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:43 PM on 11/23/2008
- Brett575 I'm a Fan of Brett575 10 fans permalink
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"Last Saturday, Constable Hlanganani Nxumalo, a VIP protection officer for KwaZulu-Natal Social Development MEC Meshack Radebe, shot the tyre of a Mazda that did not move out of his way quickly enough as he raced along the N3 towards Waterfall to collect his boss.
The Mazda's tyre blew; the car veered into oncoming traffic; it collided head-on with a bakkie [truck]; and in the ensuing chaos, eight people were injured.
Nxumalo, meanwhile, barely paused to glance in his rear-view mirror. With his foot flat on the accelerator and his blue light flashing, he fled the scene of the accident. He did not stop to survey the damage. He did not rush to the aid of his victims. He simply sped off." As reported by Helen Zille in South Africa last week.

Says it all, that's the African way. Once drunk with power; stuff the people, stuff the rule of law, viva mayhem! (oh, and blame it on THEM).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:14 AM on 11/23/2008

Try getting in the way of Putin's motorcade, pal. Yes, this is disgusting, unacceptable behavior from that policeman - but you seem to be under the impression that it is peculiarly African. I know it suits your anti-Africa theme - but perhaps you need to read a bit more about the rest of the world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:07 PM on 11/23/2008
- GrainOSand I'm a Fan of GrainOSand 269 fans permalink
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Starved so long -- by the time you took power all your morals were gone.


Imbued with purpose and righteous intent-- maybe...at one time, now Mugabe, you appear to be out of your mind -- An African leader who unites through crime and death -- Just anther one only thinking of self -- no one else.

Africa’s song plays on through the desert, over the mountains, and in the jungles and marshlands where ecology is threatened by all sorts of predators. Africa must flourish and all disease, starvation, and lawless murder must cease -- if this is not happening -- “It is not happening!” -- “Life in Africa is not happening!” The African Union must bring their brother along. Tribal differences, political differences, differences of religion, none of these should be the root of the battered continent that is Africa continuing to be battered..­.but now, from the inside.

The populations who die are real people. The populations who suffer are real people. Suffering is a spirit. When it lingers for too long it seeks refuge in expressions of the times; of frustration, of hostility boiled over, of anguish unsheathed. The commercials have been on since the early 70s. Feed this one and clothe that one. War, violence, greed, and corruption, all of these have been the story. Stand up is what Africa must do and turn back the tide of years of amnesia that co-opted governing principle. Amnesia caused by internal and external raps upon the skull.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:05 AM on 11/23/2008

On the bright side ... Zimbabweans are scattered in the Diaspora seeking a better life that is a life-line to many in Zimbabwe ... but also provides a pool of talent ready to go home and rebuild one of Africa's best and most beautiful countries.
Viva MDC! Viva Carter! Viva Anan! Viva Machel! Aluta continua! The sun is setting on Uncle Bob and it's a red African sky ...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:07 PM on 11/22/2008
- OutsiderSA I'm a Fan of OutsiderSA 8 fans permalink
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Bob made the mistake to take on a hate-white stance and as a result, many left in fear.

The few that stayed behind that actually worked the economy,he has disenfranchised and I have white friends that cannot leave as they cannot even gain a passport.

The only country that has a $100Bn currency note.

Zimbabwe has become SA's Mexico but here you cannot blame them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:54 PM on 11/22/2008

Not all of Africa is silent or pussyfoot like Mbeki. Botswana, Zambia, and Mozambique have strongly critized the Mugabe regime. As has the world's greatest living politician and African, Mandela (a terrorist according to the US until about a month back!).
Zimbabwe will recover after Mugabe has gone which won't be too much longer, provided China hasn't been sold all its assets by the current regime. Like Bush his reign of power and destruction will take years to repair and a generation of Zimbabweans are lost. We hope Zimbabweans look west to their neighbor Botswana as a model for the future, where the countries wealth can be applied for everyone's benefit and upliftment of the poor.
The greatest stone scupltors alive today and possibly of all time still produce world-class sculptures everyday in Zimbabwe. Vist: www.kwaze-kwasa.com if you want to help the hardcore poor in Zimbabwe and Sub-Saharan Africa. An excellent nonprofit that operates a lean machine as a hand up rather than a hand out model. Their Epworth Overflow base, south east of greater Harare was destroyed and looted by Mugabe's murderous Zanu-PF thugs this past June and several people lost their lives not to mention the many who were raped or beaten. Continues below...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:07 PM on 11/22/2008

The Zimbabwean people are some of the nicest , friendliest, hard working, and well-educated you will come across on this planet living in conditions akin to North Korea or worse. Despite the terrible conditions one is completely safe anywhere in Zimbabwe unlike its wealthy neighbor to the South where crime is the national sport.
The exception is when politics and political power rears its ugly head. Zanu-PF has so indoctrinated the urban illiterate and rural poor and the so-called 'war veterans' that they become barbarians to support the regime at all costs to retain the morsels Mugabe tosses their way with promises of more to come that never happens.
Mugabe won't relinquish power, as the world thought he walked on water in the 80s after the liberation struggle and feted and bestowed many awards and honors whilst his goons were practicing genocide and ethnic cleansing. He knew he was doing wrong but the world sang his praises desperate to atone for the sins of colonialism who was he to query their assesment of his rock star status. Continues below...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:06 PM on 11/22/2008

Most of Africa's woes can be ascribed to the US's (CIA) paranoia with communism and meddling in fledgling post-colonial regimes in the 1950s and 60s and the many years of colonial rape before that let alone the iatrogenic origin of AIDS/HIV in the Congo by US physicians in the late 1950s that has resulted in humankinds worst pandemic of all time.
This does not exonerate Mugabe who lost his way years ago (shortly after liberation) but gave him liberation kudos and ammunition to ward off critics. He blames sanctions by EU, US etc. are the cause of the current shortages Zimbabweans are suffering from daily along with the world's worst-ever hyperflation. That is not true ... there are no sanctions on Zimbabwe ... just targeted on its leader and his fellow kleptomaniacs which goads the old b*st*rd to be more stubborn.
Many have died and more are close to death from starvation and the lack of basics. Mugabe is an egomaniac and any time he can throw his weight around he will ... sad to see a brother and hero of the liberation struggle become a dictator and kleptomaniac robbing the treasury for personal reward ... a nightmare worse than Smith or apartheid .. and nobody wants those eras to return.
Continues below...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:06 PM on 11/22/2008
- Brett575 I'm a Fan of Brett575 10 fans permalink
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"Most of Africa's woes can be ascribed to the US's (CIA) paranoia with communism and meddling in fledgling post-colonial regimes in the 1950s and 60s ..." What a load of rubbish! But typical of the African mentality, you will ALWAYS blame someone else.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:50 AM on 11/23/2008

Are you denying though that the CIA was active in Angola, Congo, South West Africa, Kenya, Uganda, Egypt? It's not "African mentality" as much as common knowledge for anyone with any basic information on CIA destabilization activities in Asia, Africa and Central and South America, in the 1970s in particular. Seems as though, in your eagerness to demonize the "African mentality" - whatever that is - you're willing to blind yourself to parts of the historical record that don't suit your argument.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:47 PM on 11/23/2008
- Agnim I'm a Fan of Agnim 6 fans permalink

Good for the Zimbabwean patriots who are being criminally sanctioned into 'regime change' by racist invaders of their space.
Carter should be directing his efforts at his wicked European people who are seeking to destroy countries with vile and racist sanctions.
Now the world can see that the economic destruction that the US has been sowing to destroy Cuba, Korea, Myanmar, Zimbabwe, etc is now returning to destroy America's economy. What goes around comes around. Karma!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:40 PM on 11/22/2008
- JulieSA I'm a Fan of JulieSA 165 fans permalink
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You have it exactly backwards.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:01 PM on 11/22/2008
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Mugabe? Is that you?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:33 PM on 11/25/2008

Harare's refusal smacks of Myanmar's military junta saying no to international aid when a cyclone claimed the lives of more than 100,000 people and left millions destitute earlier this year. In both instances, it's about holding onto power, about misplaced pride and vanity - and never about putting people first no matter what the respective governments may claim.
http://mashngravy.wordpress.com/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:36 PM on 11/22/2008
- claptrapa I'm a Fan of claptrapa 8 fans permalink
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Zimbabe. upon the demise of their head henchman, Mgabe, could easily fall in a condition similar to Somalia where warlards and thugs have taken charge.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:33 PM on 11/22/2008
- HallStyle I'm a Fan of HallStyle 11 fans permalink
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You make a very valid point. Do we help get rid of a leader that we dont' like only to give power to one we don't know or may not even be capable of handling?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:20 PM on 11/22/2008

Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:43 AM on 11/23/2008
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Help the one who really won the election.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:34 PM on 11/25/2008
- JulieSA I'm a Fan of JulieSA 165 fans permalink
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Yeah. Ther's been a lot of discussion about that. I thought a sniper's bullet would be the best remedy for Zimbawe's misery, but apparently he has a bunch of henchmen in place who are just as bad as he is.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:03 PM on 11/22/2008

Zimbabwe is starting to sound like Jonestown.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:12 PM on 11/22/2008
- SuperSam I'm a Fan of SuperSam 6 fans permalink

Zimbabwe and I.s.rael have something in common, they both despise Carter.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:53 PM on 11/22/2008
- mystic I'm a Fan of mystic 18 fans permalink

At one time Israel sold arms to Mugabe. Just saying.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:54 PM on 11/22/2008
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 383 fans permalink
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'Tis indeed bad based on some first-hand input from one who had to return to Zimbabwe to help her grandmother. No food most days, she says, although they have money to buy some.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:52 PM on 11/22/2008

Tell her to plant lettuce. It grows year round. I know that's not the solution to the crisis but at least she'd have something to eat when she can't get food.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:14 PM on 11/22/2008
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I don't understand why South Africa does not just go in there and over throw him. The refugee problem is driving them n u t s. Organizing a campaign against them would even give people jobs. How can they allow such a p itiful government do such atrocities right across the border?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:29 PM on 11/22/2008
- chaos4700 I'm a Fan of chaos4700 85 fans permalink
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Going into another country and overthrowing its government isn't even a good idea as a last resort, let alone an optimal solution. Case and point, Iraq. I'm not saying we should do nothing, but "regime change" through invasion never works. And frankly, it generally ends up looking like good ol' conquest and colonialism, re-branded.

Like I said, I agree with you and I am also pained when I see atrocities happening, but risking the commission of atrocities oneself will not end that cycle. And really, on top of all of that, South Africa has a lot of problems it's still sorting through in its own right. Things are so much better there than they were a few years ago, but there's still a ways to go. But it's wonderful that they're walking that road. I suppose we can just hope that South Africa can keep extending a hand of friendship and some time in the future, Zimbabwe will be in a position to grasp it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:38 PM on 11/22/2008
- Brett575 I'm a Fan of Brett575 10 fans permalink
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Don’t kid yourself; there is more than ample evidence to suggest that South Africa is walking down the same road as Zimbabwe. The demise of apartheid, the release of Mandela were heady days. As a South African, I too was looking forward to the vibrant future that lay ahead. Unfortunately, there was only one Mandela, and now, the rot has really started to set in. The ANC have shown that they are the same old power-at-all-cost African government. From one cr@p regime to the next!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:23 PM on 11/22/2008
- OutsiderSA I'm a Fan of OutsiderSA 8 fans permalink
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Yeah w.a.r solves all the worlds problems like Iraq Eh?

Even f-ked up Zimbabwe is part of the UN, we cannot just invade them although we have the might to do it.

See, even Africans have one up on the good ol' USA, there are skirmishes in many countries but no nation vs. nation since SA vs Angola.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:56 PM on 11/22/2008

OutsideSA

email me at yahoo.comyahoo.com

Flew Mugabe many times all around Africa in 2002-2003. VIP crew.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:09 PM on 11/22/2008
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There is w a r going on inside of Zimbabwe right now. The people are begging for our help. You don't know the atrocities going on their.

Iraq is a very bad comparison. Bush has been quoted saying that there needed to be an event so they could go into Iraq. Everybody knows we went there not for the Iraqi people, but for the oil. All it would take is grabbing Mugabe and his top people and putting them on trial. They have an elected president ready to take over. They don't have the ethnic problems there either.

Stop trying to put people down and raise yourself up when there are the problems in the Congo, Zimbabwe, and Sudan. Our government here right now is as corrupt as it gets, but we are fixing that. The people of Sudan and Zimbabwe deserve to be liberated. However, the Congo is a mess that I would not touch because of the terrain and the many ethnic problems that pit people against each other. Sudan and Zimbabwe need to be de cap ita ted. It would not take much.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:54 AM on 11/23/2008

You don't seem to understand the region well at all. Aside from the rather unavoidable inconvenience that Zimbabwe is a sovereign country, South Africa is not a belligerent imperialist power that invades other countries illegally.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:06 PM on 11/22/2008
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Maybe, we should have stayed out of WW2 as well and not liberated the people. They lost their right to sovereignty with the abuse of their citizens who are suffering terribly and the cheating of the democratic process. This is unheard of for a country not to let Carter and Kofi in. Unspeakable things are surely happening. I am not a militant, but I do not stand aside and let people suffer. I help people when they need it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:43 AM on 11/23/2008
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"Come at a later date-- to accommodate the crop planting season."

interpretation

Come back after we're done burying all the bodies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:26 PM on 11/22/2008
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