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Jumat, 19 Desember 2008

Mugabe: 'Zimbabwe belong to me'

President Robert Mugabe said Zimbabwe belong to me "and rejected the appeal of a number of African leaders in order to stand down. "I do not, not, will never surrender," he told the members of the delegation party Zanu-PF leadership in power in the party's annual conference.
Mugabe also said he already sepucuk send a letter to the leaders of the main opposition, Morgan Tsvangirai, invites to be taken oath as prime minister. Previous Tsvangirai says he will pull out of the division of powers unless the abduction of supporting stopped. He said more than 40 members of the Movement for Democratic Change leader and lost accuse Zanu-PF terror campaign conduct.

Zimbabwe currently experiencing economic destruction and epidemic cholera.

The United Nations on Thursday reported a number of death due to disease is increased to 1123 and that 20,896 people contracting.
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said on Friday that the ancient method used to treat people with the epidemic that can not bring hope for the suffering people of Zimbabwe, and calls for greater assistance to be sent. "I believe the situation now, at variance with President Mugabe said that, of all the evidence we have increasingly worsened and worsened very quickly," Brown said in a press conference in London. Assistant Minister of Foreign Affairs for the United States African affairs Jendayi Frazer said "there is total destruction of the system at this time" and called on Zimbabwe that Mugabe step down.

'A series of lies'

But in a speech challenging the party's annual conference in Zanu-PF in Bindura, President Mugabe menkankan "those who can defeat Robert Gabriel Mugabe is the Zimbabwe people." "I do not, not, will never surrender. Zimbabwe is owned by me, I am of Zimbabwe. Zimbabwe for the Zimbabwe people," he said. Mugabe said, criticism of the international community against a government deal with outbreaks of cholera is a "series of lies." "I can not be intimidated. Even if I threatened will be cut, I believe the following and confidence that will not be lost: Zimbabwe ours, not the UK," he added.

He also ask whether countries neighboring Zimbabwe "have the courage to order military intervention." "Why would they come and what they will do in the military here? When they come they will threaten our stability," he added.

"There will be a war that need not be preceded with a stupid, stupid because inducement is coming from sources that stupid."

Senegal President Abdoulaye Wade joined with a number of senior African politicians who proclaim that Mugabe step down Friday.

He told French newspaper La Croix that he had support Mugabe, but now he considers Mugabe is the cause of many problems in Zimbabwe.

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