Zimbabwe says US envoy lucky not to have been killed (Reuters) Updated: 2005-10-15 11:12
Zimbabwe's government said on Friday a U.S. envoy who was briefly detained
after entering a security zone near President Robert Mugabe's residence would
have been "a dead man" if the incident had happened elsewhere.
Zimbabwe's
President Robert Gabriel Mugabe addresses the 2005 World Summit during the
60th session of the United Nations General Assembly at U.N. headquarters
in New York, in this file photo from September 14, 2005.
[Reuters]
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Zimbabwe state television reported on Thursday night that U.S. ambassador
Christopher Dell was held by the Presidential Guard on Monday after he entered a
restricted zone at the National Botanic Gardens near Mugabe's official Harare
residence, ignoring "no entry" signs, on what the government says was a "mission
to provoke an unwarranted diplomatic incident."
In a statement published by state media on Friday, Mugabe's spokesman George
Charamba said Dell -- who was unavailable for immediate comment -- had
undertaken a dangerous "adventure."
"The ambassador must consider himself very lucky that he is dealing with a
professional army that the Zimbabwe National Army is," he said.
"Elsewhere, and definitely in America, he would have been a dead man. His
adventure is really dangerous," he added.
A U.S. State Department official said on Thursday the department was looking
into reports of an incident involving the ambassador and was trying to ascertain
exact details before commenting further.
The Zimbabwe government said it sent a letter of protest to the U.S. embassy
over what it called "a calculated disregard of the rules governing relations
between states ... clearly intended to provoke an unwarranted diplomatic
incident."
Relations between the United States and Zimbabwe have soured in recent years,
with Washington accusing Mugabe's government of rigging parliamentary and
presidential elections since 2000 and human rights abuses.
Last month a senior U.S. official said President George W. Bush's
administration planned to slap tough sanctions barring Mugabe, members of his
government and their extended families from traveling to the United States.
Mugabe, 81 and Zimbabwe's sole ruler since the southern African country's
independence from Britain in 1980, says the U.S. and other Western powers are
punishing him for his seizures of white-owned farms for redistribution to
blacks.
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