Zim Accuses US Of Trespassing

Diplomatic ties between Zimbabwe and the United States came under further strain today when authorities in Harare accused Washington’s envoy to South Africa of sneaking into the country. While US officials in both Harare and Pretoria denied the ambassador had made such a journey yesterday and said it appeared to be a case of mistaken identity, Zimbabwe’s state media said he had crossed over via the border with Botswana on “an undisclosed mission”. In a front-page story, the Herald newspaper said the “United States ambassador to South Africa Patrick Kelly Diskin sneaked into Zimbabwe through Plumtree border post yesterday on an as yet undisclosed mission. Sources at the border said Diskin indicated he was visiting US ambassador to Zimbabwe James McGee in Harare over confidential matters and stated he would be in the country for 14 days.” The newspaper then printed the number of Diskin’s US diplomatic passport and the car registration number. An unnamed government official said he was “interested” in discovering the reason for the visit. “Whilst is is normal for ambassadors to visit each other, we find the timing and the route used very odd,” he told the paper.

However the US embassy in Pretoria dismissed the report and said the Herald had not even got the name of the ambassador right. “Our ambassador is Eric Bost. He did not go to Zimbabwe yesterday,” an embassy spokeswoman told AFP. An official at the US embassy in Harare meanwhile said the man named by the Herald worked for the State Department’s United States Agency for International Development (USAID). “The Patrick Diskin we know is a food for peace officer with USAID in South Africa. He is not an ambassador,” he said. “We are checking with USAID whether Diskin was coming to Zimbabwe to meet the ambassador.” The episode comes days after Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe threatened to expel McGee whom he accused of meddling in Zimbabwe’s internal affairs. “I am told he (McGee) says he fought in Vietnam,” Mugabe said on Sunday in a keynote speech at the launch of his campaign for a presidential election run-off against opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai next month. “Fighting in Vietnam does not give him the right to interfere in our domestic affairs. Tall as he is, if he continues doing that, I will kick him out. I am just waiting to see if he makes one more step wrong, He will get out. This is Zimbabwe, it is not an extension of America.” Relations between the United States and Zimbabwe have been tense ever since Washington imposed sanctions against Mugabe and his inner circle after he allegedly rigged his 2002 re-election.

(Source)

Leave a Reply

*
To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture.
Anti-Spam Image

Close
Powered by ShareThis