Text
of President Robert Mugabe's speech at 62nd
Session
of UN General Assembly
Your
Excellency, President of the 62ndSession of the
United
Nations General Assembly, Mr. Srgjan Kerim,
Your
Majesties,
Your
Excellencies, Heads of State and Government,
Your
Excellency the Secretary-General of the United
Nations,
Mr. Ban Ki-Moon,
Distinguished
Delegates,
Ladies
and Gentlemen.
Mr.
President,
Allow
me to congratulate you on your election to preside over this August
assembly. We are confident
that
through your stewardship, issues on this 62nd Session agenda be dealt with
in a balanced manner and
to the
satisfaction of all.
Let
me also pay tribute to your predecessor, Madame Sheikha Haya Rashed Al
Khalifa, who steered the work
of the 61st
Session in a very competent and impartial manner. Her ability to identify
the crucial issues facing the world today will be remembered as the
hallmark of her presidency.
Mr.
President,
We
extend our hearty welcome to the new Secretary-General, Mr. Ban Ki-Moon,
who has taken up
this challenging
job requiting dynamism in confronting the global challenges of the 21st
Century. Balancing global interests and steering the United Nations in a
direction that gives hope to the multitudes of the
poor,
the sick, the hungry and the marginalized, is indeed a mammoth task. We
would like to assure him
that Zimbabwe will
continue to support an open, transparent and all-inclusive multilateral
approach in
dealing with these
global challenges.
Mr.
President,
Climate
change is one of the most pressing global issues of our time. Its negative
impact is greatest in
developing
countries, particularly those on the African continent. We believe that if
the
international
community is going to seriously address the challenges of climate change,
then we need to get
our priorities
right. In Zimbabwe, the effects of climate change have become more evident
in the past
decade as we have
witnessed increased and recurrent droughts as well as occasional floods,
leading to
enormous humanitarian challenges.
Mr.
President,
We
are for a United Nations that recognises the equality of sovereign nations
and peoples whether big
or small. We are
averse to a body in which the economically and militarily powerful behave
like
bullies, trampling
on the rights of weak and smaller states as sadly happened in Iraq. In the
light of
these inauspicious developments, this Organisation must surely examine the
essence of its authority and
the extent of its
power when challenged in this manner.
Such
challenges to the authority of the UN and its Charter underpin our
repeated call for the
revitalisation of
the United Nations General Assembly, itself the most representative organ
of the UN. The
General Assembly
should be more active in all areas including those of peace and security.
The
encroachment of
some U.N. organs upon the work of the General Assembly is of great concern
to us. Thus any
process of
revitalizing or strengthening of the General Assembly should necessarily
avoid eroding the
principle of the
accountability of all principal and subsidiary organs to the General
Assembly.
Mr.
President,
Once
again we reiterate our position that the Security Council as presently
constituted is not democratic. In
its present
configuration, the Council has shown that it is not in a position to
protect the weaker states
who find
themselves at loggerheads with a marauding super-power. Most importantly,
justice demands that
any Security
Council reform redresses the fact that Africa is the only continent
without a permanent seat
and veto power in the Security Council. Africa's demands are known and
enunciated in the Ezulwini consensus.
Mr.
President,
We
further call for the U.N. system to refrain from interfering in matters
that are clearly the domain of
member states
and are not a threat to international peace and security. Development at
country level
should continue to
be country-led, and not subject to the whims of powerful donor states.
Mr
President,
Zimbabwe
won its independence on 18th April, 1980, after a protracted war against
British colonial
imperialism which
denied us human rights and democracy. That colonial system which
suppressed and
oppressed us
enjoyed the support of many countries of the West who were signatories to
the UN Universal
Declaration of
Human Rights.
Even after 1945, it would appear that the Berlin Conference of 1884,
through which Africa was parcelled
to colonial
European powers, remained stronger than the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights. It is
Therefore clear
that for the West, vested economic interests, racial and ethnocentric
considerations
proved stronger
than their adherence to principles of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights.
The
West still negates our sovereignties by way of control of our resources,
in the process making us
mere
chattels in out own lands, mere minders of its trans-national interests.
In my own country and other
sister
states in Southern Africa, the most visible form of this control has been
over land despoiled from
us
at the onset of British colonialism.
That
control largely persists, although it stands firmly challenged in
Zimbabwe, thereby triggering the
current
stand-off between us and Britain, supported by her cousin states, most
notably the United States and
Australia.
Mr Bush, Mr. Blair and now Mr Brown's sense of human rights precludes our
people's right to their
God-given
resources, which in their view must be controlled by their kith and kin. I
am termed dictator
because
I have rejected this supremacist view and frustrated the neo-colonialists.
Mr
President,
Clearly
the history of the struggle for our own national and people's rights is
unknown to the
president
of the United States of America. He thinks the Declaration of Human Rights
starts with his last
term
in office! He thinks he can introduce to us, who bore the brunt of
fighting for the freedoms of our
peoples,
the virtues of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. What rank
hypocrisy!
Mr
President,
I
lost eleven precious years of my life in the jail of a white man whose
freedom and well- being I have
assured
from the first day of Zimbabwe's Independence. I lost a further fifteen
years fighting white
In
justice in my country. Ian
Smith is responsible for the death of well over 50 000 of my people. I
bear scars of his tyranny which
Britain
and America condoned. I meet his victim�s everyday. Yet he walks free.
He farms free. He talks freely,
associates freely under a black Government. We taught him democracy. We
gave him back his humanity.
He
would have faced a different fate here and in Europe if the 50 000 he
killed were Europeans. Africa
has
not called for a Nuremberg trial against the white world which committed
heinous crimes against its own
humanity.
It has not hunted perpetrators of this genocide, many of whom live to this
day, nor has it
got
reparations from those who offended against it. Instead it is Africa which
is in the dock, facing
trial
from the same world that persecuted it for centuries.
Let
Mr. Bush read history correctly. Let him realise that both personally and
in his representative
capacity
as the current President of the United States, he stands for this "civilisation"
which
occupied,
which colonised, which incarcerated, which killed. He has much to atone
for and very little to
lecture
us on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. His hands drip with
innocent blood of many
nationalities.
He
still kills. He kills in Iraq. He kills in Afghanistan. And this is
supposed to be our mentor on
Human
rights?
He
imprisons. He imprisons and tortures at Guantanamo.He imprisoned and
tortured at Abu Ghraib. He has
secret
torture chambers in Europe. Yes, he imprisons even here in the United
States, with his jails
carrying
more blacks than his universities can everenroll. He even suspends the
provisions of the
Universal
Declaration on Human Rights. Take Guantanamo for example; at that
concentration camp international
law
does not apply. The national laws of the people there do not apply. Laws
of the United States of
America
do not apply. Only Bush's law applies. Can the international community
accept being lectured by this
man
on the provisions of the universal declaration of human rights? Definitely
not!
Mr
President, We are alarmed that under his leadership, basic rights of his
own people and those
of
the rest of the world have summarily been rolled back. America is
primarily responsible for rewriting
core
tenets of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. We seem all guilty
for 9/11. Mr. Bush thinks
he
stands above all structures of governance, whether national or
international. At
home, he apparently does not need the Congress. Abroad, he does not need
the UN, international law and
Opinion.
This forum did not sanction Blair and Bush's misadventures in Iraq. The
two rode roughshod over the
UN
and international opinion. Almighty Bush is now corning back to the UN for
a rescue package because
his
nose is bloodied! Yet he dares lecture us on tyranny. Indeed, he wants us
to pray for him! We say
No
to him and encourage him to get out of Iraq. Indeed he should mend his
ways before he clambers up the
pulpit
to deliver pieties of democracy.
Mr
President,
The
British and the Americans have gone on a relentless campaign of
destabilising and vilifying my
country.
They have sponsored surrogate forces to challenge lawful authority in my
country. They seek
regime
change, placing themselves in the role of the Zimbabwean people in whose
collective will democracy
places
the right to define and change regimes.
Let
these sinister governments be told here and now that Zimbabwe will not
allow a regime change authored
by
outsiders. We do not interfere with their own systems in America and
Britain. Mr Bush and Mr Brown
have
no role to play in our national affairs. They are outsiders and
mischievous outsiders and should
therefore
keep out! The colonial sun set a long time ago; in 1980in the case of
Zimbabwe, and hence
Zimbabwe
will never be a colony again. Never!
We
do not deserve sanctions. We are Zimbabweans and we know how to deal with
our problems. We have done so in
the
past, well before Bush and Brown were known politically. We have our own
regional and continental
organizations
and communities.
In
that vein, I wish to express my country's gratitude to President Thabo
Mbeki of South Africa who, on
behalf
of SADC, successfully facilitated the dialogue between the Ruling Party
and the Opposition Parties,
which
yielded the agreement that has now resulted in the constitutional
provisions being finally adopted.
Consequently,
we will be holding multiple democratic elections in March 2008. Indeed we
have always had
timeous
general and presidential elections since our independence.
Mr.
President,
In
conclusion, let me stress once more that the strength of the United
Nations lies in its
universality
and impartiality as it implements its mandate to promote peace and
security, economic and
social
development, human rights and international law as outlined in the
Charter. Zimbabwe stands ready to
play
its part in all efforts and programmes aimed at achieving these noble
goals.
I
thank you.
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