| Now post the picture of when the oyibos/muzungus put the big noose around
Comrade Mugabe's neck dragging him like an animal as they were preparing to
lynch him. How soon many of you forget history!!!
May the souls of our Zimbabwe Ancestors of the Chimurenga continue to give
strength to Mugabe and his fellow True Afrikanis to resist the conspiracy of
oyibo/muzungus and their Negro collaborators/sell outs to rob that country's
resources. Like China, Zimbabwe is the only country entitled by God to
decide its own fate. When the honest Zimbabweans are ready for Mugabe to go,
he will go. Those Negro puppets have no legitimacy in Zimbabwe.
on 3/31/07 8:15 PM, corneliushamelberg@bredband.net at
corneliushamelberg@bredband.net wrote:
> How I miss my peace partner SAHR T! He who does not like Mugabes moustache.
>
> Old Mugabe, here @ 81
> http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/0,1518,378506,00.html
>
> What a disappointment that his brothers didnt use his walking stick! But as
> always and this included South Africa, the lame mans cry is that its the
> people who suffer most through sanctions, the crooks and some of their
> cronies say, long live Mugabe, yet others drink beer loudly to satisfy a
> thirst and cool down the heat, swear at hard times and occasionally curse King
> Bob:
>
> http://news.independent.co.uk/world/africa/article2401737.ece
>
>
>>
>> From: Abdul Bangura
>> Date: 2007/04/01 sö AM 03:19:31 CEST
>> To: ,
>> "leonenet@lists.umbc.edu"
>> Ämne: Re: Mugabe The Man!!!
>>
>> Karmor Cornelius, how dare you compare Comrade Mugabe The Great Afrikan Hero
>> to Yoda-BeLewa The Bumpeh Killer? You really don't know much about Ponius
>> Pillate, do you?
>>
>> Brace yourself!!! You ain't seen nothin' yet!!!
>>
>>
>>
>> on 3/31/07 4:02 PM, corneliushamelberg@bredband.net at
>> corneliushamelberg@bredband.net wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> Karmoh AKB,
>>>
>>> Let?s honour you for your unfailing and strong pro-Africa stand ? not that I
>>> have anything against the Oyibo, but let?s also be honest: if Berewa (God
>>> forbid) visited the same damage on Hon. Charles Margai and the PMDC, as
>>> Mugabe
>>> has approved for Morgan Tsvangirai and the MDC. You would be one of the
>>> first
>>> to be shouting Yodalaria and wanting to eat his liver. In my view, here
>>> Berewa
>>> is superior to Mugabe as far as holding himself within the restrictions of
>>> the
>>> law, is concerned ? not that I think that Mugabe would have handed over
>>> Chief
>>> Hinga Norman to even the Lancaster House people ? but there he is battering
>>> and bruising Morgan, his own brother, and in doing that he cannot be yapping
>>> from the other side of his twisted mouth ?Long live democracy!? when he
>>> actually means ?long live me and may I die as president of Zimbabwe.?
>>>
>>> Unemployment is at 80% inflation closer to 3,000% and many of the white
>>> farmers ( who employed so many black workers are now relocated to Nigeria,
>>> Mozambique, other fertile lands where food is grown for consumption and cash
>>> crops for cash all to the good of the economy where they pay their taxes.
>>>
>>> Farouk, a South African has explained it most reasonably, a few days ago
>>> when
>>> I met him and I look forward to continuing our discussion in which I have
>>> mostly been listening.
>>>
>>> http://www.google.se/search?sourceid=navclient&ie=UTF-8&rls=GGLJ,GGLJ:2007-1
>>> 3,
>>> GGLJ:en&q=Redeeming+Zimbabwe
>>>
>>> http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=en&sa=X&oi=spell&resnum=0&ct=result&cd=1&q
>>> =M
>>> organ+Tsvangirai+&spell=1
>>>
>>> OK Joe Slovo is gone. Here is an honourable White South African man and as
>>> Frederik Willem de Klerk said IN ONE OF HIS LAST INTERVIEWS BEFORE ANC TOOK
>>> OVER, colour is no longer of the uttermost importance, and I think, so too
>>> it
>>> ought to be in Zimbabwe:
>>>
>>> http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/hardtalk/6507427.stm
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>>
>>>> From: Abdul Karim Bangura
>>>> Date: 2007/03/31 lö PM 04:43:25 CEST
>>>> To: "leonenet@lists.umbc.edu"
>>>> Ämne: Mugabe The Man!!!
>>>>
>>>> Mugabe The Man!!!
>>>>
>>>> Africa summit seek Zimbabwe talks, shows solidarity
>>>> http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L29499733.htm
>>>> 29 Mar 2007 19:55:51 GMT
>>>> Source: Reuters
>>>>
>>>> By Katie Nguyen
>>>>
>>>> DAR ES SALAAM, March 29 (Reuters) - African leaders rallied around
>>>> President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe on Thursday, ignoring calls for
>>>> tougher action against him and suggesting dialogue as the solution to his
>>>> country's deepening political crisis.
>>>>
>>>> Mugabe has faced growing Western censure over the past two weeks after his
>>>> police arrested political opponents who claimed they were severely beaten
>>>> in custody, sparking calls for his neighbours to step up pressure on his
>>>> regime.
>>>>
>>>> But a special summit of the Southern African Development Community (SADC)
>>>> urged the West to drop sanctions against Mugabe's government and appealed
>>>> to Britain to "honour its commitments" to fund land reforms in its former
>>>> colony.
>>>>
>>>> Leaders at the meeting also put South Africa's President Thabo Mbeki in
>>>> charge of defusing Zimbabwe's deepening political crisis, leaving him to
>>>> mediate between Mugabe and his opponents.
>>>>
>>>> Summit host Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete said the regional grouping
>>>> appealed to all sides in the dispute to "give this initiative a chance"
>>>> and "exercise restraint and avoid anything that's going to inflame the
>>>> situation".
>>>>
>>>> "Excellent meeting," Mugabe said, clapping his hands as he left for the
>>>> airport after the closed-door discussions.
>>>>
>>>> Analysts say the veteran leader has been able to escape a public reprimand
>>>> from his African peers by trading on his legacy as a leader of Africa's
>>>> anti-colonial struggle.
>>>>
>>>> The summit came two weeks after Zimbabwe police arrested opposition leader
>>>> Morgan Tsvangirai and other members of his Movement for Democratic Change
>>>> (MDC) attempting to attend an anti-government prayer meeting.
>>>>
>>>> That set off an international outcry. But, in contrast, African nations
>>>> were muted in their criticism.
>>>>
>>>> Mbeki's government, a regional powerhouse, has for long assumed a leading
>>>> role in addressing Zimbabwe's troubles but been criticised for being
>>>> ineffective.
>>>>
>>>> Throughout the latest furore, Pretoria has insisted that the West's
>>>> hardline approach is unnecessary.
>>>>
>>>> The United States and the European Union have imposed "targeted" sanctions
>>>> on Mugabe and his circle following a series of elections that the
>>>> opposition says were rigged.
>>>>
>>>> As the African leaders met, allegations of abuse by Mugabe's government
>>>> grew.
>>>>
>>>> The U.S.-based Human Rights Watch said police were targeting ordinary
>>>> Zimbabweans suspected of backing the opposition, doling out beatings to
>>>> discourage the 83-year-old leader's opponents.
>>>>
>>>> The United States, joining Britain and the European Union, condemned
>>>> Zimbabwe police for briefly detaining opposition leaders on Wednesday for
>>>> the second time in a month.
>>>>
>>>> "Certainly we think it's time for the African states, specifically this
>>>> group of neighbouring states, to make clear that this kind of behaviour
>>>> from President Mugabe is unacceptable," U.S. State Department spokesman
>>>> Tom Casey said.
>>>>
>>>> "SOLIDARITY AGAINST THE BRITISH"
>>>>
>>>> Mugabe's spokesman George Charamba had earlier brushed aside the criticism
>>>> and said Mugabe -- still revered by many as a hero of Africa's liberation
>>>> struggle -- would be looking for regional support in the face of Western
>>>> pressure.
>>>>
>>>> "The president is here for two basic things -- to explain the situation on
>>>> the ground and to get solidarity from SADC in his fight against the
>>>> British," Charamba told reporters.
>>>>
>>>> "He will continue to tell the West to go hang as long as those (Western)
>>>> concerns undermine the sovereignty of the country," he said, referring to
>>>> economic sanctions.
>>>>
>>>> Mugabe, who has ruled Zimbabwe since independence from Britain in 1980, is
>>>> accused by critics of political abuses and economic mismanagement.
>>>>
>>>> In Harare, MDC Secretary-General Tendai Biti appealed for support from
>>>> SADC leaders.
>>>>
>>>> "We are fighting against inflation, against homelessness. ... We hope that
>>>> they will be strong against Mugabe and tell him he has had 27 years of
>>>> uninterrupted, peaceful rule in Zimbabwe and should go now," he said.
>>>>
>>>> Mugabe, who is thought to be running into opposition within his ZANU-PF
>>>> party over plans to extend his rule, calls the MDC Western "stooges" and
>>>> police have accused party activists of a terror campaign aimed at removing
>>>> him from office. The MDC denies the charges.
>>>>
>>>> Political analysts say Zimbabwe's political crisis and rapidly shrinking
>>>> economy threaten to destabilise the region as millions flee inflation of
>>>> 1,700 percent, food shortages and more than 80 percent unemployment.
>>>> (Additional reporting by George Obulutsa in Dar es Salaam, Cris Chinaka in
>>>> Harare, Paul Simao in Johannesburg)
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
>>>> You received this message because you are subscribed to the "USA-Africa
>>>> Dialogue Series" moderated by Toyin Falola, University of Texas at Austin.
>>>> For current archives, visit
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>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
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>>>>
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>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Africa summit seek Zimbabwe talks, shows solidarity
>>>> http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L29499733.htm
>>>> 29 Mar 2007 19:55:51 GMT
>>>> Source: Reuters
>>>>
>>>> By Katie Nguyen
>>>>
>>>> DAR ES SALAAM, March 29 (Reuters) - African leaders rallied around
>>>> President
>>>> Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe on Thursday, ignoring calls for tougher action
>>>> against him and suggesting dialogue as the solution to his country's
>>>> deepening political crisis.
>>>>
>>>> Mugabe has faced growing Western censure over the past two weeks after his
>>>> police arrested political opponents who claimed they were severely beaten
>>>> in
>>>> custody, sparking calls for his neighbours to step up pressure on his
>>>> regime.
>>>>
>>>> But a special summit of the Southern African Development Community (SADC)
>>>> urged the West to drop sanctions against Mugabe's government and appealed
>>>> to
>>>> Britain to "honour its commitments" to fund land reforms in its former
>>>> colony.
>>>>
>>>> Leaders at the meeting also put South Africa's President Thabo Mbeki in
>>>> charge of defusing Zimbabwe's deepening political crisis, leaving him to
>>>> mediate between Mugabe and his opponents.
>>>>
>>>> Summit host Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete said the regional grouping
>>>> appealed to all sides in the dispute to "give this initiative a chance" and
>>>> "exercise restraint and avoid anything that's going to inflame the
>>>> situation".
>>>>
>>>> "Excellent meeting," Mugabe said, clapping his hands as he left for the
>>>> airport after the closed-door discussions.
>>>>
>>>> Analysts say the veteran leader has been able to escape a public reprimand
>>>> from his African peers by trading on his legacy as a leader of Africa's
>>>> anti-colonial struggle.
>>>>
>>>> The summit came two weeks after Zimbabwe police arrested opposition leader
>>>> Morgan Tsvangirai and other members of his Movement for Democratic Change
>>>> (MDC) attempting to attend an anti-government prayer meeting.
>>>>
>>>> That set off an international outcry. But, in contrast, African nations
>>>> were
>>>> muted in their criticism.
>>>>
>>>> Mbeki's government, a regional powerhouse, has for long assumed a leading
>>>> role in addressing Zimbabwe's troubles but been criticised for being
>>>> ineffective.
>>>>
>>>> Throughout the latest furore, Pretoria has insisted that the West's
>>>> hardline
>>>> approach is unnecessary.
>>>>
>>>> The United States and the European Union have imposed "targeted" sanctions
>>>> on
>>>> Mugabe and his circle following a series of elections that the opposition
>>>> says were rigged.
>>>>
>>>> As the African leaders met, allegations of abuse by Mugabe's government
>>>> grew.
>>>>
>>>> The U.S.-based Human Rights Watch said police were targeting ordinary
>>>> Zimbabweans suspected of backing the opposition, doling out beatings to
>>>> discourage the 83-year-old leader's opponents.
>>>>
>>>> The United States, joining Britain and the European Union, condemned
>>>> Zimbabwe
>>>> police for briefly detaining opposition leaders on Wednesday for the second
>>>> time in a month.
>>>>
>>>> "Certainly we think it's time for the African states, specifically this
>>>> group
>>>> of neighbouring states, to make clear that this kind of behaviour from
>>>> President Mugabe is unacceptable," U.S. State Department spokesman Tom
>>>> Casey
>>>> said.
>>>>
>>>> "SOLIDARITY AGAINST THE BRITISH"
>>>>
>>>> Mugabe's spokesman George Charamba had earlier brushed aside the criticism
>>>> and said Mugabe -- still revered by many as a hero of Africa's liberation
>>>> struggle -- would be looking for regional support in the face of Western
>>>> pressure.
>>>>
>>>> "The president is here for two basic things -- to explain the situation on
>>>> the ground and to get solidarity from SADC in his fight against the
>>>> British,"
>>>> Charamba told reporters.
>>>>
>>>> "He will continue to tell the West to go hang as long as those (Western)
>>>> concerns undermine the sovereignty of the country," he said, referring to
>>>> economic sanctions.
>>>>
>>>> Mugabe, who has ruled Zimbabwe since independence from Britain in 1980, is
>>>> accused by critics of political abuses and economic mismanagement.
>>>>
>>>> In Harare, MDC Secretary-General Tendai Biti appealed for support from SADC
>>>> leaders.
>>>>
>>>> "We are fighting against inflation, against homelessness. ... We hope that
>>>> they will be strong against Mugabe and tell him he has had 27 years of
>>>> uninterrupted, peaceful rule in Zimbabwe and should go now," he said.
>>>>
>>>> Mugabe, who is thought to be running into opposition within his ZANU-PF
>>>> party
>>>> over plans to extend his rule, calls the MDC Western "stooges" and police
>>>> have accused party activists of a terror campaign aimed at removing him
>>>> from
>>>> office. The MDC denies the charges.
>>>>
>>>> Political analysts say Zimbabwe's political crisis and rapidly shrinking
>>>> economy threaten to destabilise the region as millions flee inflation of
>>>> 1,700 percent, food shortages and more than 80 percent unemployment.
>>>> (Additional reporting by George Obulutsa in Dar es Salaam, Cris Chinaka in
>>>> Harare, Paul Simao in Johannesburg)
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>
>
|