Daily Nation Newspaper

US ENVOY A THUG?

…Zimbabwe calls US envoy ‘thug’ as anti-government protests loom

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HARARE - Zimbabwe’s ruling African National Union- Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) has called the US ambassador to the country a “thug” and accused him of funding the opposition ahead of this week’s planned anti- government protests.

Patrick Chinamasa, a spokespers­on for ZANU-PF, told reporters on Monday that Ambassador Brian Nichols was involved in subversive activities to topple President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government.

“He (Nichols) continues to engage in acts of underminin­g this republic and if he does so, if he continues engaging in acts of mobilising and funding disturbanc­es, coordinati­ng violence and training fighters, our leadership will not hesitate to give him marching orders,” Chinamasa said, without providing evidence.

“Diplomats should not behave like thugs, and Brian Nichols is a thug.” The US embassy in Harare did not immediatel­y respond to Chinamasa’s comments. Political tensions are rising fast in Zimbabwe after activists called for demonstrat­ions on July 31 against government corruption, which they blame for deepening the worst economic crisis in more than a decade.

In the past week, Minister of Informatio­n Monica Mutsvangwa and Minister of Foreign Affairs Sibusiso Moyo have accused Western countries of sponsoring Hopewell Chin’ono, a prominent journalist known for exposing alleged government corruption, and Jacob Ngarivhume, an opposition politician behind the planned protests.

They have been detained for a week on allegation­s of organising the planned protests. The police have said they are looking for several other activists and politician­s accused of mobilising protests.

Chinamasa on Monday urged party supporters to defend themselves from protesters and avoid a repeat of the deadly violence that followed post- election demonstrat­ions in August 2018 and the January 2019 protests over a steep fuel price rise. Organisers say this week’s protests will be peaceful.

In recent weeks, the US, Britain, European Union embassies and the United Nations have all criticised Zimbabwe for the arrest of journalist­s and political challenger­s.

Relations between Zimbabwe and the West were promising when Mnangagwa replaced

Robert Mugabe after a coup in 2017, but have soured over the government’s human rights record. Mnangagwa himself remains under US sanctions for alleged abuses, and relations between Zimbabwe and the West now echo the days of Mugabe, when Western ambassador­s were routinely threatened with expulsion. –

 ??  ?? Ambassador Brian Nichols
Ambassador Brian Nichols
 ??  ?? Patrick Chinamasa
Patrick Chinamasa
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