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S.Africa doubts need for UN action on Zimbabwe
03 Jul 2008 18:51:23 GMT
Source: Reuters
(Adds South African ambassador, quotes from U.S. envoy)

By Louis Charbonneau

UNITED NATIONS, July 3 (Reuters) - The United States said on Thursday it expects the U.N. Security Council to vote next week on sanctions against Zimbabwe's leaders for last week's widely criticized election but South Africa suggested it would oppose the resolution.

U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad told reporters after a closed-door council session that he had formally submitted the U.S.-drafted resolution to the full 15-nation council.

"We expect a vote on the resolution sometime next week," Khalilzad said.

The sanctions would impose an arms embargo on Zimbabwe and travel bans and asset freezes on President Robert Mugabe, the central bank governor and 10 other top government and security officials.

Mugabe won re-election in a June 27 run-off ballot after Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, pulled out because of attacks on his supporters. Tsvangirai had won a first-round vote on March 29.

Khalilzad said the council had no choice but to respond to Zimbabwe's defiance. But it did not want to do anything that would harm the country's already-suffering people, he said.

"We have proposed a resolution that will impose targeted sanctions on those that are responsible for the crisis with the expectation and hope that they will be incentivized to cooperate," he said.

"This crisis not only impacts the people of Zimbabwe, and we stand with them, but also the region," Khalilzad said.

In a telephone interview with Reuters, South African Ambassador Dumisani Kumalo indicated he would not back the U.S. draft, saying the very premise of the resolution was faulty.

"The biggest challenge of the resolution is the premise that the problem of the election is a threat to international peace and security," he said.

Several Western diplomats spoke optimistically about the chances for passing an amended version of the U.S. draft but Kumalo said it was too early to predict any outcome.

To be approved, a resolution needs nine votes in favor and no veto from any of the five permanent council members -- the United States, Britain, France, Russia and China.

RUSSIA AND CHINA

In addition to South Africa, Russia and China have said Zimbabwe was an African problem and voiced their disapproval at the idea of imposing sanctions. But it was not clear if Moscow and Beijing were prepared to use their veto powers given the wide condemnation of Mugabe's re-election.

The resolution will be revised in closed-door negotiations before it is put to a vote. Council diplomats say it is possible there could be changes to the proposed measures and the list of those targeted by the sanctions could shrink.

Before last week's election, the Security Council unanimously condemned Mugabe's plans to go ahead with the poll, saying the campaign of violence and restrictions on the opposition made a free and fair election impossible.

It was not clear if the other council members shared Khalilzad's optimism about the timing for a vote.

"Many members of the council need time to consult their capital," Vietnamese Ambassador Le Luong Minh, president of the council for the month of July, told reporters.

French Ambassador Jean-Maurice Ripert, whose country holds the rotating half-year presidency of the European Union, reiterated the EU's position that Tsvangirai should be seen as the country's legitimately elected leader.

In addition to Mugabe, the draft text, obtained in full by Reuters, says Zimbabwean central bank governor Gideon Gono, army chief Gen. Constantine Chiwenga and Happyton Bonyongwe, Zimbabwe's head of intelligence, would also face sanctions.

Kumalo described the list as "interesting" but said the inclusion of Gono was perplexing.

"He's just a professional and a bureaucrat," he said. "It's very unusual." (Editing by Eric Beech)


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A girl carries her crying sibling as victims of Zimbabwe's post election violence camp outside the U.S. embassy in the capital Harare July 3, 2008. More than 200 victims of Zimbabwe's ...



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