A Zim teacher recalls the moment she realised that her name was on a wanted list.
Did SA help arms ship?
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Sun, 18 May 2008 07:12
Deputy defence minister Mluleki George will this week address the media on allegations that he had ordered the SAS Drakensberg to refuel a Chinese ship bearing arms for Zimbabwe.
A statement from George's office read: "Honourable Mluleki Goerge
wishes to categorically state that the alleged instruction has never
been issued to the minister and that these allegations are baseless,
untrue and have no substance whatsoever."
This followed reports in a Mozambican online newspaper, Canal de
Moçambique, which reported that the ship had been refuelled by the SAS
Drakensberg off the coast of South Africa before sailing north to
offload its deadly cargo.
Canal de Moçambique reported that President Thabo Mbeki gave "a
direct instruction" to Deputy Defence Minister Mluleki George to send
the SAS Drakensberg to refuel the An Yue Jiang.
The Weekender on Saturday reported that the weapons destined for
Zimbabwe have arrived in Harare.
The report said
the Zimbabwean government confirmed that 3-million
rounds of assault rifle ammunition, 3000 mortar rounds and 1500
rocket-propelled grenades - ordered from the Chinese government - had
arrived in Harare.
There were fears that Robert Mugabe was planning to use force to
storm back to power in the presidential runoff election to be held on
June 27.
He had deployed the army, police and intelligence units across
Zimbabwe to campaign for him through intimidation and coercive tactics,
the report said.
It reported that the ship was offloaded at Ponta Negra in the
Democratic Republic of Congo. However, Zimbabwean government officials
said it was offloaded in Angola.
Presidential spokesperson Mukoni Ratshitanga dismissed the reports,
saying "it seems that the season of propaganda is upon us".
George said he had no instruction from Mbeki to dispatch the SAS
Drakensberg and that the allegations had no substance.
However, the Canal de
Moçambique article also said the arms were
flown to Harare in an Ilyushin Il-76 belonging to Avient Aviation, a
freight charter airline based in Zimbabwe but registered in the UK. This was confirmed by government officials in Harare, The Weekender said.
Zimbabwe's Deputy Information Minister Bright Matonga confirmed the
weapons have been delivered.
The Angolan government’s assistance came after an appeal by the
Southern African Development Community (SADC) chairman, Zambian
President Levy Mwanawasa, to member states to bar the delivery of the
ammunition to Zimbabwe, saying the arms could deepen the country's
election crisis.
The US and British governments had also exerted concerted pressure
on the SADC and China to stop the ship from docking in the region.
The ship has been spotted off the coast of Port Elizabeth, The
Weekender said.