The Queen strips Mugabe of his knighthood for failing to uphold democracy

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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Britain is finally starting to take action with with its former colony Zimbabwe (no-one else seems to be doing so).

The Queen has stripped Mugabe of his knighthood over his disregard for democracy. This follows Britain banning the Zimbabwe cricket team playing in England in May next year against the England&Wales team, and Zimbabwe being thrown out of the Commonwealth until it gets its act together.

Mugabe stripped of his knighthood after Queen gives her backing as Britain starts to cut ties with Zimbabwean regime


By Daily Mail Reporter
25th June 2008
Daily Mail

  • Brown threatens to name and shame the 'criminal cabal' propping Mugabe's regime up
  • England & Wales Cricket Board agrees to ban Zimbabwe from Twenty20 World Cup tour in England after pressure from the Government
  • Zimbabwe Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai says the country is 'burning' as he begs the international community to intervene
Zimbabwean dictator Robert Mugabe has been stripped of his knighthood as Britain begins to cut links with his hardline regime.

The Foreign Office said Mugabe's knighthood was anulled with the Queen's backing over his "abuse of human rights" and "abject disregard for democracy".


Robert Mugabe pictured with the Queen during his state visit to Britain in 1994, when he was awarded the honorary knighthood

Prime Minister Gordon Brown threatened to name and shame the "criminal cabal" keeping Mugabe in power, as Zimbabwe Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai emerged briefly from his refuge in the Dutch embassy in Harare to warn the country was "burning" and beg the international community to intervene.

Though a group of southern African nations held an emergency meeting today to discuss the crisis, South Africa president Thabo Mbeki - the leader charged with the task of negotiating a solution - refused to attend.

Mr Brown revealed also today that he was seeking to block a Zimbabwe cricket tour of England planned for next year.

The Queen approved the annulment of Mr Mugabe's knighthood - awarded in 1994 - on the recommendation of Foreign Secretary David Miliband.

A Foreign Office spokesman said: "This action has been taken as a mark of revulsion at the abuse of human rights and abject disregard for the democratic process in Zimbabwe over which President Mugabe has presided."

"We are preparing intensified sanctions - financial and travel sanctions - against named members of the Mugabe regime," Mr Brown said during his weekly question-and-answer session in the House of Commons.


The ball's on the slates: Robert Mugabe kicks a football in a crowd of party supporters at a campaign rally held in Banket


The Foreign Office and a European Union list confirm that 131 individuals connected to Mugabe's regime are currently the subject of EU travel and financial sanctions, under EU measures drafted in 2002.

Beyond that, Downing Street office said an unspecified number of other leaders of Zimbabwe's regime have had their assets frozen and their travel restricted by Britain.

Britain will push the EU for further action against certain individuals, Brown told lawmakers.

"We do know the names of the individuals who are surrounding Mugabe at the moment, we know the names of the criminal cabal that is trying to keep him in power, and we will name those individuals and these will be part of the next stage of the sanctions," Brown said.

In a statement the England and Wales Cricket Board said the British government had given it "a clear instruction that Zimbabwe's bilateral tour scheduled under the ICC Future Tours Programme for 2009 should be cancelled".

"The ECB deplores the position in Zimbabwe and, like Cricket South Africa, finds this untenable. Therefore all bilateral arrangements are suspended with Zimbabwe Cricket with immediate effect," the statement said.

"The ECB...welcome the Government's decision and share the Government's concerns about the deteriorating situation and lack of human rights in Zimbabwe."

The Twenty20 World Cup, which at present includes Zimbabwe, will be staged in England next year.

Zimbabwe's opposition leader emerged briefly from his refuge at the Dutch Embassy today to call for African leaders to guide talks to end the country's crisis.

Morgan Tsvangirai said the goal of the talks would be forming a coalition transitional authority for his country.

Dialogue could not begin until there was an end to attacks on his supporters and a release of "political prisoners" including top opposition figure Tendai Biti, he added.

"What is important is that both parties must realize the country is burning and the only way is to sit down and find a way out of it," Tsvangirai told reporters at his home in Harare.



Zimbabwean Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai is greeted by joyful supporters as he briefly emerges from the Dutch embassy on Wednesday

Mr Mugabe is the first foreigner to be stripped of an honorary knighthood since Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu in 1989, the day before his execution.

The move follows growing calls for Mr Mugabe to have the honour removed. Foreign Office Minister Mark Malloch Brown has previously insisted that now was not the right time.

The Foreign Office spokesman said today: "Our focus has been on improving the situation for ordinary Zimbabweans on the ground and it remains so.

"But we can no longer justify an individual who is responsible for a consistent campaign of human rights violations and the disregard for the democratic process retaining an honour.

"As international and regional leaders have said, Mugabe's actions in the run-up to the second round of elections has demonstrated his total disregard for democracy and human rights.

"His actions have proved beyond all argument that he is not worthy to retain this honour."

Mr Mugabe's appointment as an honorary Knight Grand Cross in the Order of Bath occurred during his state visit to the UK in 1994.

"The honour was given when conditions in Zimbabwe were very different," the Foreign Office spokesman added.

"It is a sad fact that, since 1994, Mugabe has overseen the collapse of Zimbabwe and brought misery to millions."

The Foreign Office also tonight urged against all travel to Zimbabwe.

Its advice was previously against all but essential travel to the southern African country.

"There has been a marked increase in violence in Zimbabwe in the run-up to the second round of the Presidential election on June 27 and the situation there remains highly unpredictable, volatile and could deteriorate quickly, without warning," it said in a statement.

"We judge that for the time being British nationals should avoid all travel to Zimbabwe."

dailymail.co.uk
 

talloola

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 14, 2006
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Vancouver Island
Good for her, and good for Britain. This move will create more attention to his
horrendous treatment of the people of Zimbabwe. He has the nerve to thumb his nose
at everyone, and lie about his 'fake democratic elections', so he should be pointed to,
from many countries and jeered at, then the united nations should step in, but, when
have they taken any initiative when they should have.
 

data

Nominee Member
Jan 24, 2008
89
7
8
Thuringia
The Queen strips (political)

Zimbabwean dictator Robert Mugabe has been stripped of his knighthood as Britain begins to cut links with his hardline regime.
The Foreign Office said Mugabe's knighthood was anulled with the Queen's backing over his "abuse of human rights" and "abject disregard for democracy".
Mr Mugabe's appointment as an honorary Knight Grand Cross in the Order of Bath occurred during his state visit to the UK in 1994.
"The honour was given when conditions in Zimbabwe were very different," the Foreign Office spokesman added. dailymail.co.uk

Please note, not the "abuse of human rights" and "abject disregard for democracy" were different in 1994, but the conditions in Zimbabwe.

Last wednesday I saw via Sky news a placad, held up by one of the baby-ZANUids on edge of an rally:
"We did it 1980, we will do it again." The pre-electoral violence and intimidation by then ZANLA activists and rural ZANU youth was very similar to what we saw during last weeks. In fact it was and obviously is the traditional (maoist) ZANLA tactic to "move like a fish in the waters of the people". Killings, torture, mutilations, intimidation and desinformation showed the same picture. In 1980 the tribal (rassist) card of ZANU and Mugabe helped them to reduce ZAPU to a Ndebele minority party according to the family origin of its Fater Zimbabwe (Dr. Joshua Nkomo - Dr. degree not revoked).

The Torys promoted Maoist Mugabe in 1980 in order to avoid a victory of the rather social democratic ZAPU (Joshua Nkomo). They interpreted his military support from Soviets, as to be a deputy of the "communist rich of the evil" (Moscow). Maoists got rather support as counter poison: "They are thugs, but they will be our thugs." according to the US approaches to the Communist Party led China. That resulted even in the KCB for Mugabe in 1994 (genocid gukurahundi to establish public order extinct ZAPU opposition, buy who you can not kill up to subjugation in the Unity Accord for a ZANU one party state. Soviet influence was wiped out an the knighthood was donated (as top of permanent military support from UK). Mr. Cheaucescu got knighthood before for good UK business weather and not for good human rights record and revoked, when he got killed with his wife as unpleasant witnesses from their own security forces in 1989.

Then Tony Blair from conservative Labour came, noticing that Lancaster land compensations (agreed 1979) could get spared by addressing the humanitarian and democracy violations by the Mugabe-ZANU dictatorship. Blair even "discovered" a genocid, but not the gukurahundi campaign of 1983-86 with 20.000 alledged ZAPU supporters dead (frog marched to get burned in their huts or mutilated and buried alive - "ploughed under"), but the landgrab after 2000, when 12 white settlers got killed from more or less fake and drunk warvets!
According to Sebrenica the Minimum of kills for a genocid is 7000 (even, that meanwhile 1000 more victims of it were found).

The London trained intellectual and business servant Mbeki still prevents criticism to come over the non-interference principle in internal affairs of sovereign states and dictators, as US and allies already did for decades to the genocid in the Democratic Cambodia (1975-79). It's power policy to avoid, that the people could get somewhere else their universal human rights.
Today we know the "obligation to protect", but it seems to "work" only, if petrol ressources are involved (Iraq retroacting). May be, the protection means in practice just oil interests (see Niger Delta or Dafur)?
 

MikeyDB

House Member
Jun 9, 2006
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Maybe these British fools should step up to the plate and acknowledge how ridiculous their "knighthoods" actually are.

What a pathetic gesture. While the French have been referred to as the Surrender Monkeys aren't the British just a foolish in taking such stern action as taking this animals "sir" away....?

What a piss-poor ghost of a nation Britain has become!
 

MikeyDB

House Member
Jun 9, 2006
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NO

When human beings lived on the earth there was a chance.... But human beings have been re-structured re-conditioned into consumer-units. Our appetites reign supreme and our vision and our thinking is atrophied and commoditized... (Not sure that's a word...I'll ask George Bush..) :)
 

Nuggler

kind and gentle
Feb 27, 2006
11,596
141
63
Backwater, Ontario.
8O Owww!

Ooooooooooooh!

Not my knighthood!!!

Puleeeeeeeeeeeeze not that!!

Anything but that, Queenie!!

Awwwwwwwwwwwwww darn!!!

Ther she went!!

How can I live now???:-(

:munky2:Sumthun tells me I'll get by.
 

data

Nominee Member
Jan 24, 2008
89
7
8
Thuringia
aren't the British just a foolish in taking such stern action as taking this animals "sir" away....?
His Excellency was not allowed to use "Sir Robert" since that is only a privilege of first class Commonwealth members, like some Caribbeans set equal to UK residents in this matter, if knighted by the Queen. Sir Garfield Todd (1908-2002) was knighted in 1989, with Mugabe's approval, for his services to New Zealand and Africa. He got the "Sir" privilege, since he was born in New Zealand (first class Commonwealth member), while Robert Mugabe was only born near Salisbury / Rhodesia and could therefore just use the extention KCB after his name according to the high rank of his knighthood (used for other heads of state or equal).

By the way, who assumes, my declaration from afternoon is a just funny statement should read http://www.rhodesiana.com/rsr/rsr3-005.html, especially the comment below to understand, that Sir Garfield and his daughter Judith (exiled to Cape Town) learned the truth in it the hard way - by experience. Sir Garfields reforms during the 50s are one of the secrets, what make expectations and hopes for this country still extraordinary despite of the Zimbabwe Ruins of today. Who could estimate it better, than Germans - who were not able to free themself from their Hitler, like the Zimbabweans of today.

The outfit of nationalist socialism got just adapted to the modern world with a US military household, bigger than that of the rest of the world. It's not PC to talk about, since dangerous nationalism grows not less, than around times of WWII, no matter if the country is considered to be a dictatorship, democracy or perhaps controlled democracy.

But UK is doing still more to help the people of Zimbabwe by excluding Zimbabwe from the next year cricket championship (as far as heavy weight India will agree).

But when it comes to business, they will just follow the money. Barklays Zimbabwe (30% UK owned) assists ZANU PF with credit lines for new farmers (chefs) and some days ago a 400 Mill. US-$ investment of Anglo American Plc to develop its Unki platinum project in Zimbabwe got confirmed to avoid the threat of nationalization by the Mugabe-ZANU junta resp. mafia (and give so China access).

The ordinary population is just taken hostage by the new black upper class, what is not much needed to exploit the country’s mineral resources. As more the infrastructure and living conditions get neglected and looted, as more the diaspora Zimbabweans will get blackmailed to support their relatives home (by sending forex).

But the sanction grip tightens even more. A Munich paper company got the request to cease their deliveries of special document paper for the fresh money printing of Mr. Gono. Even the homeless in Zimbabwe are $-Billionaires today. And tortures will say to their victims "Sorry - it was just a job.", if the fresh ZANU money flow runs dry.