US reveals its efforts to topple Mugabe regime   · State department tells of 
regime change strategy
· Washington funded opposition activities
Ewen MacAskill in Washington
Friday April 6, 2007
  Guardian
   
  The US admitted openly for the first time yesterday that it was actively 
working to undermine Robert Mugabe, the president of Zimbabwe.
   
  Although officially Washington does not support regime change, a US state 
department report published yesterday acknowledged that it was supporting 
opposition politicians in the country and others critical of Mr Mugabe.      
The state department also admitted sponsoring events aimed at "discrediting" 
statements made by Mr Mugabe's government.     The report will be seized on by 
Mr Mugabe, who has repeatedly claimed that the US and Britain are seeking 
regime change.      The comments are contained in the state department's fifth 
annual Supporting Human Rights and Democracy report. It sets out in detail 
actions the US government is taking worldwide to promote human rights.     The 
report has had a troubled history. Three years ago publication had to be 
hastily delayed when details emerged about US human rights abuses at Abu Ghraib 
prison outside Baghdad.     The US, compared with the UK, was initially slow to 
criticise Mr Mugabe, but has since adopted an increasingly
 critical stance, most recently at the Human Rights Council in Geneva last 
month.      In an unusual piece of candour, the state department report says: 
"To encourage greater public debate on restoring good governance in [Zimbabwe], 
the United States sponsored public events that presented economic and social 
analyses discrediting the government's excuses for its failed policies.      
"To further strengthen pro-democracy elements, the US government continued to 
support the efforts of the political opposition, the media and civil society to 
create and defend democratic space and to support persons who criticised the 
government."      While the US and British governments still insist their aim 
in Zimbabwe is not regime change, they have been encouraging the main 
opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangarai, who was beaten up last month.      The 
report says that while Zimbabwe is nominally democratic, the government of Mr 
Mugabe is "now authoritarian".      At a press conference to
 launch the document, the assistant secretary of state, Barry Lowenkren, said 
the US goal was not necessarily regime change but to create a level playing 
field for all parties. He added that where there was a country with record 
levels of inflation, denial of basic human rights and other abuses, the US had 
a duty to speak out so that people in Zimbabwe knew they had support.      
Asked whether US efforts to promote human rights worldwide were being 
undermined by the hundreds of of people being held at Guantánamo, Mr Lowenkren 
insisted the issue was not raised by non-governmental groups at conferences he 
attended and participants were more interested in what the US could do to help 
them in their own countries.      He also denied the report was softer on 
authoritarian governments allied to the US, such as Belarus, than to Zimbabwe.  
    Mr Lowenkren said $66m was being spent on promotion of democracy and human 
rights in Iran, about half of which was devoted to broadcasts
 from outside the country and the rest spent on support for non-governmental 
exchanges, cultural exchanges such as the visit by the US wrestling team and a 
Persian internet service.      The report is critical of Russia, noting the 
killing of the journalist Anna Politkovskaya.   It says: "Political pressure on 
the judiciary, corruption and selectivity in enforcement of the law, continuing 
media restrictions and self-censorship, and government pressure on opposition 
political parties eroded the public accountability of government leaders.      
"Security forces were involved in additional significant human rights 
problems."      Guardian Unlimited © Guardian News and Media Limited 2007
 
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