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Zimbabwean President and Southern Africa Development Community chairman Robert Mugabe holds up a mock key to the SADC Regional Peace Training Centre, to be built in Zimbabwe, during the regional bloc’s summit meeting yesterday in Harare.
AFP/Harare
Attacks on migrant workers living in South Africa yesterday threatened to overshadow a regional summit in Zimbabwe when leaders gathered to promote industrial growth.
Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe has expressed “shock and disgust” at the xenophobic violence in Johannesburg and Durban in which at least seven people have been killed.
But he avoided the issue in his opening address to the Southern African Development Community (SADC) summit, where South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma was among the delegates.
“Despite the rich endowment of our natural resources about 70% of our people live below the poverty line,” Mugabe said, calling for the region to develop its own industries rather than exporting raw materials.
“By exporting materials in their raw form, we can only earn marginal benefit,” he said.
“Just we were our own liberators from colonial bondage and oppression, we have to find the resources to free ourselves from economic bondage.”
Thousands of immigrants in South Africa were displaced by the unrest earlier this month as local mobs targeted workers from countries such as Zimbabwe, Mozambique and Malawi.
The presidents of all three of those countries were among the 10 heads of state at the one-day event in the Zimbabwean capital Harare.
Ahead of the meeting, Zimbabwe’s presidential spokesman George Charamba told AFP that some heads of state might choose to address the attacks.
“Whether people are going to take advantage and bring the matter up will be at the discretion of the heads of state,” he said.
The subject of the summit - industrialisation - could itself raise the issue of why so many citizens of neighbouring countries head for South Africa, the continent’s most sophisticated economy, to find work.
Zuma, who condemned the attacks after an outcry at home and abroad, focused on the problem on Monday in a manner unlikely to have been well received in neighbouring capitals.
“We cannot shy away from discussing the reasons that forced migrants to flee to South Africa,” he said. “All of us need to handle our citizens with care.”
Mugabe, for example, has been blamed for a collapse in Zimbabwe’s economy which has sent millions of his people to seek work in South Africa.
The Harare meeting is a follow-up to a summit in Victoria Falls last August which resolved to discourage the export of primary goods and develop industries to ensure the region reaps maximum benefit from its resources.
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