Zimbabwe’s president lashed out at Western powers in a speech to the UN General Assembly, accusing them of genocide and calling for the removal of US sanctions.
Robert Mugabe also slammed Western-led efforts earlier this year at the UN to step up punitive measures against his regime, and he praised Russia and China for blocking them.
“By the way, those who falsely accuse us of these violations are themselves international perpetrators of genocide, acts of aggression and mass destruction,” Mr Mugabe said in his speech.
“The masses of innocent men, women and children who have perished in their thousands in Iraq surely demand retribution and vengeance. Who shall heed their cry?” Mr Mugabe asked.
The United States only sent a low-ranking diplomat to take notes at Mr Mugabe’s speech.
Mr Mugabe praised Russia and China, saying the two ensured Zimbabwe “did not fall prey to a cocktail of lies which had been designed by our detractors to call for UN sanctions”.
He did not specifically mention Zimbabwe’s disputed election earlier this year, but he thanked South Africa’s former President Thabo Mbeki for his mediation efforts that led to a power-sharing deal.
Mr Mugabe lauded Mr Mbeki “whose patience, fortitude, sensitivity, diplomatic skills and painstaking work made it possible for the Zimbabwean parties to overcome what had appeared to be insurmountable and intractable difficulties to reaching agreement”.
Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai won the most votes in March presidential polling, but not enough to avoid a runoff against Mr Mugabe.
An onslaught of violence against Mr Tsvangirai’s supporters led him to drop out of the presidential runoff and Mr Mugabe was declared the overwhelming winner of the second vote, which was widely denounced as a sham.
Under the power-sharing deal signed September 15 with his rivals, Mr Mugabe is supposed to cede some of the powers he has wielded for nearly three decades.
However, Mr Mugabe’s party and his political rivals have not been able to agree on who will get four of the Cabinet posts.
Western sanctions have targeted individuals and companies seen to be supporting Mr Mugabe’s regime and were tightened after elections this spring.
“Once again, I appeal to the world’s collective conscience to apply pressure for the immediate removal of these sanctions by Britain, the United States and their allies, which have brought untold suffering to our people,” Mr Mugabe told world leaders.