Harare - President Robert Mugabe said on Monday that if the West can't support Zimbabwe's struggling coalition government, it should "leave us alone".
Mugabe spoke at the funeral of 85-year-old vice president Joseph Msika, who served alongside Mugabe for two decades and died last week after suffering from heart disease for many years.
Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai and other top officials in the five-month-old coalition government joined Mugabe and some 20 000 other mourners at Harare's Heroes Acre cemetery. Mugabe was the only one to speak.
Mugabe often turns his addresses at state funerals into fiery political speeches through which he undresses and ridicules opposition political leaders and western governments. His speech on Monday came after US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton visited neighbouring South Africa last week and called on Pretoria to help Zimbabwe cope with what she called the "negative effects" of Mugabe's leadership.
Mugabe did not name Clinton on Monday, but said his coalition with former opposition leader Tsvangirai was working and supported by southern Africans. But not, he said, by the US and former colonial ruler Britain.
"Who is the real judge of the political arrangement that we have done here in southern Africa?" Mugabe said.
"Why should America not recognise the work we are doing as an inclusive government? These Anglo-Saxon nations are giving us problems. We tell them today, "Leave us alone, we don't need your interference because we can do it alone."
Mugabe is accused of bringing a once-prosperous nation to ruin during his decades of authoritarian rule.
Former president Thabo Mbeki brokered Zimbabwe's coalition agreement after Tsvangirai beat Mugabe in the first round of presidential polling in 2008, and then pulled out of a run-off against Mugabe because of state-sponsored violence against opposition supporters.
Since joining the coalition, Tsvangirai has accused Mugabe hard-liners of stalling political reforms and continuing to harass Tsvangirai supporters. Mugabe's ZANU PF party has revisited its farm invasion programme with white farmers are being indiscriminately harassed and evicted from farms. Over a hundred farmers have been evicted while the courts that are managed by Mugabe's loyalist, Johannes Tomana, the Attorney General, continue dismiss applications from farmers and human rights organisations challenging the evictions.
- AP and Simba Nembaware
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