Defecting MDC-T envoy gets support

Politics
CANBERRA — A REFUGEE advocacy group has called for the Australian government to grant asylum to the Zimbabwean ambassador to Australia.

CANBERRA — A REFUGEE advocacy group has called for the Australian government to grant asylum to the Zimbabwean ambassador to Australia.

But the Refugee Action Coalition has used ambassador Jacqueline Zwambila’s plight to highlight the “government’s inconsistencies in dealing with the issue of protection visas”.

Zwambila revealed she was asking the Australian government for asylum because she feared for her life if she returned home when her term ends tomorrow.

She is aligned to MDC-T.

Refugee Action Coalition spokesman Ian Rintoul said with Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe’s supposed coalition with the MDC formations at an end, there was no doubt Zwambila was at risk should she be forced to return home.

“The Australian government should act quickly,” he said in a statement.

However, Rintoul said many asylum seekers were arriving by boat with cases as compelling as Zwambila’s.

“But under (Immigration minister) Scott Morrison’s regime there are two rules — one for plane arrivals and another for asylum seekers coming by boat,” he said.

“The Zimbabwean ambassador needs protection and so do all those asylum seekers who arrive by boat.”

Zwambila told Fairfax Media on Saturday she knew it meant the end of her term when Mugabe won elections earlier this year.

“Once the July 31 elections were stolen by the current government — which is illegitimate — I knew that this was the end of the line,” she says in a video on the Canberra Times website.

“End of the line for the people of Zimbabwe . . . and for people like me who were appointed by the ex-Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai.”

Morrison said an application for a protection visa would be assessed on merit “and in accordance with the normal rules that apply in these circumstances”.

“The government does not provide commentary on individual cases as it can prejudice their case or, worse, place people at risk,” he said in a statement.

Mugabe (89), long considered an international pariah, finished with 61% of the vote at the election, amid claims of intimidation and tampering with electoral rolls.

He called on his opponents to accept defeat or commit suicide, declaring that “even dogs will not sniff at their flesh if they choose to die that way”.

— Daily Telegraph