Sat, 05:29 17 May 2008 GMT17

 

INTERVIEW-Norway PM sees aid for Zimbabwe if vote settled
22 Apr 2008 14:37:47 GMT
Source: Reuters
By George Obulutsa

DAR ES SALAAM, April 22 (Reuters) - Nordic countries are willing to grant Zimbabwe an aid package to help its declining economy if it shows democratic credentials, Norway's Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg said on Tuesday.

International pressure is piling on Zimbabwe over its delayed election results more than three weeks after the country -- suffering from hyper inflation of almost 165,000 percent -- held a vote.

Norway, Sweden, Iceland, Finland and Denmark are ready to help ease economic hardships, which also include mass unemployment and food shortages, if Zimbabwe makes the election outcome public, Stoltenberg told Reuters.

"The Nordic countries have said that we are ready to present an economic stabilisation package if there's a true democratic election and a responsible financial and fiscal policy," Stoltenberg told Reuters in an interview.

"I think that the world opinion is very clear on the issue of democracy, respecting the voice of the people of Zimbabwe and insisting on the release of the election results."

Stoltenberg said it was still too early to say how much money such a package could involve.

Norway, the world's fifth largest oil exporter, has currently committed 0.98 percent of its gross domestic product to international development aid, a figure Stoltenberg said the country aimed to raise to 1 percent next year.

AFRICAN PRESSURE

Stoltenberg added that while the African Union had come out strongly against Zimbabwe's election deadlock, more African nations needed to exert pressure. African leaders have come under criticism for their muted approach to Zimbabwe.

"We have urged African countries to be very clear and put as much pressure as possible on the authorities, government of Zimbabwe to release and to respect election results," Stoltenberg said.

Zimbabwe's main opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) says its leader Morgan Tsvangirai defeated incumbent Robert Mugabe and the veteran president's 28-year rule is over.

There has also been a delay to a partial recount of votes from the parallel parliamentary election, in which Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF party lost its majority for the first time. The recount could overturn the MDC victory in that poll.

The Southern African Development Community has also asked Zimbabwe to release the election results promptly and respect the will of the people.

The opposition and Western governments including former colonial power Britain have accused Mugabe of trying to rig both the parliamentary and presidential elections and of instigating violence to scare opposition supporters.

Stoltenberg is on a two-day visit to Tanzania.

On Monday, Norway signed a $100 million deal for a five-year forest expansion project that would also try to cut carbon dioxide emissions in the east African economy.

He added that Norway, which last year said it was ready to allocate $500 million annually to forests, was looking at establishing similar projects in Brazil, Indonesia and in the Congo Forest basin along with British help.

Stoltenberg will later launch a Tanzanian project aimed at reducing the number of mothers who die while giving birth, as well as those of infants and children under five.

(For full Reuters Africa coverage and to have your say on the top issues, visit: http://africa.reuters.com/)
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REFILE-ADDING INFORMATION Reuters photographer Howard Burditt, shown here in this undated file picture, has been detained for three days for allegedly using a satellite phone to transmit pictures. Burditt, a Zimbabwean ...



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