Mugabe calls on American negroes to murder whites!
Deon Masker
Submitted by: K. Roberts
MARXIST Mugabe calls on American negroes to do as Zimbabwean (formerly Rhodesian) negro natives are doing: that is murdering all white Anglo-Saxons and steal their land! (read quotes, stories and references
below)
The butcher of Zimbabwe (Rhodesia) president ROBERT MUGABE, is in NEW YORK this week and it has been a well-kept secret until this week! In fact, an almost TOTAL MEDIA BLACKOUT with the lone exception of a single story in the Washington Post Newspaper which I have read.
Mugabe is President of Zimbabwe, Africa. He is activily calling for the murder, rape and theft of all land owned and occupied by white Zimbabweans.
Make no bones about it, Mugabe is a murdering racist, thief who is actively committing genocide against white people and stealing their homes and land in Zimbabwe.
Mugabe has been spreading his lies at the UN about how humane he is about preserving Zimbabwe for the native people and how he could have had head's served on a plate, ala John the Baptist. (Times (UK), 9 September, 'Merciful' Mugabe says: I could have beheaded Ian Smith).
Not only has he been permitted to come to the US - an outrage in and of itself - he will be in New York City and will visit City Hall TODAY- Thursday Sept. 12!
Some have called for the assassination of President Robert Mugabe, while he is in New York City, today!
Listed below are some incredible news stories and quotes from the African butcher Robert Mugabe. Take note:
Mugabe IS CALLING ON AMERICAN NEGROES TO DO THE SAME (MURDER, RAPE, STEAL) IN AMERICA TO SUPPORT HIS EFFORTS IN AFRICA!!!! MR. Mugabe suggested that American politicians were in league with
the British because the majority of them are "Anglo-Saxons and blood is thicker than water. We blacks have to stick together. We must be able to say an attack on a black in the diaspora is an attack on me". He urged his audience to work to support Zimbabwe in America..." 'Merciful' Mugabe says: I could have beheaded Ian Smith.
NEW YORK - President Mugabe was explaining to an appreciative audience how his treatment of Ian Smith proved that he was not a mad dictator. "We have not decapitated him," he said of the former prime minister of what was Rhodesia, prompting disappointed mutterings from members of the crowd. "He still has his land. Thank God we are a forgiving people. Now if I was a dictator, if I was autocratic, I long ago would have demanded the
head of Ian Smith." There were cries of "yes" and "thief". Mr Mugabe paused, and then in those rich, fruity BBC tones that are a legacy of growing up under colonial rule, he stated: "It would be placed on a dish, in a biblical way."
There were whoops and noisy shouts of approval:
Why hadn't he just executed the guy? "Nobody recognises that charitable act," said Mr Mugabe. "I did it on behalf of all Africa."
Mr Mugabe, ostracised by many at the UN Millennium Summit over the seizure of white farms in Zimbabwe, had found an adoring reception at the Mount Olivet Baptist Church in Harlem. Although some protesters had handed out leaflets arguing against him being given the forum,
the hall was packed with militant sympathisers. Mr Mugabe was four hours late, which allowed plenty of time for drumming and dancing and for members of the Friends of Zimbabwe to vent their fury against what they saw as continued imperialism in Africa. "Mugabe - keep on kicking colonial butt," said one woman's banner.
"This is not a time for peace, it is a time for war," railed Omowale Clay, chairman of Friends of Zimbabwe. Mr Mugabe was constantly referred to as "a real president", as opposed to the inhabitant of the Oval Office.
Louis Farrakhan, leader of the Nation of Islam, swept in surrounded by a group of heavies and wearing tinted glasses. Despite reports that he has been ill, he repeatedly leapt to his feet to applaud the rhetoric on stage and
eventually rose to say a few words about the need for black people to get "what we rightfully deserve" by working outside the political system.
But he scampered hurriedly from the stage at word of Mr Mugabe's approach and looked on in raptures as the President entered. While Mr Mugabe punched the air only weakly and leaned heavily on the lectern, he was fullof fighting talk as he delivered a sermon about the international dispute over seizures of white farms which have left at least three farmers dead.
He laid the blame for the "quarrel between us and the British" squarely at the door of "Blair and his lot," who he charged with reneging on agreements between Britain and Zimbabwe to fund the purchase of white farms for
redistribution. Britain has provided millions of pounds for the process and the government insists it will continue to do so, but only if a proper legal process is followed.
"We tried to reason with them," Mr Mugabe said, sadly, of the Blair government, but in the end he had to break the deadlock byamending the constitution to permit seizure without compensation. When the the white farmers' ancestors "seized our land they did not pay compensation so we do not have any duty or moral principle on the strength of which we pay compensation.
We shall take the land. We will die clinging to our land," he said to rousing cheers and chants of "take the land. Take the land."
He reiterated the theme in an address to the UN yesterday in which he said that even though he had been "demonised and reviled", his conscience was clear and "we will not go back".
He told his Harlem audience:
"The fight has no hate in it," but "all talk about fair play emanating from the developing countries is nonsense." Attacking a bill before Congress which recommends sanctions against his "little Zimbabwe", Mr. Mugabe
suggested that American politicians were in league with the British because the majority of them are"Anglo-Saxons and blood is thicker than water.
We blacks have to stick together. We must be able to say an attack on a black in the diaspora is an attack on me." He urged his audience to work to support Zimbabwe in America, or best of all, return to Africa.
"I say to yooooou...