Africa

‘Let It Become a Global Village’: Zimbabwean Minister Calls for Multipolar World

A view of the handshake between U.S. President Joe Biden, right and Russia’s President Vladimir Putin, prior to the U.S.-Russia summit, in Geneva, Switzerland, Wednesday, June 16, 2021. Zimbabwe strives for a multipolar world with peace and stability, an essential condition for economic development, the Zimbabwean minister of information, media, and telecommunications told Sputnik.In an interview with Sputnik, Zimbabwe’s Minister of Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services, Monica Mutsvangwa, said she favors the emergence of a multipolar world system.”We want a peaceful world. We want the world to become a global village. When there is peace and stability, it is a recipe for economic development. We always strive for a peaceful world where people respect each other. Tolerance is a very important ingredient for peace,” Ms. Mutsvangwa, who is participating in the Global Media Congress being held on November 15-17 in Abu Dhabi, said.

Several Companies Set Up in Zimbabwe

The cabinet minister stressed that Zimbabawe, being “everyone’s friend”, has “worked hard to get where [it is]”, and is very grateful to the “progressive nations that have supported it”, including Russia and China.”We are starting to see a lot of companies coming back, for example, the British, the former colonizers (…). There is a reconciliation in my country. We don’t keep saying ‘this is our enemy and we don’t deal with them’. Those were the days, they are over and we have to move forward,” Monica Mutsvangwa said.AfricaG7 Countries Announce ‘Global Shield’ Climate Insurance Scheme, Concerns Raised About FairnessYesterday, 14:33 GMT

Fight for Independence

However, the minister recalled that relations between Europe and Africa were one-sided and that she herself was fighting for the independence of Zimbabwe.”Before independence, before 1980, a black person in my country did not have the right to vote, was not considered a full human being (…). I was a 15-year-old girl when I went out to fight. We are the generation that fought for the liberation of our country. What we fought for was peace,” she concluded.

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