Sydney —
Zimbabwe's ambassador to Australia is asking Canberra for asylum, lashing out
at her country's "illegitimate" government and voicing fears for her
safety if she returns home at the end of her posting next week, reports said
Saturday.
Jacqueline
Zwambila condemned President Robert Mugabe's government, and said she has moved
out of her official residence but has no intention of using her business class
ticket to return home, the Canberra Times reported.
"I
don't feel safe about returning to Zimbabwe at all," said Zwambila, who is
aligned with Zimbabwe's opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).
"Once
the elections of 31 July were stolen by the current government -- which is
illegitimate -- I knew that this was the end of the line," Zwambila, whose
tenure as ambassador ends on Tuesday, said in a video posted 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."
Zwambila
said she was seeking a protection visa from Australia so she can stay on in the
country along with her family once her diplomatic status expires. But it was
not immediately clear whether Canberra would approve her request.
Mugabe,
Africa's oldest leader who has been in power for 33 years, began a new
five-year term after winning a landslide victory in disputed elections end of
July.
His rival,
opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, described the vote as
"fraudulent", citing an unusual number of voters had been turned away
in urban constituencies that are considered opposition strongholds.
Australia,
which had offered reduced sanctions as an incentive for free and fair
elections, joined the United States and Britain in questioning the credibility
of the polls and called for a re-run.
But the
89-year-old veteran leader dismissed the view, brusquely telling his opponents
to accept defeat.
Zwambila
said that when she learned about Mugabe's victory, she saw "doom, a black
cloud".
"I
knew then it was the end of my term," the report quoted her as saying.
She voiced
fears of indefinite detention if she returned home, saying she had been
threatened with arrest in Zimbabwe after a court found that she owed several
hundred dollars to a tradesman. She denied the charge.
"So
many things have been done to me since I've been here in Australia, the smear
campaigns and threats... There is no way I feel safe being in Zimbabwe or going
back to Zimbabwe," she said.
Mugabe, who
has led Zimbabwe since independence in 1980, is serving under a new
constitution and has not ruled out running again when he will be 94.
Tsvangirai
had shared power with Mugabe until the July elections, with his MDC party
controlling the finance ministry after they forged a unity government in 2009
following violent disputed polls.
But the
shaky power-sharing deal ended when the veteran president won the July 31 polls
with 61 percent against his rival's 34 percent.

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