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U.N. Council Agrees to Condemn Zimbabwe, Diplomats Report

Reuters
Jun 23, 2008

Zimbabweans queue to buy bread as a campaign poster of President Robert Mugabe is displayed June 23, 2008 in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. (Getty Images)
Zimbabweans queue to buy bread as a campaign poster of President Robert Mugabe is displayed June 23, 2008 in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. (Getty Images)



UNITED NATIONS—The U.N. Security Council agreed on Monday to condemn the violence in Zimbabwe and declare that a free and fair run-off election was impossible because of the turmoil and restrictions on the opposition, diplomats said.

They said the text, obtained by Reuters, had been agreed among envoys of the council's 15 member states, though Russia and one other country were awaiting final approval from their capitals.

If adopted by the U.N. council, it will be its first formal action on the crisis.

The text was watered down from an earlier version, which had the council explicitly blaming President Robert Mugabe's government for the crisis and saying opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai would be the legitimate leader if a credible run-off election, planned for Friday, cannot be held.


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