Attacks against the
Robert Mugabe,
Mugabe, 83, himself accused of extensive human rights abuses since coming to power in 1980, accused Bush of "rank hypocrisy" for lecturing him on human rights.
His comments came a day after Bush described the governments of
"His hands drip with innocent blood of many nationalities," Mugabe said in a typically fiery speech in
Mugabe, blamed for causing food shortages, soaring unemployment and hyperinflation in his country of 6,500 per cent, has accused Western countries of sabotaging the economy.
He said the
Felipe Perez Roque,
"We would have been spared his presence yesterday and would have listened to president Al Gore talking about climate change and the risks to our species," he said.
'Industry of death'
Nuri al-Maliki, the Iraqi prime minister, under pressure to show progress on resolving sectarian violence, sought international help by outlining the concerns and hopes of the Iraqi people.
But his claims that Iraqi forces "with loyalty to country, not sect nor ethnicity" were "ready to assume full responsibility for our security in order to defend the democratic gains" were met with skepticism.
On the same day, the Pentagon told congress it was ready to sell
The
Denouncing war in his speech, Evo Morales, the president of
"Some countries are in an arms race, I don't understand that. We are talking about social movement; we are talking about a new constitution in
"I'm convinced that war is the industry of death, and therefore the arms race is one more industry that goes together with that industry of death."
PHOTO CAPTION
The president of
Al-Jazeera