From: as on
Botswana recalls diplomats from Zimbabwe

http://www.swradioafrica.com

By Tichaona Sibanda
5 February 2010

Botswana is to recall two diplomats from Harare in protest against what
it
considers a 'rebuff' by Zimbabwe to engage them and find a 'diplomatic'
solution to the continued detention of three wildlife officials.

The wildlife officials were picked up two weeks ago after
'inadvertently'
straying into Zimbabwe as they were tracking lions that had killed some
cattle in Lesoma village in Botswana.

Botswana's Ambassador to Zimbabwe Gladys Kokorwe told SW Radio Africa
on
Friday that the wildlife officers had been dispatched to the border
area to
help search for the marauding lions.

"The officers were new to the area and they got lost. They decided to
follow
a gravel road in the hope of meeting people who would help them with
directions. After traveling some distance they saw a Zimbabwe flag and
decided to approach the people there," Ambassador Kokorwe said.

The officers reportedly presented themselves to what is now believed to
have
been a border patrol team from Zimbabwe and told them of their
predicament
and that they were lost and looking for directions.

"Unfortunately, after talking to three people there, they eventually
found
themselves in the hands of the police. Frustratingly, all our efforts
to
have the officers released have been ignored by our counterparts here
in
Harare," claimed the Ambassador. The officers have since appeared in
court
in Victoria Falls and are now awaiting a magistrate's judgment, due on
Monday next week.

The Ambassador revealed that Foreign Affairs officials in Harare only
reacted to their enquiries after her government ordered the recall of
the
diplomats. Efforts by Botswana to have the wildlife officers released
included high level phone calls by Foreign Affairs Minister Phandu
Skelemani
and Police Commissioner Thebeyame Tsimako to their counterparts in
Harare.

As a last endeavor, earlier this week the Vice President of Botswana
Mompati
Merafhe attempted to meet Robert Mugabe in Ethiopia, Addis Ababa at the
African Union summit but was rebuffed.

"So my government said - enough is enough - and decided to recall the
defence and intelligence attaches from the embassy here in Harare in
the
hope that Zimbabwe will do the same from its embassy in Gaborone at the
end
of this month," Ambassador Kokorwe said.

Analysts in diplomacy say Botswana's action to recall the diplomats
shows it
means business over the issue, and intends to send 'a clear signal' to
Zimbabwean authorities about the seriousness with which they regard the
rebuff.

Relations between the two countries have been chilly - and look set to
get
colder following Botswana's position that the two posts of defence and
intelligence attach� be frozen, and are never to be filled.

Such a move by Botswana is rare especially among SADC states, but is
used as
a peaceful warning shot when countries fail to find common ground on
controversial subjects. Zimbabwe and Botswana have not enjoyed the best
of
relations in the pas, especially in 2008 when Robert Mugabe's regime
accused
Botswana of training MDC bandits and militia to overthrow the
government.