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Harare (AFP) May 22, 2008 The Zimbabwe government Thursday denied taking delivery of a consignment of weapons from China after a ship carrying the arms was prevented from unloading its cargo. "The shipment did not dock and there has not been delivery (of the equipment) as yet," Defence Minister Sydney Sekeramayi told journalists in Harare. "The shipment is part of a routine equipment for our defence. Zimbabwe has always procured equipment from the People's Republic of China," Sekeramayi said. A South African newspaper reported over the weekend that the weapons had reached their destination, although the report was unclear over whether the arms had been offloaded in Angola or the Democratic Republic of Congo. The ship identified as the An Yue Jiang, which belongs to COSCO, a Chinese state-owned shipping firm, was forced to abandon plans to offload the arms in the South African port of Durban last month after workers refused to carry out the work. Sekeramayi described the controversy which surrounded the ship's failure to dock as a "hullabaloo." There were fears that the arms could be used to crack down on opposition supporters following parliamentary and presidential elections in Zimbabwe in March, both of which the Movement for Democratic Change won. The An Yue Jiang was carrying three million rounds of assault rifle ammunition, 3,000 mortar rounds and 1,500 rocket-propelled grenades, according to an inventory, published in a South African newspaper. Community Email This Article Comment On This Article Share This Article With Planet Earth
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