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(21 Feb 2002) 1. Wide shot Mugabe supporters running and chanting 2. Mid shot supporters 3. Zanu PF election poster 4. Various shots of crowd 5. Helicopter landing 6. Various Mugabe walking up hill 7. Wide of crowd 8. Various Mugabe walking amongst supporters 9. Crowd clapping 10. SOUNDBITE: (English) Robert Mugabe, President of Zimbabwe: "I don't have a cent why should my money go to Britain at all? What about our banks here in the country? I don't have goats in Europe, I don't have pigs there. I have goats here. I have pigs in my country. So there it is and we must prepare to withstand all these actions by Britain and its allies." 11.Various cutaways crowd 12. SOUNDBITE: (English) Robert Mugabe, President of Zimbabwe: "But the war veterans were saying they white farmers they have no right to that land in the first place. Let them go (he repeats the word "go" in various dialects) and they know the roads and if they don't know we can show them. We can show them where Britain is and Blair will take care of them." 13. Wide shot crowd 14. Various Mugabe on podium clapping and meeting supporters 15. Mid shot crowd 16. Wide shot wall saying Matabeleland is Zanu PF province. STORYLINE: Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, visited the opposition stronghold of Matabeleland on Wednesday, in the run up to the March elections. He addressed a crowd of 5,000 supporters of his Zanu P-F party at rally in the area which traditionally supports opposition party The Movement for Democratic Change (M-D-C) and its leader Morgan Tsvangirai. Mugabe reacted defiantly to the E-U sanctions, recently imposed on Zimbabwe, saying that the country would withstand the measures. He added that the remaining white farmers in the country should go to Britain where Tony Blair could take care of them. Voters will go to the polls on March 9 and 10 in the highly controversial election. The run up to the voting has been marred by violence, including several deaths. The European Union and South Africa both sent observers to Zimbabwe to monitor the elections. But the EU imposed sanctions against the government and ordered its observer team home after Zimbabwe's government refused to let the delegation freely monitor the elections. South Africa's 25 official observers have remained in the country and say that they are disturbed by the violence they have seen.Sam Motsoenyane, head of the South African observer mission, said his group was troubled by violence in the Harare township of Epworth on Saturday and in downtown Harare on Monday. He said that it had been alleged that police had failed to intervene in the violence, which mainly affected opposition party offices and opposition party supporters. The government has blamed most of the political violence that has wracked the country since March 2000 on the opposition but Independent Human rights groups say most of those killed in political fighting have been opposition activists. Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork Twitter: / ap_archive Facebook: / aparchives Instagram: / apnews You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/you...