Sir Nicholas Soames has defended holding a personal meeting
with Robert Mugabe while on a visit to Zimbabwe.
The veteran Conservative MP said he met the president last
week to reminisce about his father's role as the last governor of Southern
Rhodesia.
Sir Nicholas said they met for old times' sake, adding:
"It was purely for Auld Lang Syne and I'm glad I did it."
But Labour MP Kate Hoey called the visit a "body
blow" to people who had suffered under the Mugabe regime.
The 93-year-old president has been quoted in Zimbabwean
press reports saying Sir Nicholas's visit showed the British wanted dialogue
with his country. Ms Hoey, who chairs the All-Party Parliamentary Group on
Zimbabwe, said it had given him a "huge fillip".
"You can't have a private visit which is then front
page of the newspapers in Zimbabwe," she said.
She said she would be urging ministers to make clear the
Mid Sussex MP had not been visiting on their behalf.
Speaking on BBC Radio 4's Today programme, Sir Nicholas
said his father Christopher Soames would not have forgiven him if he had not
tried to "call on" the president.
The late Lord Soames - whose father-in-law was wartime
leader Sir Winston Churchill - oversaw the transition to the independent state
of Zimbabwe in 1979 and 1980.
Sir Nicholas said the UK had "terrible unresolved
issues" with Zimbabwe, but described the meeting as "a historic
moment for me and my family".
Responding to Ms Hoey's criticism that the meeting would
"pander to the vanity of a wily and ruthless dictator", he added:
"I met him purely and entirely in a personal capacity - there was no-one
present, it was just him and me." bbc
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