Foreign Secretary Jack Straw has dismissed calls to stop the Zimbabwe
cricket team's tour of England.
Mr Straw said to cancel the tour would only punish "ordinary Zimbabweans".
Zimbabwe captain Heath Streak
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Zimbabwe are scheduled to play two Tests, at Lord's and Durham, and a one-day triangular series against England and South Africa in May and June.
During a series of tough question time exchanges on the escalating problems in
Zimbabwe, Tory MP Henry Bellingham upbraided the Government for
sanctioning an event which would "only bolster" the Mugabe regime".
But Mr Straw told him: "I've always taken the view, so far as visiting sports
people from Zimbabwe are concerned, if we had the powers to stop them from
visiting we would be punishing ordinary Zimbabweans - we would not be punishing
the regime."
To heckling from Tory benches, he added: "Henry Olonga - a great man - said it is right for the cricketers of his country
to be here in the UK."
The fast bowler, who has been in exile here since his black-armband protest
during the World Cup in February, has said the tour should go ahead.
Shadow foreign secretary Michael Ancram said Monday's visit to Zimbabwe by
a delegation of African leaders was a "belated but welcome initiative", but
branded its outcome "predictably disappointing".
South African President Thabo Mbeki, Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo and
Malawi President Bakili Muluzi held talks aimed at resolving the crisis with
President Mugabe and opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai.
Calling for the "restoration of democracy and the rule of law", Mr Ancram
said the situation was no longer "just a domestic problem, but a matter of
regional security and humanitarian crisis."