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Zimbabwe
police storm theatre to stop controversial play
NewZimbabwe.com
June 15, 2007
http://www.newzimbabwe.com/pages/arts12.16544.html
RIOT police on Wednesday
night stormed Bulawayo's Amphitheatre and stopped the staging
of a political satire called The Good President that is produced
by Amakhosi Theatre's Cont Mhlanga.
Mhlanga has since filed
an urgent High Court order compelling police to allow the play to
go on until Saturday as scheduled.
About two hundred people,
including outspoken Roman Catholic Archbishop, Pius Ncube, who had
braved the chilly night to watch the play were dispersed without
any scuffle although some openly expressed their displeasure.
The play, written by
Qhubani Dube, a member of a pressure group called Ibhetshu Likazulu,
premiered in Harare last month without incident.
Mhlanga, who directed
and produced the movie, was led away by three officers, before theatre
goers were told to disperse.
The 50-minute play, which
was received with negative publicity by the government media, revolves
around a grandmother (gogo) played by Thembekile Ngwabi, and her
grandson comparing the prevailing political and economic situation
in the country with what most Zimbabweans expected during the war
of liberation.
Mhlanga is not new to
controversy since penning the award winning play, Workshop Negative,
in the late 80s. Last year he courted the authorities' wrath
when he was arrested for mobilising artistes to stage plays for
the commemoration of the first anniversary of Operation Murambatsvina,
the code name of a government blitz on illegal housing which the
United Nations says left close to a million people homeless.
This was after he wrote
and directed another controversial play, Pregnant With Emotion.
It could not be established
last night when the High Court would hear Mhlanga's case on
The Good President.
Archbishop Ncube said
he was angered by the cancellation.
He said: "This is
further evidence of the repressive capacity of a bullying government
that does not tolerate opposing views."
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