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Strikes and Protests 2007/8 - Index of articles
MDC
to protest despite police ban
IRIN News
January 22, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=76373
Despite a police
ban, the faction of the Zimbabwean opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) led by founding president Morgan Tsvangirai will go
ahead with a protest march on 23 January.
The law enforcement authorities
had granted permission for the MDC faction to hold what it called
'The Freedom Walk' but police spokesman Assistant Commissioner Wayne
Bvudzijena later announced that permission to march through the
capital had been revoked.
MDC secretary-general
Tendai Biti told IRIN that they would defy the police ban. "We
are going to proceed with our planned march. What police are doing
to ban our procession is illegal, because on January 18 they granted
us permission to march."
Bvudzijena told local
media that participating in the procession would be an offence,
and offenders would be arrested.
MDC officials said the
purpose of the protest was to highlight the humanitarian crisis
in the country and test the ruling ZANU-PF party's commitment to
mediation efforts being brokered by South Africa.
Biti said ZANU-PF had
refused to implement a transitional constitution before elections
scheduled for March, which would introduce a series of pro-democracy
reforms. The opposition has also called for the elections to be
postponed to June.
"We want to hold
a solidarity march - not in support of an individual, but in support
of the suffering people of Zimbabwe, for a free and fair election,
food, jobs, water, electricity and money from the banks - but the
partisan police and their ZANU-PF handlers are showing their usual
bias," Biti commented.
Mediation
efforts
South
African President Thabo Mbeki flew into Harare on 17 January to
try to mediate between the ZANU-PF and the two MDC factions. Before
he left, Mbeki told journalists in Harare that the talks were "a
work in progress, and I must say that there has been good progress;
there is definitely a lot of light."
He also implied that
postponement of the elections was unlikely. "Everyone is very
conscious of the fact that elections are coming in March, but they
are also conscious of the tasks that have to be accomplished."
The last time opposition
and civic leaders held a public procession, in March 2007, many
were arrested and beaten while in police custody. The attacks outraged
the international community and the Southern African Development
Community (SADC), and led to the ongoing dialogue.
But Bvudzijena was adamant:
"It is felt by the police that it is not in the interest of
public security for the march to proceed."
The police accuse MDC
leaders of trying to incite members of the public to engage in violent
demonstrations, an allegation denied by the opposition party.
Kenya
inspired
Political
journalist Valentine Maponga told IRIN that the recent post-election
violence in Kenya appeared to be influencing both the government
and the opposition. "Based on the Kenyan political violence,
it looks like the opposition wants to start building some momentum
against the government in the event of losing the elections later
this year.
"On the other hand,
the government would want to ensure that the march does not take
off because it might ignite [others] and spread throughout the country."
On the eve of the demonstration,
Zimbabweans are reeling from national power blackouts, water shortages,
lack of fuel and no cash, because without electricity nobody can
withdraw money from the banks.
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