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Strikes and Protests 2007/8 - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
opposition leader condemns 'pro-Mugabe' police
Godfrey Marawanyika, Agence France Presse (AFP)
January 23, 2008
http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5jdAQ7gFNJakBdEaFtTuDXgPwCIJQ
Zimbabwe's opposition
leader Morgan Tsvangirai accused President Robert Mugabe of running
a dictatorship on Wednesday after he was briefly detained by police
and needed court approval to address supporters.
Ten months after being
assaulted at another anti-Mugabe rally, Tsvangirai told supporters
his detention in the early hours by police who picked him up while
he was sleeping was a bad omen for elections due in March.
While there were sporadic
clashes between followers of Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) and security forces in the build-up to the rally at
a football pitch, Tsvangirai's address passed off peacefully.
"Where in the world
have you seen the leader of a reputable national and international
brand like the MDC be treated like a common criminal?," said
Tsvangirai who is trying to end Mugabe's 28-year rule at the ballot
box.
"If this is the
reaction of this dictatorship, then the elections are a farce.
"I don't foresee
a situation where this very police can salute a change of government.
I don't foresee a situation where this Zimbabwe Electoral Commission
can actually announce the defeat of Mugabe."
Tsvangirai was only given
clearance to address around 1,000 supporters after Harare magistrates
overruled a blanket ban on the protest but did order the MDC to
axe plans to march through the city.
Presiding justice Priscilla
Chigumba said the MDC must wrap up their rally by 3:15pm (1315 GMT),
an order that was adhered to.
Speaking to journalists
after the ruling, MDC secretary general Tendai Biti praised the
court's judgement.
"We want to commend
the magistrate for a very brave decision which allows us to exercise
our freedom of association and the right to freedom of assembly,"
said Biti.
As MDC supporters who
had gathered at the party headquarters in the city centre made their
way to the football ground, several were targeted by riot police
who fired teargas without causing major injury.
Around 1,000 supporters
finally made it to the venue where scores of police, including undercover
officers, closely watched events. Several diplomats from Western
missions could also be seen monitoring the rally.
The former British colony,
led by the 83-year-old Mugabe since independence in 1980, is in
economic meltdown. The official annual rate of inflation is put
at 8,000 percent, but economists believe it to be nearer 50,000
percent.
Unemployment is running
at around 80 percent while basic foodstuffs such as cooking oil
and sugar are now a scarce commodity in the one-time regional breadbasket.
The MDC is hoping that
the crisis will lead voters to dump Mugabe at joint parliamentary
and presidential polls next month.
"We are crying against
poverty, we are crying for food, we are crying for jobs and what's
the response of the state?" asked Tsvangirai.
"The child is crying
to the father and the father takes a stick and beats up that child.
What kind of a father is that?"
Mugabe came in for widespread
international criticism in March last year after Tsvangirai and
dozens of MDC supporters were assaulted as they tried to attend
an anti-government rally in Harare. The president responded by telling
his critics to "go hang".
The prospect of the MDC
looking to defy another banned rally had raised fears of new unrest,
with the government warning the opposition not to resort to violence.
"Government expects
Tsvangirai and his party to keep their pledge to a peaceful campaign
and lawful conduct which they made to the law-enforcement authorities
only this morning," information ministry spokesman George Charamba
said.
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