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Strikes and Protests 2007/8 - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
police fire tear gas into crowd headed to opposition rally
Angus Shaw,
Associated Press
January 23, 2008
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/world/20080123-1309-zimbabwe-elections.html
Zimbabwe police fired
tear gas and charged toward several hundred protesters making their
way to a rally Wednesday, following the brief detention of the leader
of the country's political opposition.
Police had earlier banned
a march planned by supporters of Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for
Democratic Change. The party appealed the ban, but a high court
upheld it, although it said a planned rally could go ahead, according
to Nelson Chamisa, the opposition party's spokesman.
Tsvangirai was briefly
detained, in what appeared to be an attempt to prevent the protests
from going forward.
The demonstration was
to be the first test of new security laws adopted earlier this month
that were meant to ease restrictions on protests in the leadup to
elections set for March. The reforms also relaxed rules for journalists
to obtain licenses, and set up a new licensing authority.
After the court ruling,
several hundred oppositions supporters chanting and waving placards
started walking from party headquarters in downtown Harare, where
they has gathered to await the court's ruling, toward the rally
site, a stadium about a 20-minute walk away.
After about four blocks,
police fired tear gas and charged the group, which they said was
breaking the court ruling by marching. The group then dispersed.
Opposition lawyer Alec
Muchadehama said there were some injuries and ''quite a lot'' of
demonstrators were arrested.
''Police behavior was
unlawful,'' he added.
Police could not immediately
be reached for comment.
In the aftermath, streets
were littered with opposition posters, flyers and several shoes
lost as people fled the tear gas. Riot police with dogs were stationed
at the closed gates of the stadium.
Tsvangirai later addressed
a few hundred people outside of the stadium. He said his party would
intensify protests throughout Zimbabwe, South Africa's SABC radio
news reported.
Tsvangirai had been expected
to speak at the rally. Chamisa said police had seized Tsvangirai
at around 4 a.m. from his home in northern Harare and released him
five hours later.
Chamisa said the arrest
and the ban on the march were a deliberate snub to South African
efforts to find a solution to Zimbabwe's crisis. South African President
Thabo Mbeki had mediated talks between the two sides after the opposition
claimed security and media laws were hindering election campaigning.
''It's a mockery of President
Mbeki's efforts. It's a mockery of African solutions to African
problems. It's a mockery to humankind,'' he said.
State radio had said
Tuesday that police believed there were ''sinister motives'' behind
the ''Freedom Walk'' and that it would not be peaceful.
The opposition has demanded
more constitutional and electoral reforms before the election, and
said polling should be delayed until June to allow for its demands
to be met. President Robert Mugabe has insisted elections take place
as scheduled.
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