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Strikes and Protests 2007/8 - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
protesters tear-gassed
BBC News
January 23, 2008
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/em/fr/-/2/hi/africa/7204828.stm
Zimbabwean police have
fired tear gas at hundreds of opposition protesters on the streets
of the capital, Harare, after a court banned a protest march.
The judge ruled an opposition
stadium rally could go ahead but agreed with police warnings that
a march would present a threat to public security.
Opposition leader Morgan
Tsvangirai was detained for five hours then released ahead of the
planned demonstrations.
He later accused the
authorities of treating him like a "common criminal".
Mr Tsvangirai, who was
arrested at his home in Harare early on Wednesday morning, addressed
supporters at the rally site, Glamis Stadium, in the west of the
capital.
'Farce'
He told
a crowd: "If this is the reaction of this dictatorship, then
the elections are a farce."
The Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) is demanding a new constitution before presidential
and parliamentary polls that President Robert Mugabe said would
be held in March.
After the court ruling,
several hundred opposition protesters had begun walking to the stadium
from the MDC headquarters in central Harare.
But police told the demonstrators,
who were chanting and waving placards, they were breaking the court
order, before firing tear gas and charging.
A spokesman for the MDC
said people trying to reach the stadium had been intimidated by
heavy police presence.
On Tuesday, state radio
said police suspected "sinister motives" behind the march.
The opposition warned
this month it would boycott the polls if it was not satisfied with
preparations to ensure they would be free and fair.
The BBC's Peter Greste,
in neighbouring South Africa, says the rally was also organised
to protest about the state of the economy, with unemployment more
than 80% and inflation widely thought to be more than 50,000%.
The demonstration was
the first test of the new public order and security act which should,
in theory, allow political rallies after simply informing the police,
our correspondent says.
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