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Strikes and Protests 2007/8 - Index of articles
Zim
court allows opposition protest
Godfrey Marawanyika, Mail & Guardian (SA)
January 23, 2008
http://www.mg.co.za/articlepage.aspx?area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__africa/&articleid=330423&referrer=RSS
Zimbabwe's main opposition
party was given permission on Wednesday to stage a protest rally
against President Robert Mugabe after its leader Morgan Tsvangirai
was briefly detained by police.
Police had slapped a
blanket prohibition on the protest called by the Movement for Democratic
(MDC) as a show of strength ahead of joint parliamentary and presidential
elections due in March.
But a court in Harare
ruled that while a ban on marching through the capital's central
business district could remain in place, the MDC should be allowed
to gather in a football stadium where the rally was intended to
culminate with an address by Tsvangirai.
"The respondents
[police] are not to interfere with the gathering at Glamis Stadium
until [3.15pm local time]," added Priscilla Chigumba, the presiding
justice at a hearing before magistrates in Harare.
The MDC said they had
received initial approval from the police to stage the protest only
to be slapped with the ban on Monday.
As government and opposition
lawyers argued in court, a heavy police presence prevented MDC supporters
from entering the downtown area.
Tsvangirai and several
of his top lieutenants were badly beaten up by members of Mugabe's
security services last March as they tried to stage another protest
rally in Harare.
But in an apparent warning
shot across his bows, Tsvangirai was picked up by police at his
home in the early hours of the morning and questioned for about
four hours.
"He was picked up
by the police at about 4am [local time] on Wednesday but he has
since been released," his lawye, Alec Muchadehama, said.
National police spokesperson
Wayne Bvudzijena confirmed that Tsvangirai had been briefly detained.
"We invited Morgan
Tsvangirai, Ian Makone [the MDC's director for elections] and Denis
Murira [another top MDC official] here," he said.
"They held discussions
with the officer commanding law and order and then they went home.
We wanted to establish what they intended to do following recent
utterances."
During the court hearing,
Muchadehama said that the police action went against the grain of
recent amendments to laws on the holding of protests, which had
been agreed between the opposition and government.
"The position the
police have taken is not in the spirit of what was agreed in on
the constitutional amendments," said Muchadehama.
"When we agreed
to the [amended] law we did not know it could be used against us."
Fatima Maxwell, a law
officer in the Attorney General's office, said while the authorities
were prepared to negotiate with the opposition, the police had good
reason to worry about the impact of the rally in the city centre.
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%, but economists believe it to be nearer 50 000%.
Unemployment is running
at about 80% while basic foodstuffs such as cooking oil and sugar
are now a scarce commodity in the one-time regional breadbasket.
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 a new bout
of unrest, with the government warning the opposition not to resort
to violence.
"The 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 [Wednesday]," Information Ministry
George Charamba said. -- Reuters
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