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Crowds
jeer Mugabe birthday at Beitbridge
The Zimbabwean
February 23, 2008
View story on
The Zimbabwean website
More than 30 police worked
to control an estimated crowd of 1200 demonstrators as trucks and
cars backed up for two kilometres, waiting to cross the Beitbridge
border post between South Africa and Zimbabwe.
The protest, just metres
from a customs office that marks the start start of bridge zone,
was organised by a number of Zimbabwe exile groups based in Johannesburg,
Pretoria and the border town of Musina.
"It is hard to tell
how many people were there," Mr. Simon "Dreadman"
Mudekwa of Zimbabwe Revolutionary Youth (ZRY) said after the meeting,"but
we came with 1000 T-shirts and they are all finished. I think there
must be at least two or three hundred who did not get shirts so
that makes it a very large crowd," he said.
The ZRY had brought its
supporters in six buses from Johannesburg and other regions.
"Many from Zimbabwe
walked over the bridge to come and join us because we had put out
the word that there would be a rally here to counter Mugabe's celebrations
that side."
President Robert Mugabe,
who turned 84 on Thursday, held his own party on the Zimbabwe side
of the bridge. Food supplies have run short across the country and
insiders from Mr. Mugabe's ruling Zimbabwe African National Union
- Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) say that the border town was chosen
so that food and other goods could be ferried to the party from
the South African town of Musina, 10 kilometres south of the bridge.
While the protestors
danced and sang, a helium-filled blimp was raised 100 metres above
the bridge with a banner that cast doubt on the integrity of elections
due for March 29. "Free and fair or just hot air," ran
the slogan on one side of the balloon while the other called on
President Mugabe to, "Have your cake... and beat it!"
A giant cardboard cake
was hauled into place and four men dressed a skeletons jumped out
danced to hoots and cheers from the audience. At first, it seemed
that the point was to show how Zimbabweans are starving in a country
where United Nations agencies estimate that seven out of 10 people
are malnourished.
However, one by one the
bone-men raised signs with the names of former Mugabe colleagues
who have died under mysterious circumstances after clashing with
the president, including the late ZANU-PF youth commander, Border
Gezi and Mugabe's military advisor, Josiah Tongogara who was killed
in a car crash shortly before independence in 1980,
Tongogara had been popular
with the working class and with veterans on both sides of the civil
war that raged from 1972 to 1980.
The protestors, clearly
enjoying the joke, surged towards the cake and held two of the skeletons
on their shoulders while shounting chants in support of opposition
leader, Mr. Morgan Tsvangirai who leads the Movement for Democratic
Change or MDC.
Mr Tsvangirai's treasurer,
former MP Mr. Roy Bennett who now lives in exile in South Africa,
addressed the gathering in the Shona language, calling on people
to go home and vote in next month's election.
The MDC lost to ZANU
PF in 2005, in a poll that many analysts claimed was marred by rigging
and intimidation. Western countries including the USA, Britain,
Australia, Canada and the EU have not recognised the result.
Shortly before the crowd
dispersed, ZRY's Simon Mudekwa again took the microphone and summed
up the remarks made by Mr. Bennett.
"We have
suffered long and many of our people have died or been tortured
by the regime," Mr. Mudekwa said. "The future will be
ours, but only if we fight for it with our votes. That battle starts
now, and next time we meet, we will do so on the other side of this
bridge, home at last in a free Zimbabwe."
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