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Strikes and Protests 2007- Save Zimbabwe Campaign
More
violence possible, analysts warn
IRIN
News
March 26, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=70937
HARARE - Pro-democracy activists have
warned that protests in Zimbabwe might become even more violent
after the bombing of a passenger train, a supermarket and a police
station over the course of Friday and Saturday last week.
The police announced that they were
now authorised to use live ammunition in response to violence. Assistant
Commissioner Wayne Bvudzijena, the national police spokesman, told
the official daily, The Herald, that the police had increased patrols
and had been "given the green light to open fire in cases involving
violence".
According to Bvudzijena, "We are now
allowed to use firearms in cases of this nature."
He said a supermarket in the capital,
Harare, was bombed on 24 March, and suspected opposition supporters
threw teargas canisters and a petrol bomb at a train carrying about
750 passengers bound for Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second city, at a
stopover point a few kilometres outside Harare, on 23 March, injuring
five people.
The injured were taken to Harare Central
Hospital where a pregnant woman was reported to have sustained injuries
and suffered a miscarriage due to shock.
In the eastern city of Mutare, about
300km from Harare, unknown assailants razed a police station with
a petrol bomb, but no injuries were reported.
"There have not been any arrests so
far but we know these are MDC [opposition party Movement for Democratic
Change] people who have embarked on a violent campaign against the
government. Last week they also tried to petrol-bomb the same passenger
train in Bulawayo but they failed; we are following leads and arrests
will soon follow," claimed Bvudzijena.
A police detective in the capital told
IRIN that an urgent police notice was doing the rounds, notifying
officers countrywide that they had permission to open fire. "There
is a growing worry that if the police do not adopt a hard stance
against the growing number of violent activities, the situation
might get out of hand," said the detective, who refused to be named.
The MDC has distanced itself from the
bombings. "We don't know anything about that. Anyone could have
done it, including the police themselves, or the CIO [Zimbabwe Central
Intelligence Organisation), so that it could be blamed on us," alleged
MDC spokesperson Nelson Chamisa.
"More violence is certainly coming,
not because people love violence but because they are frustrated,"
commented John Makumbe, a political analyst. "All they need is change,
and the general feeling is that Zimbabweans have nothing more to
lose. They have lost everything, hence their determination, as evidenced
by recent street protests, to take the government head-on."
Zimbabwe has been simmering for the
past two months, as ordinary people battle with shortages of food,
fuel and foreign currency, as well as an annual inflation rate of
more than 1,700 percent.
But the situation has taken a violent
turn since the police imposed a ban on political rallies last month.
After an opposition supporter was shot dead by the police and opposition
leaders allegedly beaten while in custody, strikes and protests
have given way to bombings of police stations across the country.
Lovemore Madhuku, a political scientist
and chairman of the National Constitutional Assembly (NCA), an umbrella
organisation for civil groupings, said despite the heavy-handedness
of state agents in dealing with protests, it was clear that Zimbabweans
were more determined now than ever before to shape their future.
"This is a dangerous situation that
could degenerate into a full-blown civil strife ... As the old adage
goes, a hungry man is an angry man; people are hungry and yearning
for change," said Madhuku. "What makes tension even higher is the
fact that government has further tightened its grip on political
space; the banning of rallies has frustrated many people, hence
the violent clashes with the police."
Political parties have reacted strongly
to the police announcement on the use of live ammunition. "It is
unheard of in any democratic society to use live ammunition against
your critics ... While the threat by the police is meant to instil
fear in the opposition's leadership and membership, we are not going
to stop organising protests to make sure that we deliver a democratic
Zimbabwe to the people," the MDC's Chamisa told IRIN.
Welshman Ncube, secretary-general of
one of the MDC factions, alleged: "Disturbing as the statement by
the police might be, there is nothing new in their threat, as the
government has always been using live ammunition against unarmed,
innocent civilians, who are merely seeking to express themselves."
The South African Development Community
(SADC) will be holding a summit on Zimbabwe in Tanzania on Thursday
and Friday. The meeting will be attended by the SADC's security
'troika', Angola, Tanzania and Namibia, as well as current SADC
chair Lesotho, outgoing chair Botswana, and incoming chair Zambia.
Zambia's foreign minister, Mundia Sikatana,
told IRIN that the meeting would discuss all aspects of recent events
in Zimbabwe. "We are very concerned with the situation [there].
Because we are close neighbours, we get affected: when they sneeze,
you also sneeze."
Zambia is the only country in the region
to have called for a "new approach" to resolving Zimbabwe's crises.
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