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Zimbabwe
riot police use violence to quell fresh protests
Jan Raath, Times
October 15, 2008
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article4944024.ece
Robert Mugabe's
riot police returned to their violent ways yesterday as Thabo Mbeki,
the South African mediator, sought to break Zimbabwe's political
deadlock.
Four students
were injured when they tried to deliver a petition to Parliament
in Harare protesting at the failure of most of the country's
universities to open at the start of the new academic year. Three
students, including Clever Bere, the president of the Zimbabwe
National Students Union, were arrested.
It was the first
such heavy-handed action by police since President Mugabe and Morgan
Tsvangirai, leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change,
signed a power-sharing agreement
on September 15. Yesterday the two leaders were locked in discussions
over the distribution of Cabinet posts at a Harare hotel with Mr
Mbeki. At the weekend Mr Mugabe handed
all but one ministry to his own Zanu (PF) party, effectively reneging
on the deal.
The students picked this
auspicious moment to air their grievance, assuming that they would
receive a favourable hearing from the country's first opposition-controlled
Parliament since independence.
The initial signs were
encouraging. Privilege Mutanga, a member of the Zinasu national
executive, said that police told the 200 peaceful demonstrators
to send two representatives to present the petition. They were,
however, arrested as soon as they reached the doors of Parliament,
Ms Mutanga said.
"Then the riot
police charged us. They were about 30, and they had baton sticks,
guns and dogs, so we scattered." She tried to hide in a shop
doorway but was dragged out and beaten and kicked. She was treated
for bruising and contusions. The incident is seen as an indication
that Mr Mugabe has already ordered the resumption of his policies
of violent suppression since his U-turn on the power-sharing deal,
which allocated 16 Cabinet posts to the MDC, and 15 to Zanu (PF).
Mr Mugabe's aides
insisted that the MDC could now reckon on just one seat at the Cabinet
table. "As far as we are concerned, the only contention is
the Ministry of Finance," said Patrick Chinamasa, Justice
Minister and Zanu (PF)'s chief negotiator. "We hope
the facilitator will come up with fresh ideas," Mr Chinamasa
added. "The country has been drifting for the past six months.
We cannot continue drifting."
Mr Tsvangirai has threatened
to walk away from the power-sharing deal unless his party is granted
some powerful ministries. His aides were putting a brave face on
the fresh round of talks, vainly expressing hope that Mr Mugabe
might yet be forced to change course.
"We are placing
our faith in the efforts of the mediator, and that Zanu (PF) can
be persuaded that it has to share and not grab power," said
Nelson Chamisa, an MDC spokesman. Last night the talks were adjourned
without agreement.
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