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ZIMBABWE:
Govt will not tolerate post-election demonstrations
IRIN
News
March
30, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=46384
JOHANNESBURG
- The Zimbabwean government has threatened to crack down on any
public demonstration after the 31 March legislative elections.
The government was responding to calls by the opposition for peaceful
'Ukraine-style' protests to oust the ruling ZANU-PF party of President
Robert Mugabe should it win the keenly-contested elections on Thursday.
Catholic Archbishop Pius Ncube of Bulawayo, and Morgan Tsvangirai,
leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), alleged
over the weekend that the elections had already been rigged and
called on people not to accept another "stolen" ZANU-PF victory.
Ncube repeated allegations that opposition supporters were being
denied food aid, while Tsvangirai, addressing voters on Sunday,
called on MDC supporters countrywide not to accept a ZANU-PF victory.
ZANU-PF spokesman Nathan Shamuyarira dismissed Ncube as a liar and
said government would publish its latest food aid distribution reports
to prove that food was, indeed, reaching everyone, regardless of
political affiliation.
Home affairs minister Kembo Mohadi said any demonstrations against
the elected leadership would be a violation of the country's democratic
principles, and the government had a responsibility to ensure law
and order in the pre- and post-election periods.
"We have a duty to ensure there is peace and order in the country.
The security forces will not stand by and watch people subverting
our national democratic processes to get a short cut to regime change
- anyone who plans to engage in such acts should know that it is
not only illegal but unacceptable," Mohadi told IRIN.
He said Zimbabweans had worked hard to achieve democracy, and "allowing
it to be hijacked and abused by malcontents would be a self-inflicted
injury on the part of government".
"People who want political office in this country have to run for
it. We cannot allow the will of the people, shown through democratic
elections, to be subverted by malcontents and Western agents of
regime change," Mohadi emphasised.
He declined to comment on whether Ncube and Tsvangirai would face
arrest for making the call for peaceful demonstrations.
Tsvangirai still faces a charge of treason for calling for a "final
push" demonstration to oust the Mugabe regime in June 2002.
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