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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Strikes and Protests 2007/8 - Index of articles
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Opposition
strike falters in Zimbabwe
Voice of America (VOA)
April 15, 2008
http://voanews.com/english/2008-04-15-voa61.cfm
A call by Zimbabwe's
opposition Movement for Democratic Change for a national strike
was largely ignored by Zimbabweans, most of whom reported for work
Tuesday. And, as VOA's Delia Robertson reports from our southern
Africa bureau in Johannesburg, South Africa's ruling African National
Congress says it will seek meetings with both ruling and opposition
parties in Zimbabwe.
The Movement for Democratic
Change called for Zimbabweans to stay home from work indefinitely
to register their protest at what the party sees as the deliberate
withholding of the tally in the presidential poll, held more than
two weeks ago. As in the past, the call went largely unheeded.
Zimbabwe has 80 percent
unemployment and inflation running more than 100,000 percent; the
loss of a day's wage is something few can afford.
Fear may also be a factor.
The police said Monday the strike call was aimed at disturbing the
peace and promised to deal severely with any unrest.
Independent human rights
groups have reported several incidents, including attacks on opposition
or independent poll monitors; two killings and more than 20 victims
of violence have been hospitalized. The independent Media Monitoring
Group of Zimbabwe says state-owned radio stations are broadcasting
songs that foster violence against opponents of the government.
Meanwhile, South Africa's
ruling party has called the situation in Zimbabwe dire and says
it will seek to meet with both the ruling and opposition parties
in Zimbabwe. The aim is to see if contacts at the party level can
assist in breaking the crisis caused by the failure of the Zimbabwe
Electoral Commission to release the result of the presidential poll.
African National Congress
Secretary-General Gwede Mantashe told a media briefing that the
speedy release of the result is crucial.
"You cannot allow
a situation where you sit on the results," Mantashe said. "You
create an environment where there must be violence; you hear all
sorts of rumors of the deployment of military all over the country;
we are saying as the ANC it is not acceptable."
The African National
Congress has been more critical than South African president Thabo
Mbeki, who last weekend said the there was no crisis in Zimbabwe.
Mantashe says as mediator
appointed by the Southern African Development Community, Mr. Mbeki
must be seen to be impartial.
"The president of
the Republic is a mediator in that situation. Half the time when
he speaks [about Zimbabwe] he does no speak even for the South African
government, he speaks for SADC," Mantashe said.
A Zimbabwe court has
postponed until Wednesday a hearing on an application by the MDC
to block a recount of all the ballots in 23 constituencies scheduled
for this Saturday.
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