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Zimbabwe opposition figure arrested
Agence-France-Presse
June 01, 2008
http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5j8noG31CygvR7X1l9rsY4zvgoKHA
The leader of
a rebel faction of Zimbabwe's MDC party was arrested Sunday over
a written attack on Robert
Mugabe, becoming the most senior opposition politician to be detained
ahead of a run-off election.
Arthur Mutambara, who
recently pledged to work with the main Movement for Democratic Change
leader Morgan Tsvangirai to help oust President Mugabe later this
month, was arrested up at his home in Harare, his party and lawyer
said.
"He was arrested
for publishing falsehoods and for contempt of court for an opinion
article he wrote in April," the lawyer Harrison Nkomo told
AFP.
One of his senior allies,
former lawmaker Trudy Stevenson, confirmed that Mutambara was picked
up at his Harare home by police on Sunday morning and taken to the
central police station.
The editor of
the country's only independent Sunday paper The Standard was arrested
last month over the piece written by Mutambara which accused
Mugabe of running down the Zimbabwean economy and his security forces
of abuses.
Mutambara fell out with
Tsvangirai in 2005 in a dispute over whether to contest elections
to the largely ceremonial Senate and commanded the loyalty of nearly
half the parliamentary party until joint legislative and presidential
elections on March 29.
But his faction fared
poorly in the elections and won only 10 seats in the 210-strong
chamber while Tsvangirai's camp won 99. The two men subsequently
agreed to join forces in parliament, although there has been no
formal merger.
Nkomo said he did not
expect Mutambara, who lost his seat in the March 29 election, to
be brought before a court until Tuesday.
"I am only expecting
him in court on Tuesday as no questioning will take place today.
The questioning will only start tomorrow," he said.
Three MDC lawmakers have
been arrested in Zimbabwe in the last month amid mounting violence
in the approach to the run-off between Tsvangirai and Mugabe scheduled
for June 27, although two are out on bail.
Nelson Chamisa, chief
spokesman for the main MDC faction. said Mutambara's arrest followed
a pattern of intimidation by the Mugabe regime and his ZANU-PF party
which lost control of parliament in the March 29 poll.
"Why are they arresting
Mutambara? People should be able to write whatever they want,"
he told AFP.
"It's a clear onslaught
instigated, coordinated and executed by ZANU-PF to either eliminate,
terrorize or intimidate the faces of democracy in Zimbabwe."
According to the MDC,
more than 50 of its supporters have been killed in attacks by pro-Mugabe
militias in recent weeks while tens of thousands have been displaced
in order to prevent them from voting on June 27.
Mugabe in turn has accused
the MDC of "terrorizing" his supporters and state media
reported on Saturday that two ZANU-PF supporters had been shot dead
by suspected MDC followers.
Meanwhile, Chamisa said
that plans by Tsvangirai to address two rallies in the resort towns
of Hwange and Victoria Falls on Saturday were scuppered when police
prevented MDC supporters from entering the stadium venues.
"The police are
literally trying to be difficult, but acting on the instructions
of ZANU-PF," he said.
Under the terms
of an agreement mediated
by South African President Thabo Mbeki in the run-up to the polls,
the opposition was meant to be free to hold rallies as long as it
notified the police beforehand.
But the police have been
accused of ignoring the agreement and issued an edict in April banning
any political rallies in the capital Harare.
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