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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
arrests 100 in new crackdown on opposition
Reuters
May 18, 2006
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L18653874.htm
HARARE - Zimbabwe
police arrested about 100 people demonstrating for political reforms
on Thursday in a new crackdown which critics say is designed to
deter possible wider anti-government protests.
Security forces
have banned marches, detained critics and stepped up an intimidation
campaign out of fears that government opponents were about to launch
a wave of protests against President Robert Mugabe, rights groups
said.
The main opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) has warned Mugabe to brace
for "a winter of peaceful democratic resistance" against
his 26-year rule.
Mugabe, in turn,
has threatened MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai, saying any effort to
force him out of power would be "dicing with death".
Security forces
have been have been on high alert for political trouble since February
and have turned up the heat this week, activists say.
On Thursday,
about a dozen police halted a march and arrested some 100 members
of the pressure group National
Constitutional Assembly (NCA), including several old women,
who were marching to press for constitutional reforms.
A Reuters correspondent
saw police with batons force the marchers to sit down before they
reached the city centre, and then cart them in trucks.
Rights groups
said dozens of activists and trade union officials had either been
summoned by police or warned by Central Intelligence Organisation
(CIO) operatives against organising anti-Mugabe demonstrations.
"A number
of people have been questioned, and are being intimidated around
the country, from civic society, the MDC and anyone suspected ...
of) organising activities critical of the government," said
Itai Zimunya of Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition.
Both chief police
spokesman Wayne Bvudzijena and MDC spokesman Nelson Chamisa were
unavailable for immediate comment.
A Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Union (ZCTU) official said the police action
suggested they believed the MDC and allied civic groups were close
to launching anti-government protests.
"I think
they are nervous and all that is happening now is part of the pressure
to forestall any planned or spontaneous demonstrations," he
said.
Some analysts
believe that co-ordinated and peaceful demonstrations across Zimbabwe
could force Mugabe to agree to talks about the crisis in the southern
African country.
Political analysts
say that although Zimbabweans have largely been cowed by Mugabe's
use of riot police to crush earlier street protests, a crumbling
economy has increased public frustration with the government and
the risk of riots.
Riot police
have been camped at a square in Harare's city centre, the focus
of protest rallies in the last few years.
The country is wrestling with shortages of food, fuel and foreign
currency, as well as with unemployment of over 70 percent and an
inflation rate topping 1,000 percent.
The World Bank
says Zimbabwe, whose gross domestic product has contracted by 40
percent over the last eight years, has the fastest-shrinking economy
outside a war zone.
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