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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Harare
bans public prayers, marches amid fears of anti-Mugabe protests
ZimOnline
May 18, 2006
http://www.zimonline.co.za/headdetail.asp?ID=12124
HARARE
- Zimbabwe police have banned public rallies, marches and prayer
meetings planned for next weekend to mark the government's controversial
home demolition exercise last year, for fear the commemoration
could easily turn into anti-government protests, organisers said
on Wednesday.
To
ensure the commemoration was pre-empted, the police also arrested
several church, civic leaders and individuals leading preparations
for various activities to mark the urban renewal exercise.
The
religious and civic leaders, who were mostly arrested between Tuesday
and Wednesday, were detained for brief periods and released after
strong warning not to proceed with plans to remember the home demolition
exercise.
The
Crisis in Zimbabwe
Coalition (CZC) that brings together churches, human rights
groups, opposition parties, labour and students and was spearheading
plans for the planned commemoration said the police ordered the
cancellation of prayer meetings and rallies because they feared
the organisers might turn them into anti-President Robert Mugabe
protests.
"The
police have cancelled all our programmes to commemorate the event.
They advised us that we can no longer go ahead because they suspect
we might end up turning commemorations into countrywide anti-Mugabe
protests," CZC advocacy officer Itai Zimunya told ZimOnline.
Home
Affairs Minister Kembo Mohadi said he had not been briefed by police
commanders about the ban on prayers, rallies and public marches.
But
Mohadi virtually endorsed the police action, saying: "Common sense
however dictates that the police should not let events that have
a potential of turning violent or have undesirable political connotations
going ahead."
Zimbabwe
has been on edge since main opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai
said in March that he would lead supporters of his Movement for
Democratic Change (MDC) party in mass protests to force Mugabe to
give up power to a transitional government that would pen a new
constitution and organise fresh elections under international supervision.
Mugabe
has warned Tsvangirai against mass action saying the opposition
leader would be "dicing with death" if he ever attempted to instigate
a Ukrainian-style popular revolt in Zimbabwe.
But
Tsvangirai has been undeterred and next weekend begins touring rural
areas - the last bastions of Mugabe's support - to try and win backing
for mass protests from rural communities.
The
CZC had planned to hold a rally next Saturday at Zimbabwe Grounds
in Harare's Highfield working class suburb, as well as public marches
in several towns and cities, where armed soldiers and police last
year razed down thousands of backyard cottages and shantytowns leaving
close to a million people homeless.
The
rally and marches have now been declared illegal by the police,
who also banned another commemorative public meeting that was to
take place in Harare's Mbare working class suburb on Wednesday.
Mbare, a stronghold of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC) party, was one of the worst affected by the home demolition
exercise.
University
of Zimbabwe political science lecturer and fierce Mugabe critic,
John Makumbe, who was to have addressed the Mbare meeting, was arrested
and detained at Harare central police station for hours before being
released.
In
the second largest city of Bulawayo, police ordered the Zimbabwe
Christian Alliance (ZCA) - a coalition of churches in the city
- to cancel prayer meetings and a public march that organisers had
said would see at least 15 000 people march for about five kilometres
from Makokoba suburb into the city centre. Two ZCA pastors, Lucky
Moyo and Promise Maneda, who were leading preparations for the weekend
march were arrested by the police on Tuesday and released later
on the same day.
ZCA
spokesman Hussein Sibanda however said the marches and prayer meetings
would go ahead because the police ban was illegal, adding that the
church organisation was working on an urgent application to the
High Court to request the court to bar the police from interfering
with the march or prayer meeting.
The
police have also summoned women rights activist Jenni Williams and
Zimbabwe Progressive
Teachers' Union secretary general Raymond Majongwe whom they
want to question in connection with the planned commemoration of
the home demolition exercise.
"Yes
they (police) want to talk to me but they have not indicated what
they want," Majongwe said. Williams could not be immediately reached
to confirm whether she had met the police.
Bulawayo
Catholic Archbishop and also a fierce Mugabe critic, Pius Ncube
said the police had also wanted to speak to him but could not because
he had been away.
"They
(the police) cancelled planned marches to commemorate Operation
Murambatsvina. They also quizzed a number of church leaders whom
they suspect of having links with the event. They couldn't talk
to me because I was away," Ncube said.
Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions secretary general Wellington Chibhebhe
said the police raided the union's offices in the cities of Gweru
and Chinhoyi offices and demanded workers at the offices to say
whether the ZCTU was involved in plans to commemorate the home demolitions.
"They
interrogated our office people there to find out about their involvement
in pending mass action and the commemorations of Operation Murambatsvina
(home demolition). The offices are now operational," Chibhebhe said.
The
home demolition campaign that began in May and ended in July last
year left at least 700 000 without shelter or means of livelihood
after the police bulldozers pulled down shantytowns and informal
business kiosks in an exercise defended by Mugabe as necessary to
smash crime and keep Zimbabwe's cities beautiful.
Western
nations, the local opposition, human rights groups and churches
roundly condemned the home demolition exercise with UN envoy Anna
Tibaijuka, who spent two weeks in Zimbabwe probing the urban renewal
exercise, saying in a report that the clean-up exercise not only
violated human rights but also possibly breached international law.
Tibaijuka
said in addition to making nearly a million people homeless, the
clean-up exercise also indirectly affected another 2.4 million people.
The
Zimbabwe government rejected the UN
report, saying Tibaijuka was under pressure from Western governments
to produce a negative report that would tarnish Mugabe and his government's
image. - ZimOnline
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