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WOZA
take the "Stand up for your child" campaign to communities
in Harare and Chitungwiza
Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA)
March 15, 2008
Members of WOZA and MOZA
held four community-based protests in Harare and Chitungwiza today,
taking to the streets of Domboramwari, Glen View, Kuwadzana and
Makoni Shopping Centre in Chitungwiza.
In Domboramwari, 100
women and men marched from the main water point to the shopping
centre, carrying balloons that read "Stand Up for Your Child"
and handing out flyers urging people to vote in the coming elections.
The group chanted slogans in the shopping centre for some time before
dispersing without incident.
In Chitungwiza, approximately
150 people marched several hundred metres to Makoni Shopping Centre,
again handing out flyers and generating much excitement from the
Saturday-morning shoppers. As the group was dispersing, a ZANU PF
campaign vehicle and police vehicles were seen driving towards the
group. At the time of writing, the welfare of Chitungwiza demonstrators
is still being ascertained. The song being sung in Shona by the
marchers was ?our children want food, schooling ? police, if you
harass them, we will be on your backs?
In Glen View, a group
of approximately 50 people began marching from Glen View 3 Shopping
Centre. It soon became clear however that the balloons and the flyers
being handed out, which include children?s games, were causing great
excitement amongst the children in the area and many children rushed
to join in the procession. As more and more children joined in,
it was decided to disperse the procession before it reached the
agreed end point as there were concerns for the welfare of the children
should police approach.
The final demonstration
of the day was held in Kuwadzana where about 75 women and men marched
for several hundred metres to Kuwadzana Shopping Centre. Again the
peaceful group, with its carnival atmosphere, attracted great attention
from shoppers in the market and in the centre. Bicycle police were
observed attending the scene shortly after the crowd dispersed.
The song being sung in Shona by the marchers was a duet by WOZA
and MOZA. The song depicted a child asking their parent to pay school
fees and both parents saying there was no money, with the father
saying he only had enough money for one pint of beer.
The peaceful protests
were to urge people to "Stand up for your Child" and
to encourage Zimbabweans to vote and to vote wisely for candidates
that will deliver a future for the children. WOZA has taken a position
to mobilize Zimbabweans to vote for any candidate that they feel
will deliver social justice rather than follow blindly party loyalties.
Yesterday, the
Zimbabwe Republic Police in clear contravention of their powers
under the new Public
Order Security Act (POSA), banned
toyi-toying yet did not seem to pay too much undue notice to
the peaceful WOZA demonstrations.
Visit the WOZA fact
sheet
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