Saturday Star

Violence flares at big anti-Mugabe rally

Tsvangirai, Mujuru flee as teargas is fired

- REUTERS

ZIMBABWEAN police yesterday fired teargas at opposition leaders and hundreds of demonstrat­ors as a protest against President Robert Mugabe descended into one of the worst outbreaks of violence in two decades.

Opposition MDC head Morgan Tsvangirai and former vice-president Joice Mujuru fled the rally in their cars while protesters ran for cover as police firing teargas and water cannons broke up the core of the demonstrat­ion.

Clashes then spread through the streets of Harare as riot police fought running battles with protesters who hurled rocks at officers, set tyres ablaze and burned a popular market to the ground, in some of the worst unrest since food riots in 1998.

“Mugabe’s rule must end now, that old man has failed us,” said one protester before throwing a rock at a taxi.

Mugabe’s opponents have become emboldened by rising public anger and protests over an economic meltdown, cash shortages and high unemployme­nt.

More than a hundred police officers in riot gear, backed up by water cannons and armoured trucks, occupied the venue that opposition parties planned to use for their demonstrat­ion.

As opposition supporters arrived for the march, they were told by the police to leave.

The officers then fired teargas and a water cannon when parts of the crowd refused to comply.

Police spokeswoma­n Charity Charamba said she was still to get details on yesterday’s protest.

“Demonstrat­ing is the only solution left to force the dictator out of office,” said Tapfuma Make, an unemployed 24-year-old from Chitungwiz­a town, south of the capital Harare.

Zimbabwe’s High Court earlier ruled that police should allow the protest to proceed between 12 noon and 4pm (local time) in what Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change called a “victory for democracy”.

MDC secretary-general and lawyer Douglas Mwonzora said the police had disregarde­d the court order and accused Zanu-PF youths of infiltrati­ng the crowd to disrupt the protest.

Opposition parties leading the protests say the electoral commission is biased in favour of the ruling Zanu-PF and is run by security agencies loyal to Mugabe, charges the commission denies.

The protesters want the next vote in 2018 to be supervised by internatio­nal observers, including the UN.

They are also calling for Mu- gabe to fire corrupt ministers, scrap plans to introduce local bank notes and end cash shortages.

The latest demonstrat­ions come nearly two months after the biggest large scale “stay at home” strike in Zimbabwe since 2007, inspired by social media movements such as #ThisFlag led by pastor Evan Mawarire.

Home Affairs Minister Ignatius Chombo on Thursday called opposition leaders “foreign agents” using protests to cause chaos in order to justify internatio­nal interventi­on in Zimbabwe’s affairs.

Police used teargas and a water cannon on Wednesday to break up a march by MDC youth supporters who were protesting over economic mismanagem­ent and what they say is brutality by security agencies.

 ??  ?? A man carries a street sign as opposition party supporters clash with police in Harare, Zimbabwe.
A man carries a street sign as opposition party supporters clash with police in Harare, Zimbabwe.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa