Police armed with batons
descended on around 100 members of the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change marching in the capital Harare, days after its party leader advocated a
wave of nationwide demonstrations.
Zimbabwe riot police
detained more than a dozen opposition protesters and beat up others at a
demonstration on Wednesday over high unemployment, an AFP correspondent
witnessed.
Protesters were beaten and
bundled into marked police vans as they headed toward parliament to present a
jobs petition to the speaker of national assembly.
Police spokespeople were
not available to confirm the number detained or if charges had been laid, but
the MDC said at least three people were still in custody.
“Our youths were peacefully
demonstrating in demand for jobs. They were doing so in terms of the Constitution,”
said MDC spokesman Douglas Mwonzora.
“Initially police arrested
28, but some of them were released. We do not know about the others but we
understand three are still in custody.”
The protesters want
long-ruling President Robert Mugabe to fix Zimbabwe’s economy, which has
lurched from crisis to crisis over the last 20 years, bringing bouts of
hyper-inflation and excruciating levels of unemployment.
An estimated 300,000
Zimbabweans have fled to neighbouring South Africa alone to look for work.
Mugabe, now 90, was
re-elected last year in a disputed vote after promising to create jobs,
extending his rule into its 34th year.
He is currently on a
five-day visit to China, in a bid to drum up financial support and investment
for agriculture and infrastructure projects.
China invested more in
non-financial sectors in Zimbabwe than in any other country on the continent
last year, around $602 million, according to figures from Beijing.
Chinese companies are
active in mining, construction, telecommunications and agriculture.
At least two China-linked
firms, Anjin Investments and Jinan Mining, have operated concessions at
Zimbabwe’s hugely lucrative Marange diamond field.
But ordinary Zimbabweans
have seen little impact from the trade.
The MDC’s Morgan Tsvangirai
— the runner-up in last year’s poll — has suggested a series of nationwide
protests against the government’s failure to stem the economic meltdown.
Previous demonstrations
against Mugabe’s government have been brutally put down by the security
services.
The latest demonstration
comes a week after police quelled another MDC rally and arrested seven. Those
protesters remain in custody.
Commentators see
Tsvangirai’s call as a reaction to growing anger among Zimbabweans about the
moribund economy, and also as an attempt to reinvigorate his opposition party
after consecutive electoral defeats.
Tsvangirai’s leadership of
the party has been called into question, with the recent breakaway of a faction
led by a former finance minister.
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