Wed 3 Dec 2008
Police Clash With Protesters In Zimbabwe Capital
Posted by admin under Current Crisis
No Comments
Trade unions have called protests over a shortage of increasingly worthless cash while at least 100 health workers protested to demand better pay and conditions at a time they are fighting
Riot police officers with shields and batons broke up a group of about 20 demonstrators marching toward the central bank.
There was no sign of any immediate impact of new measures announced by the bank to increase cash withdrawal limits and introduce higher-value notes. There were still long lines outside banks as shoppers jostled to get cash.
Across town, the police dispersed about 100 health workers who had converged outside the Health Ministry.
Public hospitals have largely shut down due to drug and equipment shortages as well as frequent strikes by doctors and nurses pressing for better pay. They have been ill-equipped to cope with the cholera outbreak.
The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in
The Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions said it would press ahead with protests despite the heavy police presence. It said at least one union leader had been arrested by the secret police from the Central Intelligence Organization.
The protests follow clashes Monday in which dozens of unarmed soldiers were involved in running battles with mobs and riot police officers after seizing cash from vendors and illegal foreign currency traders.
The Zimbabwean defence minister, Sydney Sekeramayi, said measures had been put in place to prevent acts of violence by what state media called “rogue soldiers.”
“Let me also emphasize that those who may try to incite some members of the uniformed forces to indulge in illegal activities will be found equally culpable,” Sekeramayi was quoted as saying by the state-owned Herald newspaper.
Analysts said the emergence of dissent in Mugabe’s security establishment showed the effects of increased economic instability and may compound the already myriad problems faced by Mugabe’s government.
“If this is a start of some kind of a rebellion by the troops, then we could see change in Zimbabwe a lot quicker than it seemed likely a while ago,” said Steven Friedman, a political analyst at the University of Johannesburg.
The spread of cholera over
The normally preventable and treatable disease has spread into neighbouring
Health officials said cholera had been detected in the
The Malawian health minister, Khumbo Kachali, said that health services had been put on high alert after a Zimbabwean truck driver with the disease was admitted to a hospital in the country’s second biggest city,Â
(Source)

No Responses to “ Police Clash With Protesters In Zimbabwe Capital ”