Tuesday, April 1, 2025 - Police were out in force and businesses and offices closed in key Zimbabwe cities after authorities warned against demonstrations called for Monday to demand that President Emmerson Mnangagwa leave power.
Security forces patrolled city centres after warning people
to ignore a call by a faction of Mnangagwa’s own ZANU-PF party to demonstrate
against the president, who took power in a coup eight years ago.
A small group of people tried to assemble at President
Robert Mugabe Square in the capital, Harare, but were dispersed by police,
videos on social media showed.
“It was announced as a peaceful march but the police are
already starting to hit people,” one of the protesters at the scene told the
CITE online media.
But “we are not going anywhere… I’m staying here, if I have
to die here, for the sake of my children,” she said in a video posted on social
media.
The protests were called by a veteran of the ZANU-PF, in
power since independence in 1980, following moves by a faction of the party to
keep Mnangagwa, 82, in power beyond the end of his term in 2028.
“The task of removing Mnangagwa has already begun,” Blessed
Geza, who is in hiding and has been expelled from the ZANU-PF, said on social
media last week.
The main road in the centre of Harare was deserted, and some
retailers, including car dealers, had removed items from shop windows, an AFP
reporter said. Schools were closed, and commuter taxis suspended operations.
“There are no people at all,” a man told AFP in Harare on
condition of anonymity. “They are scared because of stories flying around
(about the protests).”
In the country’s second city, Bulawayo, major retailers and
offices were shuttered, and only a few people were in the normally busy fresh
produce market, an AFP reporter said. Police patrolled in vehicles and on
horseback.
Mnangagwa and his government have been accused of corruption
and mismanagement that have left the southern African country in economic
crisis, while repression has weakened the political opposition.
Geza and his group of veterans of the war that led to
independence in 1980 are pushing to replace Mnangagwa with his vice president,
Constantino Chiwenga, a retired general who orchestrated the coup
against Mugabe.
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