STATE security agencies in Harare yesterday sealed off all
strategic points previously used by the opposition for demonstrations as
political tension continues to mount ahead of Monday’s general elections.
As early as 6am, police had mounted water cannons and
deployed heavily on all roads leading to the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission
(Zec) offices and at the Robert Mugabe Square in anticipation of protests by opposition
activists.
The opposition’s other favourite hunting ground, Africa
Unity Square in the central business district, has also been taken up by a
week-long State-organised cultural event, in a move described by the opposition
as a well-planned clampdown on democracy.
The latest heavy police deployment came shortly after a ban
on the MDC Alliance’s planned demonstrations to demand transparency in the
electoral processes.
MDC Alliance spokesperson Welshman Ncube said “the ban and
heavy police presence shows that the mask was coming off the monster and will
come out in full force, with all its horns if President Emmerson Mnangagwa wins
the forthcoming polls”.
He said it was clear that Mnangagwa was pretending to be a
reformed leader to lure people to vote for him, adding “slowly, the sheep’s
clothing on the wolf is coming off. There is no difference between former
President Robert Mugabe and Mnangagwa”.
“He (Mnangagwa) has banned our demo and the deployment of
the police in and around Zec offices shows the hyena is finally coming out.
Zanu PF has been what it is and will remain like that. A leopard doesn’t change
its colours and we had always known that the pretence of the so-called new
dispensation would come to an end if they win this election, the monster will
come out with all its horns.”
Yesterday’s heavy police presence came shortly after
Mnangagwa threatened to cause Chamisa’s arrest for allegedly inciting violence.
National Patriotic Front spokesperson Jealousy Mawarire
said: “It is good he (Mnangagwa) has done this in the presence of foreign
observers. If he wins in the forthcoming elections, the country will be a
complete military State where the people will be flogged for holding
different.”
Political analyst Ernest Mudzengi said: “The decision by
government to ban a protest by an opposition party is a contradiction of the
claims by Mnangagwa. We have been made to believe the claims by Mnangagwa that
the new dispensation was liberal and yet on the ground we see the opposite.”
Newsday
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