Zimbabwe opposition tries to lift protest ban as armed police patrol capital

Demonstrators warned ‘you will rot in jail’ in run-up to planned rally in Harare

Zimbabwe’s main opposition party has gone to court to lift a police ban on demonstrations scheduled for Friday, as hundreds of police armed with automatic weapons, batons and water cannon set up checkpoints on major roads and blocked access to the party’s offices in the capital, Harare.

The police banned the street demonstration planned by the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) on Thursday night, after saying it would turn violent, and warned that anyone who took part would be committing a crime.

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West stirring up unrest in Zimbabwe to force regime change, says Zanu-PF

Party briefing blames ‘rogue NGOs’ and ‘hostile intelligence services’ for violence

Zimbabwe’s ruling party believes western powers are behind a “revolution” to bring about regime change in the country, according to documents seen by the Guardian.

Related: Zimbabwe crackdown could last months, activists fear

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Zimbabwe crackdown could last months, activists fear

Opposition figures are in hiding as arrests and beatings continue. But the anger at Mnangagwa’s regime persists

Activists and lawyers in Zimbabwe fear that the brutal crackdown by security forces will continue “for the foreseeable future” as authorities seek to crush all possible opposition to the ruling Zanu-PF party.

Hundreds of activists and opposition officials remain in hiding this weekend after almost two weeks of arbitrary arrests, beatings, rapes and abductions committed by police and military in the poor southern African country.

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Zimbabwe dared to hope. Then the military arrived | Fadzayi Mahere

Robert Mugabe is gone, but the army remains at the centre of our political life. Until that changes, the violence won’t stop

Like the fleeting blossom of Jacaranda trees in spring, faith in the government of Zimbabwe’s president, Emmerson Mnangagwa, has waned, following another round of state violence towards unarmed citizens.

A Harare woman wounded in the leg by a close-range gunshot from a soldier’s gun is ferried in a wheelbarrow to seek medical help. Elsewhere in the capital, a young footballer is killed for standing outside his home – his sole crime was being in the wrong place at the wrong time. These days, on the streets of Harare, an unnatural silence and fear have displaced the wild cheers of celebration that accompanied the 2017 resignation of Robert Mugabe as president. Hope has turned into mourning in cities around the country, where a general strike opposing Mnangagwa’s 150% fuel price hike turned bloody. At least 12 unarmed civilians have been killed and hundreds injured in a brutal crackdown led by the military.

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‘A hungry man is an angry man’ – fear and despair stalk streets of Harare

In a poor neighbourhood on the outskirts of the Zimbabwean capital, residents reeling from a brutal crackdown describe the impact of food and fuel shortages

Every morning this past week, Innocent Tinashi has set out very early from his small wood and tin home in Epworth, a poor neighbourhood on the outskirts of Harare, to walk the seven miles into the city centre in the hope of seeing his wife, Maria.

Epworth witnessed some of the fiercest violence during a protest “shutdown” that plunged Zimbabwe into a fresh crisis 12 days ago – and some of the most brutal repression that followed.

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The Guardian view on Zimbabwe’s crackdown: Mugabe went, but the regime lives on | Editorial

The ruthless crushing of protests shows how little has changed since Emmerson Mnangagwa took over

People do not always want to be proved right. Many Zimbabweans watching the brutal crackdown on protests this weekend were the same people who had celebrated Robert Mugabe’s ousting in 2017. But they had tempered their optimism by warning that only very limited and superficial improvements were likely. They predicted that the successful coup would further embolden the military, and that putting in charge the feared security chief Emmerson Mnangagwa was a recipe for further repression. Irregularities at last year’s election, and the violence used to suppress ensuing protests, made their case for them. Now reports of torture, indiscriminate beatings, live fire and arbitrary arrests have rammed it home. At least 12 people have been shot dead and hundreds have been arrested.

Even some sceptics had hoped the new president would at least alleviate economic woes. Instead, conditions have worsened. In December, inflation hit a 10-year high, officially reaching 42% (though one estimate put it at around 235%). The government then more than doubled fuel prices, triggering calls for a strike. Unions organising the protest urged participants to “stay away” from demonstrating for fear of state violence. But thousands took to the streets, looting and rioting broke out, and the state struck back viciously. Mr Mnangagwa was forced to return home just as he was supposed to be telling global leaders at Davos that Zimbabwe was open for business. The bloody repression, and internet shutdown, are unlikely to entice foreign investors.

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Mnangagwa promises investigation of brutal Zimbabwe crackdown

Security forces apparently targeted opposition and union officials during fuel protests

Zimbabwe’s president, Emmerson Mnangagwa, has called for “national dialogue” and promised an investigation into widespread violence by security forces in recent days, after cutting short an overseas trip.

The brutal crackdown followed protests last week against the doubling of the fuel price, which led to rioting and sporadic looting.

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Zimbabwe high court orders government to restore full internet

Blackout on social media apps continues after arrests, strikes and protests over fuel prices

Zimbabwe’s high court has ordered the country’s government to restore the internet in full, ruling that the security minister did not have the power to issue such a directive.

The court said only President Emmerson Mnangagwa has the authority to make such an order.

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Civilians beaten and abducted in major Zimbabwe crackdown

Activists tell of abductions and beatings during unrest linked to food and fuel shortages

Police and military have launched a massive crackdown in Zimbabwe after what appears to be have been a widespread breakdown of public order linked to food and fuel shortages in the impoverished country.

Access to the internet and social media was shut off for most of Wednesday, and armed soldiers were patrolling the streets of major cities as unidentified men were reported to be sweeping through poor neighbourhoods of Harare, the capital, and beating people “at random”.

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