HARARE, Zimbabwe
Zimbabwean authorities remanded in custody Tuesday 98 people arrested for taking part in demonstrations called to demand that President Emmerson Mnangagwa leave power.
The men and women were rounded
up in the capital Harare during small-scale demonstrations on Monday and a
ruling on their bail is due on April 10, the courts said.
A one-time veteran of the
ruling ZANU-PF party called the day of protest to reject moves to keep
Mnangagwa, 82, in power beyond the end of his term in 2028.
Most of the 98 people in
custody were among around 200 who gathered at Harare’s Freedom Square where
they threw stones at security forces, police said.
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They chanted slogans such as
“Enough is Enough” and “Mnangagwa must go”.
They had contravened laws
against breaching the peace and participating in gatherings with the intent to
promote public violence, police said.
Turnout at Monday’s
demonstrations was limited but shops, transport, schools and businesses were
closed for the day in what many said amounted to a stay-away protest.
Police also arrested and
briefly detained 10 journalists covering the demonstrations, the Media
Institute of Southern Africa’s Zimbabwe branch said.
A journalist who interviewed
the veteran who mobilised the demonstrations, Blessed Geza, has been in jail
since February 24.
Geza has become the public
face of discontent against Mnangagwa, who took power in a coup in 2017 and has
been accused of creeping authoritarianism that has crushed the political
opposition, including through long jail terms.
A former member of parliament,
Geza said he would deliver a “crucial” address on Wednesday on the next course
of action.
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