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Scores held as Zimbabwe cracks down on protests

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HARARE: Scores of Zimbabwean civilians including a prominent activist were detained on Wednesday and others were beaten, lawyers and witnesses said, as evidence began to emerge of a brutal crackdown on dissent by security forces.


Following two days of protests against fuel price hikes, residents said soldiers and police were patrolling Harare townships and attacking some people in their homes, a tactic used by Robert Mugabe’s security services during his near four-decade rule.


Joana Mamombe, an opposition lawmaker, said she was in hiding after soldiers sought her out at her parents’ home on Tuesday and beat up her father, leaving him hospitalised and unable to sit.


“I am very scared for my life. This is a crackdown on those of us who oppose this government. They want to silence opposition voices,” she said by telephone.


Zimbabweans had hoped President Emmerson Mnangagwa would make good on pre-election pledges to kick-start the economy and break with the Mugabe era. But since the November 2017 coup that ousted its long-time leader, the country has fallen back into familiar ways.


An Internet blackout entered its third day on Wednesday, leaving many without access to social media and laying the government open to accustations that it wanted to prevent images of heavy-handedness from being broadcast around the world.


Mnangagwa, on a trip to Russia and the World Economic Forum in Davos, said he was “deeply saddened” by the violent protests.


“Resolving Zimbabwe’s economic challenges is a monumental task, and while it may not always feel that way, we are moving in the right direction,” he said on his official Facebook page.


There was no immediate comment from the government on the series of arrests or allegations of violence by police and soldiers.


An official inquiry last year found troops had used “disproportionate and unjustified” force in shooting and killing six civilians during interventions to stop violence after Mnangagwa was elected on July 30.


Outside a private hospital in Harare, Reuters saw two men seeking treatment for wounds sustained on Tuesday night.


One said soldiers smashed their way into his house and dragged him to an open space, where he and around 20 other people were beatean and accused of being protesters.


“They wanted to kill us but I managed to escape,” said one man, who had a swollen eye, before being taken inside by a nurse.


Wednesday was the third and final day of the stay-at-home protest called by unions in response to Mnangagwa increasing the price of fuel by more than 150 per cent. Shops, banks and restaurants in the centre of the capital remained closed and there was little road traffic. — Reuters



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