Wednesday, March 28, 2007

ZIMBABWE'S TSVANGIRAI 'ARRESTED' !

Mr Tsvangirai was allegedly beaten in custody earlier this month. Zimbabwe's main opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai has been arrested in a raid on his headquarters, officials from his party have said.
He was seized along with about 20 members of staff ahead of a news conference, the Movement for Democratic Change's Tendai Biti told the BBC.
Mr Tsvangirai was also arrested earlier this month and beaten while in custody.
The latest arrest came as southern African leaders gathered in Tanzania for talks on Zimbabwe.
President Robert Mugabe is expected to be at that meeting.
The BBC's Peter Greste in Tanzania's capital, Dar es Salaam, says that in private the gathered leaders will give Mr Mugabe a frosty reception following the beating of opposition politicians in police custody this month.
Riot police
In the latest raid, the opposition headquarters in Zimbabwe's capital, Harare, were cordoned off before officers went in to make the arrests.
"There's a wall of riot police so you can't actually see what's happening," Mr Biti said.

Mr Mugabe may get a frosty reception at the Tanzania meeting.
Mr Tsvangirai had been planning to hold a news conference about the arrest and assault of scores of opposition activists after police broke up a meeting earlier this month.
Germany, which holds the European Union presidency, said it was "deeply concerned" at the latest arrests.
But Zimbabwe's Information Minister Sikhanyiso Ndlovu told the BBC the arrests were a police matter.
"If the police take action it's their prerogative... They are doing their job, we can't interfere," he said.
Zimbabwe's Herald newspaper reported on Wednesday that a suspected petrol bomber was arrested amid reports that ruling party offices and a police camp were bombed on Tuesday.
Mugabe is telling them, 'I've got the title deeds to Zimbabwe, you can go to hell'
Tendai Biti,Movement for Democratic ChangE

Mr Biti denied speculation that MDC members were involved as "fiction".
In Dar es Salaam, Mr Mugabe is expected to blame tensions in his country on an opposition campaign of violence.
The government has consistently accused the MDC of using violence and attacking the police.
Our correspondent in Tanzania, Peter Greste, says that Mr Mugabe built up strong regional support for standing up to former colonial masters but that is now waning amid the brutal suppression of opposition protests.
The leaders at the summit are expected to tell Mr Mugabe, who has governed Zimbabwe since its independence in 1980, that he should stand down when his term in office ends next year.

HAVE YOUR SAY
The meeting between southern Africa's leaders is long overdue
Patrick, Kampala, Uganda
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Our correspondent says Mr Mugabe has so far seemed immune from verbal attacks from the West may not be so resistant to criticism from his own contemporaries.
Mr Biti told the BBC's Focus on Africa programme that Mr Mugabe appeared defiant. "Mugabe is telling them, 'I've got the title deeds to Zimbabwe, you can go to hell'. He's saying, 'Stuff diplomacy'."
Zimbabweans are grappling with the world's highest inflation - 1,700% a year - while unemployment and poverty are widespread.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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