-
MDC-Alliance youths aligned to party president Mr Nelson Chamisa on Friday last week disrupted the party’s Harare provincial meeting and threatened to harm members perceived to be seeking to dislodge him at the forthcoming congress.
-
An MDC-Alliance supporter based in Chitungwiza, Richard Mutiti, will spend an effective 10 months in prison after he was convicted of inciting protesters who went on a rampage and destroyed Makoni Police Station during last month’s violent protests.
-
THE MDC Alliance is using the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) platforms to train youths in violence and destabilisation tactics in order to render the country ungovernable and effect regime change. A ZCTU-affiliated non-governmental organisation, the Labour Economic Department Research Insititute of Zimbabwe (LEDRIZ), is conducting countrywide workshops where it is using labour issues as a smokescreen to hide plotting to unseat the Government.
-
SIX men who burnt a Zupco bus and a car belonging to Chegutu East legislator Webster Shamu's wife during the recent violent protests that rocked Harare and other cities have been jailed a combined 32 years.
-
-
TWO Chitungwiza men have appeared in court for stealing the town’s only traffic light during last week’s demonstrations led by MDC-Alliance and its civil society allies.
-
Officer Commanding Chitungwiza Police District Chief Superintendent Sekayi Mujiwa says protestors that laid siege on Makoni Police Station in Chitungwiza, burning cars and destroying windows on Monday last week, had planned the attack and appeared to have received prior training.
-
Police are keen to interview Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) president Peter Gift Mutasa, activist Promise Mkwananzi and some MDC-Alliance party members in connection with looting, incitement of violence and destruction of property that occurred during violent demonstrations instigated by the opposition party last week.
-
MDC-Alliance Member of Parliament for Chiwundura Livingstone Chiminya will spend another week in remand prison while police are searching for two witnesses who were supposed to testify in the case, but disappeared before doing so.
-
-
At least 1 100 people have so far been arrested over violent protests that rocked the country last week.
-
President Mnangagwa yesterday denounced violence, saying while it is everyone’s right to protest, any demonstration should be done peacefully and within the law.
-
Attempts to ascribe last week’s pre-planned violence instigated by the opposition MDC-Alliance and its civil society allies to the fuel situation in the country is a false link, President Mnangagwa established yesterday.
-
Some looters who took part in last week’s opposition-instigated violent protests stashed groceries worth over $3 000 in a funeral parlour in Luveve and were busted by the police after they threw a three-day marathon party in the morgue, alarming residents.
-
-
We are not surprised at all, are we? The recent violence by the opposition MDC-Alliance and its civic society partners has dominated the headlines putting Zimbabwe on the spotlight once again.
-
Recent demonstrations in the country were not a local affair, but a way by Western countries to camouflage their goals on Zimbabwe and the African continent in general, Presidential spokesperson Mr George Charamba said yesterday.
-
The recent shutdown which was called for by the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) and its partners has put the private media into overdrive of painting a gloomy picture of Zimbabwe locally, regionally and internationally.