MDC heckle Mugabe in parliament
MPs from Zimbabwe's main opposition party heckled and jeered
President Robert Mugabe, as he opened parliament five months after
disputed polls. "You killed people, we won't forget that," they shouted,
while Mr Mugabe listed government achievements. Correspondents say such
scenes are unprecedented in Zimbabwe, which Mr Mugabe has governed since
1980.
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Mugabe |
At the start of his speech, Mr Mugabe said there was "every
expectation" that a power-sharing deal would be agreed. The opposition
says parliament should not have been opened until the deadlocked talks
were concluded. The Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) earlier said it
would boycott Mr Mugabe's speech, saying it does not recognise his
legitimacy. Following the March elections, Mr Mugabe's Zanu-PF lost its
majority in the House of Assembly for the first time since independence
in 1980. On Monday, MDC chairman Lovemore Moyo was elected to be speaker
of parliament.
Zanu-PF's Edna Madzongwe on Monday won the presidency of the upper
house, the Senate, where Mr Mugabe's party has a majority.
In his speech, Mr Mugabe said he regretted the "isolated cases of
political violence" earlier this year and blamed all parties. The MDC
accuses Zanu-PF of organising a campaign of violence to ensure victory
in the presidential run-off in June.
It says some 200 people were killed and 200,000 forced from their
homes. MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai withdrew from the presidential
run-off, citing the violence.
MP arrested
The MDC MPs refused to stand when Mr Mugabe entered parliament,
before booing him. Mr Mugabe's speech was occasionally drowned out as
they sang that his party was "rotten". Correspondents say he looked
annoyed and raced through the final lines of his speech. The BBC's Karen
Allen says this was humiliating for Mr Mugabe, as the speech was
broadcast live on national television. Meanwhile, the AP news agency
reports that an MDC MP was arrested at his home on Tuesday. One of his
colleagues is in custody after being detained when he turned up at
parliament to be sworn in on Monday. A second MDC MP was briefly
detained on Monday.
The MDC says this is part of a campaign of intimidation but the
police say those accused are wanted in connection with murder, rape and
political violence. No senior Zanu-PF officials have been arrested over
the violence.
'New era'
Mr Mugabe arrived at the opening of parliament in the capital Harare
to cheers from his supporters outside, the AFP news agency reports. As
he arrived outside the parliament building in a vintage Rolls Royce,
many in the crowd chanted: "He is our father. He is our leader."
-BBC
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