Paper describes government as regime gone berserk
The Financial Gazette described the government’s proposed move to withdraw passports of Zimbabweans who were opposed to it as a sign of a regime gone berserk and nearing its end.
(21 VIEWS)
The Financial Gazette described the government’s proposed move to withdraw passports of Zimbabweans who were opposed to it as a sign of a regime gone berserk and nearing its end.
(21 VIEWS)
The Bulawayo daily, The Chronicle, called on the government to ban rogue non-governmental organisations which were reportedly handing out drought relief food to rural communities claiming it was coming from the opposition Movement for Democratic Change.
(37 VIEWS)
Police founds weapons at the house of a Movement for Democratic Change activist’s house at the height of the week-long stay-away that had been called for by the party but they did not claim that the weapons were intended for use during the demonstrations.
(43 VIEWS)
Movement for Democratic Change leader Morgan Tsvangirai said the militias would have to be dissolved in order to minimise the possibility of violence before any new elections could be held.
(45 VIEWS)
Former Home Affairs Minister John Nkomo threatened in 2001 to revoke the passports of Zimbabweans who were campaigning abroad for the imposition of sanctions on Zimbabwe.
(31 VIEWS)
The head of the Central Intelligence Organisation Happyton Bonyongwe told the High Court that he did not hear Movement for Democratic Change leader Morgan Tsvangirai say he wanted to kill, murder or assassinate President Robert Mugabe.
(41 VIEWS)
John Nkomo, who was Minister of Home Affairs at the time, ordered police to arrest people who were masquerading as liberation war veterans who were going around extorting money from company owners and employees on the pretext of solving long-standing labour disputes.
(27 VIEWS)