Opposition leader Nelson Chamisa |
Heaps of exasperated
Zimbabweans collected Thursday in a national protest over the united
states’s financial crumble and what the competition calls the new
authorities’s “cocktail of lies.” some cheered the protesters from
kilometers-long traces at gas stations that still have gas.
President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s administration is beneath growing
pressure twelve months after taking office following the removal of
longtime leader Robert Mugabe. Tensions continue to be high after July’s
disputed election that Mnangagwa narrowly gained.
Zimbabwe’s government is struggling to even set up a dependable foreign
money as many citizens in the southern African Kingdom say they’ve seen
no development on promises of “jobs, job, jobs.” inflation spiked to
twenty. Nine percentage in October, the best since 2009.
The protest played out peacefully under heavy security in the capital,
Harare, with opposition supporters singing anti-government songs.
Main opposition leader Nelson Chamisa, echoing some
of the other speakers, said life in Zimbabwe is more difficult now than
under Mugabe.
“Our lives are worse off,” he told the crowd,
promising to intensify the street protests until the political standoff
in the country is resolved.
Chamisa this week said he is ready for dialogue
with Mnangagwa, a longtime Mugabe enforcer. The ruling party says
Chamisa, who unsuccessfully challenged the election results in court and
claimed victory, should accept Mnangagwa’s win before talks can
commence.
The protesters delivered a petition to parliament
calling for political dialogue and an end to the economic crisis, and
Chamisa said he would deliver another one to southern Africa’s regional bloc.
“We are assuring them that we will not use guns to fight Mnangagwa,” he said.
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