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Last Updated: Monday, 2 April 2007, 17:14 GMT 18:14 UK
SA 'must act quickly' on Zimbabwe
President Robert Mugabe
Robert Mugabe said Mr Tsvangirai deserved to be beaten
Zimbabwe's opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai has called on South Africa's leader to act quickly and decisively to halt political violence in his country.

President Thabo Mbeki was appointed to mediate between Zimbabwe's government and Mr Tsvangirai's opposition party.

Mr Tsvangirai, of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), said he felt threatened by President Robert Mugabe.

"We will not allow the dictator to determine the future of our country," MDC President Arthur Mutambara said.

Two weeks ago, Mr Tsvangirai was beaten while in police custody.

"What is happening is a horrendous attack on the opposition, and I cannot put a wall around me," Mr Tsvangirai said at a news conference in Johannesburg, where he was seeking medical treatment.

"I'm as vulnerable as any other Zimbabwean."

Opposition targeted

On Saturday, Mr Tsvangirai said nine members of his Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) party had been badly beaten up in custody after being arrested last week.

The nine were had been due in court after being charged with attempted murder and illegal weapons possession for allegedly planning fire bomb attacks, but the hearing was postponed after the incident.

Morgan Tsvangirai
I'm as vulnerable as any other Zimbabwean
Morgan Tsvangirai

Mr Tsvangirai said change was now inevitable and President Mugabe should realise the end was near.

Mr Mugabe acknowledged his rival was beaten up two weeks ago, but said "he asked for it".

The president, who has just been endorsed by his party to stand for re-election next year, warned that troublemakers would be "bashed".

Mr Tsvangirai denied the MDC had any part in a fire bomb campaign, after an office of the Zanu-PF ruling party was attacked this week.

"We don't sanction or plan any bombings, we don't support violence," the MDC leader said.

'Corrupt, incompetent, criminal'

Mr Mutambara told an MDC meeting in Harare on Monday the recent meeting of African leaders in Tanzania had shown Mr Mugabe's standing was decreasing.

"Africans no longer accept Mugabe's grandstanding as a liberation hero, freedom fighter, land revolutionary, anti-imperialist and champion of African rights," he said.

"Our country is ruled by a corrupt, incompetent, criminal, and brutal kleptocracy, which has retained power through fraudulent elections."

Last week, Zanu-PF announced that Mr Mugabe would be its candidate in next year's election.

The poll would allow the president to say in power until 2013, when Mr Mugabe would be nearly 90.

However, analysts say there may be more unrest on the horizon, with more than 80% of Zimbabweans living in poverty, chronic unemployment and inflation running at more than 1,700% - the highest in the world.


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Morgan Tsvangirai on his hope for change in Zimbabwe



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