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Children dance
around a burning tire
AP/Rob Cooper [33K]
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HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) — Police and troops fired tear gas and dragged
some protesters from their homes Wednesday, the third day of riots
triggered by food price increases.
Police skirmished with protesters in impoverished townships of the
capital, Harare, and then moved to flush out the demonstrators, angry over
last week's price increases of up to 30 percent for food, bread, sugar and
soft drinks.
The Roman Catholic Justice and Peace Commission said soldiers in
eastern Harare rounded up suspected demonstrators, dragging some from
their homes.
``They are going from house to house, getting hold of young men or
women who could be possible demonstrators and either drive them off
somewhere or beat them there,'' said Tarcisius Zimbiti, head of the
commission.
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Youths protest in
the streets
AP/Rob Cooper [30K]
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Witnesses in two western townships said police and army patrols forced
their way into homes and beat residents with batons and riot sticks.
Police fired tear gas and stopped vans ferrying commuters from one
township into the center of Harare, said Robert Manase, a market vendor.
The price increases came as Zimbabwe was suffering its worst economic
crisis since independence in 1980, with inflation at a record 70 percent
and unemployment above 50 percent.
About a dozen soldiers attacked four journalists in the township of
Dzivarasekwa.
The journalists were spread-eagled face down on the street at gunpoint
and beaten with whips and riot sticks, said Associated Press Television
News cameraman Chris Mazivanhanga, who was treated at a clinic for
bruises, welts on his back and shock.
The troops also attacked an Associated Press photographer and two South
African Broadcasting Corp. television crew members. The soldiers, who had
seen the journalists' film assault victims, confiscated the camera crews'
videotapes, Mazivanhanga said.
Police spokesman Wayne Bvudzijena said he had no information on the
alleged incidents involving the journalists.
Harare district police commander Faustino Mazango told state radio that
protesters had angered police by re-erecting barricades after streets had
been cleared.
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Police chase a
protester
AP/Rob Cooper [33K]
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``The patience of the police could run out and there could be
fatalities if youths go on erecting barricades,'' he said.
State radio said 58 people were arrested Tuesday in disturbances across
western and southern Harare, most on suspicion of violence and eight for
looting.
The rioting started Monday and spread across the southern and western
suburbs Tuesday with protesters stoning cars and trashing shops. Harare's
largest bakery said three of its trucks were looted of 5,000 loaves of
bread.
The last food riots, triggered in 1997 by a 25 percent increase in the
price of corn meal, left five people dead after President Robert Mugabe
deployed troops to end civil unrest.