![The police have been accused of harassing opposition supporters [AP] The police have been accused of harassing opposition supporters [AP]](http://mwcnews.net/images/stories/Africa/A/1/2/MDC-official.jpg) | | The police have been accused of harassing opposition supporters [AP] | Robert Mugabe, the Zimbabwean president, has said that the country's war veterans are ready to fight to prevent the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) from taking power.
As the June 27 presidential run-off looms, Mugabe was quoted in the local press on Friday as telling supporters at a rally on Thursday that he did not want the country to go to war but that Zimbabwe would never be ruled by the MDC. The Herald newspaper quoted him as saying: "It will never happen that this land which we fought for should be taken by the MDC so that they can give it back to our former oppressors, the whites." He said the war veterans told him "this country was won by the barrel of the gun and should we let it go at the stroke of a pen? Should one just write an X and then the country goes just like that?" The 84-year-old also warned voters against making a "mistake". Mugabe took power as a guerrilla leader in 1980, liberating the country then called Rhodesia, from British rule. Treason charges The MDC, whose leader Morgan Tsvangirai was arrested and released twice on Thursday, had two campaign buses impounded on Friday. The MDC said that the move was made to derail their campaign. Meanwhile, Tendai Biti, the MDC's secretary-general, is set to face a treason charge in court on Saturday, an opposition lawyer has said. The charge carries a potential death sentence. Lawyer Selby Hwacha said on Friday the high court ordered Biti to be brought before court in response to an opposition plea. The court is likely to ask why he should not be released. Biti was arrested on his return from abroad on Thursday. Police have not released any details concerning why he has been charged with treason. State-run Zimbabwe Television said in a report that a secret document written by Biti had been unearthed which it claimed showed how teachers employed by the electoral commission had "agreed to overstate the vote" for a payment. Wayne Bvudzijena, a national police spokesman, told the AFP news agency that Biti will also be charged for proclaiming victory for the party in the March 29 joint presidential and parliamentary elections before the official announcement of results. Biti left the country shortly after he had declared that the MDC had won the general elections, despite official results not yet being released. 'Organised intimidation' The MDC won the first round of elections on March 29 but tensions have escalated since then. ![Tsvangirai has been detained four times in the last nine days while campaigning [AFP] Tsvangirai has been detained four times in the last nine days while campaigning [AFP]](http://mwcnews.net/images/stories/Africa/A/1/2/Tsvangirai-detained.jpg) | | Tsvangirai has been detained four times in the last nine days while campaigning [AFP] |
Tsvangirai officially fell just short of an outright victory over Mugabe in the first round but insists he in fact won more than 50 per cent and is only taking part in a run-off vote under protest. Tsvangirai, human rights groups and Western nations have alleged that Mugabe has used organised intimidation and violence to win the presidential run off. Mugabe blames the MDC for the violence and has continually portrayed Tsvangirai as a puppet of Britain. Forty African leaders, including former heads of state, business leaders, academics and diplomats, said in an open letter published on Friday that it was "crucial" that the run-off be seen as "free and fair". "It is crucial for the interests of both Zimbabwe and Africa that the upcoming elections are free and fair," they said. Signatories included Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Kofi Annan, the former UN secretary-general.
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