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Friday 7th April 2017
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<blockquote data-quote="JonnyP" data-source="post: 769412" data-attributes="member: 17918"><p>So were the anti-Mugabe protests led by the ZCTU that I mentioned earlier. They were peaceful. I have also encountered peaceful protests (political) in Egypt, Kenya and various countries in Europe. The only ones that were not peaceful were in South Africa. Yes, most were met with police (in some cases brutally), but this did not lead to looting and pyromania. During the Jan 25 2011 protests in Egypt I had friends and relatives who were stuck there. The only inconvenience they found was the curfew enforced by the police and later army. Even then, the threat of violence once the police had disappeared was low and generally people looked after their own communities.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="JonnyP, post: 769412, member: 17918"] So were the anti-Mugabe protests led by the ZCTU that I mentioned earlier. They were peaceful. I have also encountered peaceful protests (political) in Egypt, Kenya and various countries in Europe. The only ones that were not peaceful were in South Africa. Yes, most were met with police (in some cases brutally), but this did not lead to looting and pyromania. During the Jan 25 2011 protests in Egypt I had friends and relatives who were stuck there. The only inconvenience they found was the curfew enforced by the police and later army. Even then, the threat of violence once the police had disappeared was low and generally people looked after their own communities. [/QUOTE]
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