The ban was announced a day after the government declared the
disease an emergency.
National police spokeswoman Charity Charamba said it would remain in
place until the cholera outbreak was under control. She urged
members of the public to heed the ban as it would assist in
alleviating the spread of the disease.
The main opposition leader, Nelson Chamisa, had planned to hold a
rally on Saturday where he may take a mock presidential oath, three
weeks after President Emmerson Mnangagwa was inaugurated following a
court decision upholding his disputed election victory.
Chamisa's spokesman Nkululeko Sibanda had no immediate comment.
The opposition leader visited clinics where cholera patients were
being treated earlier on Wednesday and called for collaboration
between city health officials and the government.
Police also said they had stopped the selling of food by illegal
vendors on the streets in two of the most affected suburbs and in
the city center.
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"Police will intensify patrols and surveillance in the Harare
central business district and will be out in full force to ensure
compliance with the government without fear or favor," a police
statement said.
More than 3,000 people had been infected by cholera and the disease
had now spread outside the capital, Health Minister Obadiah Moyo
told a meeting of government departments.
This is the biggest cholera outbreak since 2008 when 4,000 people
died and more than 40,000 were treated for this disease, according
to ministry of health data.
(Reporting by MacDonald Dzirutwe; Editing by James Macharia)
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