Zimbabwe opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, accused of plotting to "eliminate" President Robert Mugabe, is due to return to court on Monday for the continuation of his treason trial. "The matter is proceeding tomorrow (Monday)," his spokesman, William Bango told AFP. The court sat for one day last month, after a four-month break in the high-profile trial of the leader of the official opposition, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC). The 2 December hearing was brief because state lawyers had lodged an application with the court to tighten the charges against Tsvangirai. Bango said the MDC expected Judge Paddington Garwe to deliver his ruling on Monday before the trial proceeds. "We are expecting a ruling on whether they (the state) can alter the charges or not," Bango said. Tsvangirai is on trial for allegedly plotting to assassinate Mugabe and arrange a military coup before the March 2002 presidential election, which he lost to Mugabe. He denies the charges for which he could be hanged. The state accuse Tsvangirai, who attended a meeting in Montreal, Canada in December 2001 with political consultant Ari Ben Menashe, of allegedly requesting help to eliminate Mugabe ahead of 2002 presidential elections. |