| The opposition held a series of demonstrations over the last month |
Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe
has criticised judges who give permission for anti-government protests
which later turn violent.
| Mr Mugabe accuses the courts of being too lenient to protesters |
| Police say that they do not always have the resources to deal with demonstrations |
He has routinely blamed the country's economic problems on sabotage by Western critics of his policies - which include the seizure of white-owned commercial farms for black people.
The opposition says the latest demonstration ban is unconstitutional and has approached the High Court to challenge it.
Mr Mugabe was reported to have told a conference of the governing Zanu-PF's youth wing on Saturday that "enough is enough" and he would not permit violent protests to carry on.
The latest bout of violence began more than a week ago when tear gas and water cannon were used by police to stop protesters.
"Our courts, our justice system, our judges should be the ones who understand even better than ordinary citizens. They dare not be negligent in their decisions when requests are made by people who want to demonstrate," the Sunday News quoted Mr Mugabe as saying.
The president said there was violence each time the court had allowed the protests to go ahead. Police routinely blame a lack of manpower and the security threat as reasons for barring opposition protests, but their arguments have often been overturned by the High Court.
Mr Mugabe, 92, recently arrived back in Zimbabwe from abroad amid rumours about his state of health, joking at the main airport in Harare that he had died and been resurrected.