KEY POINTS
  • Calm has been brought back to Zimbabwe's capital Harare after violence between security forces and protesters left 3 people dead.
  • The official result of Zimbabwe's election Monday is yet to be released, though incumbent President Emmerson Mnangagwa's ZANU-PF party is thought to have won the most parliamentary seats.
  • Protests began shortly after Nelson Chamisa, Zimbabwe's main opposition leader, said that his Movement for Democratic Change party had won the popular vote.
Zimbabwean riot police officers stand guard in front of the headquarters of the main opposition party Movement for Democratic Change on August 2, 2018, in the capital Harare.

Zimbabwean soldiers walked the streets of the capital Harare on Thursday as subdued calm returned a day after clashes between security forces and opposition protesters killed three people.

Gunfire crackled on Wednesday as troops, backed by armoured vehicles and a military helicopter, cleared the streets of demonstrators who accused the ruling party of trying to rig Monday's presidential election.