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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Children
more vulnerable after 'Murambatsvina'
The Standard (Zimbabwe)
April 22, 2006
http://www.thestandard.co.zw/viewinfo.cfm?linkid=11&id=632
A
recent survey conducted by Women and AIDS Support Network (WASN)
has established that several thousands of children were victims
of the government sanctioned "Operation
Murambatsvina" which displaced more than 700 000 people
last year.
The survey was
carried out in 20 schools in Harare and the few areas that were
sampled reveal a frightening pattern of children being displaced
by the government's ill-advised move.
The operation
launched last May right in the middle of the cold season was condemned
internationally.
After the operation,
it emerged that the ruling class was uneasy with the level of disgruntlement
among ordinary people because of the regime's poor economic and
political policies.
Rugare Primary
School had 1 753 pupils before the operation. It was found that
after the operation, 397 children could not be accounted for.
Chitsere Primary
lost 313 children to the Tsunami.
At Tafara Primary
School, there were 1 785 children before the clean up but 1 489
after the exercise, meaning the whereabouts and welfare of 296 children
is unknown.
Epworth primary
school authorities are not aware of what happened to 250 children
as they disappeared from the school during the clean up exercise.
Several schools
lost on average between 50 to 80 pupils and no known programmes
have been put in place by the government to cater for their welfare.
There have been
reports of increases in cases of child labour on farms and in the
number of child prostitutes around the country.
Mary Sandasi,
the executive director of WASN, said: "Overall, the girl child
has been greatly affected as most parents found it difficult to
leave them with their neighbours or relatives. As a result, a greater
percentage of the children who moved were girls.
They also dropped
out of school. When girls drop out of school, chances of getting
involved in sexual activities become high, thereby increasing the
chances of being infected with HIV and STIs."
Sandasi said
teachers who had been interviewed complained of losing very intelligent
pupils while infants who were suffering from HIV had also been affected.
She said her
organisation was deeply concerned about the fact that a lot of children
were now exposed to abuse after the displacement.
"Some of
the children now stay with relatives and this increases the chances
of children being abused as people are squatting in small single
rooms. Some cases of rape have been reported to the school heads
and senior teachers," Sandasi said.
She said the
research was designed to assess the impact of displacement on school-going
girls and the impact on children who were on treatment for HIV and
Aids.
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