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Discussion
paper on effects of operations restore order
Jonah
Mudehwe, Executive Director, National Association of Non-Governmental
Organisations (NANGO)
June 15, 2005
1. Preamble
Whilst
acknowledging that the Government has a responsibility to lead its
people, protect the citizens, provide basic services and maintain
law and order in the country, concern has been raised over Operations
Restore Order (Murambatsvina).
I
therefore want to believe that it is within the above responsibility
that the Government has embarked on the project "Operation
Restore Order Murambatsvina" in order to move the country from
a state of disorderliness, crime and dirt to that of orderliness,
lawfulness and cleanliness. There is nothing wrong with the idea
of cleaning up cities and getting rid of crime.
Unfortunately
the current state of affairs in the country has been a gradual build
up over 1½ decade as people responded to lack of decent housing,
loss of jobs in the formal sector and the general rise in poverty.
The situation has been compounded by a rise in HIV/AIDs and overwhelming
increase in the number of orphans. The high inflation and a cost
of living beyond reach has also been facilitating factors.
Effecting a
project like Operation Restore Order against this background therefore
becomes a mammoth task. The question therefore becomes "How
are we moving from the current state of bad things to the desired
state of good things.
Chairperson,
every project has costs and benefits. It may be difficult for me
to talk about the benefits of Operations Restore Order, as I am
not privy to the master plan of the project. I shall therefore talk
about the effects/costs of the current project and some proposed
way forward.
2. Categories
of affected people
Those
are six categories of people who are affected directly by the current
operation.
Viz:
- Home seekers
– these are the people who have been staying in overcrowded hostels,
backyard shacks and are tenants or lodgers. Over the years, they
had become organized into housing co-operatives, most which are
registered. By the clean up exercise most of these people have
been displaced from their homes.
- Informal
traders – these constitute mainly of cross boarder traders and
operators of flea markets. With the destruction of flea markets,
which were their outlets, their livelihoods have been affected.
- Vegetable/Street
vendors – this is another group of people who were surviving from
selling vegetables and flowers within certain points of town.
- Home industrialists
(Siyaso/Gazaland) – Families have been surviving for a along time
from home industries. The clean-up exercise has also destroyed
their livelihood.
- Street kids/Street
people – for a long time the country has been battling with how
to deal with Street kinds. These have been cleared from the streets.
- Vulnerable
groups – The elderly, orphans, disabled, sick people and HIV/AIDs
patients, child headed households and female-headed households.
3. Effects
3.1. Commerce
and industry
- reduced productivity
due to absenteeism
- new pressure
on wage increases
- informal
sector had been sustaining the formal sector
- workers demanding
accommodation from employers
- company closures
- Increase
in bad debts
3.2. Family
- increase
in domestic violence
- tension in
the homes
- family life
disrupted by relatives seeking refuge
- exposure
of family to open space and bad weather
- some children
have stopped going to school – displacement
- loss of income
from informal trade/rental
3.3. Children
- schooling
has been interrupted
- costs of
transfers/uniforms
- problem of
transferring mid-term
- indecent
exposures
- children
traumatized
- who is taking
care of the movement of orphans
3.4. People
living with AIDs
- the network
for distribution of ARVs has been disrupted
- proximity
to major hospitals giving out drugs
- workplace
programmes disrupted
- exposure
of patience to bad weather
3.5. Elderly
- increased
stress
- homelessness
3.6. Social
fabric
- loss of hope/despair
- social conflicts
- diseases
outbreaks
- malnutrition
- loss of life
- loss of property
- loss of dignity
of human being
- threat to
national values
3.7. Macro
– economic/national development
4. Proposed
Way Forward
- Provide emergency
aid to people who are living out there in the cold. Access to
be provided to those who want to help.
- Destruction
and reconstruction cannot run concurrently. Stop the destruction
and re-deploy national efforts and resources to reconstruction.
- Mobilize
national support towards the master plan for reconstruction.
- Communication
to the people of what is going on – constant feedback on achievements.
Visit the NANGO
fact sheet
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