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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
What
lies behind the Zimbabwe demolitions?
Joseph
Winter, BBC News
June 17, 2005
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/4101228.stm
The homes of
some 200,000 Zimbabwean city dwellers have been demolished in the
past three weeks, according to the United Nations. Police have been
moving from area to area, in some cases forcing people to knock
down their own homes. In others, they have turned up with bulldozers
to demolish structures which they say have been built illegally.
"We were busking, enjoying the winter sun when we heard trucks and
bulldozers roll in. There was pandemonium as we rushed to salvage
the little we could," one resident of the capital, Harare told the
BBC News website. "In no time the cottage I had called home for
three years was gone. Then it dawned on me that I was now homeless,
you try and pinch yourself and wake up but this was no dream. My
life had been shattered before my very own eyes." Worshippers at
a Harare mosque have even been made to destroy it, says opposition
MP Trudy Stevenson. Thousands of desperate Zimbabweans are living
on the streets, others have gone back to their rural homes, while
some have managed to squeeze into parts of the cities not yet touched
by what some are calling the "tsunami". President Robert Mugabe
said "Operation Murambatsvina [Drive out rubbish]" was needed to
"restore sanity" to Zimbabwe's cities, which he said had become
overrun with criminals.
His critics
say it is no coincidence that opposition to his rule is strongest
in urban areas - and that in March the opposition Movement of Democratic
Change (MDC) won almost all urban seats for a second election in
a row. "This is harassment of urban voters," MDC secretary general
Welshman Ncube told the BBC. He says the government wants people
to go to rural areas, where they can be controlled more easily.
"It could also be a pre-emptive strike against poor urban people
who will be worst affected by the inevitable hunger which is going
to stalk the population in the next few months." The UN World Food
Programme estimates that more than three million people will need
food aid in the coming year. Some of the areas where whole rows
of houses have been destroyed, such as Mabvuku and Tafara, have
seen anti-government riots in the past few years. So far, the security
forces have managed to put a lid on such protests and prevent them
spiralling into mass demonstrations capable of toppling the government.
But maybe Mr Mugabe does not want to take any chances.
Zimbabwean politics
is, however, rarely that simple. Many of the illegal structures
which have been demolished were built on farms seized from their
white owners in the past five years of a controversial land reform
programme. This is Mr Mugabe's core policy and most of those who
have moved onto the farms are supporters of his Zanu PF party. Zanu
PF chief whip Jerome Macdonald Gumbo points to this as proof that
the operation is not political. "Harare used to be a very smart
town. Now it has become dirty and dangerous," he said. "The exercise
is painful but it has to be done. It is a necessary evil." Mr Ncube
says that the government is actually quite glad to be moving against
the war veterans, who spearheaded the invasion of white-owned farms
in 2000, attacking opposition supporters as they went and paving
the way for Zanu PF's victory in the 2000 parliamentary elections.
"If they could destroy the war veterans, who have been holding this
government to ransom, that would be an added bonus," he says. Last
year, Jabulani Sibanda, the leader of the veterans of Zimbabwe's
1970s war of independence, was disciplined by Mr Mugabe, after being
identified with a Zanu PF faction which had fallen from the president's
favour.
Human rights
lawyer Brian Kagoro agrees that the eviction of Zanu PF supporters
from the farms shows that Operation Murambatsvina cannot simply
be described as punishment for pro-opposition urban voters. But
he says that whoever the victims are, their rights have been violated.
"They should have been given adequate notice. Children have been
pulled out of school and people with Aids have had to stop their
treatment." Some have been living in their shacks for more than
10 years and been told to demolish it in a single day, he says.
He also says that the government is destroying informal "flea markets"
in order to tighten its control of the economy. Most of all, the
government wants to bring all the foreign currency generated in
Zimbabwe into formal structures and stamp out the black market.
Some traders have been found with huge caches of foreign currency.
Mr Gumbo denies that the action has been unfair. "These people knew
that the structures were illegal - we always told them not to build
them. They did not think the government would take any action,"
he said. He also accuses the opposition of hypocrisy, after previously
criticising the government for tolerating a situation of lawlessness.
A coalition of opposition groups, including the MDC, last week organised
a general strike to protest at the demolitions but it was a failure.
Mr Ncube says that Zimbabweans are angry but they are not prepared
to stand up and take the risks needed to change the government.
"Every second person wants someone else to take action on their
behalf." So he is reluctant to predict that the demolitions will
alienate a new section of Zimbabweans from Zanu PF and drive them
into the arms of his party. "This government has been shooting itself
in the foot for a long time, alienating more and more constituencies.
The question is whether the people are willing to take political
action," he says.
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