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ZIMBABWE:
UN envoy confirms reports of deaths
IRIN
News
July 01, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=47927
JOHANNESBURG - A spokesman
for the special UN envoy evaluating the impact of the controversial demolition
of informal settlements in Zimbabwe confirmed on Friday that they had
received reports of "two or three" deaths in areas where evictions had
been carried out.
"But we are yet to establish whether the deaths were circumstantial or
as a direct result of the demolition", said Sharad Shankardass, spokesman
for the UN Secretary-General's special envoy, Anna Tibaijuka.
The human rights NGO, Amnesty International, said on Thursday it had received
information that at least three people, including a pregnant woman and
a four-year-old child, had died during a mass eviction of at least 10,000
people from Porta Farm, an informal settlement on the outskirts of the
capital, Harare, established by the government more than 10 years ago.
"Over the last 48 hours, Porta Farm - a settlement of at least 10,000
people - has been obliterated. People have watched their lives being completely
destroyed, and many are now being forcibly removed in trucks by police.
At the moment we are not sure where they are being taken," the Director
of Amnesty International's Africa Programme, Kolawole Olaniyan, said in
a statement on Thursday.
Speaking to IRIN from Zimbabwe, Shankardass said Tibaijuka had visited
Porta Farm after the demolitions and met with the affected people to get
their version of the events.
"She has also asked for a detailed report from the government and the
MP responsible for the area," he added.
Shankardass pointed out that Tibaijuka was in Zimbabwe to conduct an "impartial
evaluation - she is not here to endorse anybody's actions. At the end
of her trip she will make her own assessment, which she will then present
to the UN Secretary-General".
Tibaijuka arrived in Harare on Sunday and later in the week met with President
Robert Mugabe, who allowed her to "go anywhere she wanted," he noted.
On Thursday the UN envoy met with local and international NGOs providing
humanitarian aid.
Meanwhile Alpha Oumar Konare, Chairperson of the African Union Commission,
has designated Bahame Tom Nyanduga, a member of the African Commission
on Human and Peoples' Rights, Special Rapporteur Responsible for Refugees,
Asylum Seekers and Internally Displaced Persons in Africa, to carry out
a fact-finding mission in Zimbabwe that began on 30 June and will conclude
on 4 July.
Nyanduga is expected to meet with the Zimbabwean authorities and relevant
human rights organisations and inspect areas where evictions and demolitions
have taken place.
The government started its crackdown on informal settlements and traders
over a month ago, arguing that the exercise was meant to rid urban centres
of criminal activities.
Human rights groups and the international community have condemned the
campaign, which has left over 320,000 people homeless.
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