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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Harare
demands withdrawal of AU envoy
Zim-Online
July 06, 2005
http://www.zimonline.co.za/headdetail.asp?ID=10095
HARARE – Zimbabwe
has asked the African Union (AU) to withdraw its envoy and to follow
"proper procedure" when appointing a new emissary to assess
Harare’s controversial urban clean-up campaign, authoritative sources
told ZimOnline.
The sources
said that Mugabe was also expected to meet Alpha Konare, chairman
of the AU Commission that runs the daily affairs of the union and
Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo in Libya on the sidelines of
the AU summit, to discuss the issue of the continental body’s envoy
to Harare. Obasanjo currently chairs the 53-member AU.
A senior Harare
official, speaking anonymously, said: "What has been put forward
is that the AU withdraws its envoy currently in the country to allow
for proper procedures of notifying the government ahead of such
a mission ....this is as it should be, it is common in any diplomatic
relationships and Zimbabwe is not any different."
Balame Tom Nyandanga,
a rapporteur for refugees on the AU Commission on Human and People’s
Rights, is stuck in Harare, since arriving last weekend as government
officials refuse to clear him to visit families who were evicted
under the urban clean-up operation, insisting his mission was un-procedural
and in breach of protocol.
Konare dispatched
Nyanduga to Harare in a major U-turn as international pressure mounted
on the union not to remain silent in the face of gross human rights
abuses inflicted by the Zimbabwe government on poor urban families
it evicted en masse from their homes.
The government
exercise that Mugabe says is necessary to smash crime and restore
the beauty of Zimbabwe’s cities has displaced close to a million
people, many of whom are now living in the open without food or
clean water. The AU had earlier said it would not interfere with
the widely condemned clean-up operation because it was an internal
matter.
Yesterday, Nyanduga
said he would extend his stay in Zimbabwe as AU officials tried
to convince Harare to allow him to proceed with his mission.
"I am still
in the country but I don’t know for how long. I am continuing to
be in touch with the government on that (assessment trip)....there
will come a point in time at which we will talk about it,"
Nyanduga said.
But the sources
were adamant Harare wanted Nyanduga out of Zimbabwe although they
said he would not be deported as European Union election observer
team leader, Pierre Schori, was expelled just before the country’s
2000 general election.
Harare has however
accepted a United Nations envoy, Anna Tibaijuka, who is now in her
second week in Zimbabwe touring different parts of the country to
assess the impact of the mass evictions and how the world body could
intervene.
Earlier this
week, UN boss, Koffi Annan told journalists he had been in touch
with Mugabe and that he was awaiting Tibaijuka’s report before deciding
on what course of action to take.
"I personally
have been in touch with President Mugabe. We have discussed this
issue several times," Annan said in response to a question
whether he was happy with Africa’s silence on the mass evictions.
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