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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Demand for aid to the homeless is exceeding supply in Zimbabwe,
UNICEF says
UN
News Service
July 28, 2005
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=15193&Cr=zimbabwe&Cr1=
Despite calls
on the Government of Zimbabwe from senior United Nations officials
to stop demolishing housing, thousands of Zimbabweans lost their
homes within 24 hours of the appeals and the increasing demand for
assistance continues to outstrip the supply, the UN Children's Fund
(UNICEF) said.
"We have been
working around the clock for the better part of two months and are
improving the situation for tens of thousands, but such is the gravity
of the situation that we are asking the international community
to support the people of Zimbabwe," UNICEF Representative in Zimbabwe
Festo Kavishe said.
UNICEF said
the Porta Farm community felt the full force of the Operation Murambatsvina
(Restore Order) demolitions during the fact-finding visit of Secretary-General
Kofi Annan's Special Envoy for the evictions, UN-HABITAT Executive
Director Anna Tibaijuka, three weeks ago.
Suddenly made
homeless, an estimated 4,000 people fled from Porta Farm to either
their rural homes, or a government transit camp called Caledonia
Farm, it said, but Caledonia Farm was soon closed.
Ms. Tibaijuka
issued her report and appeal last Friday, as Mr. Annan condemned
the demolition.
Any family that
tried to rebuild on the ruins of Porta Farm this week witnessed
the return of the bulldozers, it said.
In response
to pleas from tens of thousands across Zimbabwe, UNICEF is providing
blankets and plastic sheeting as protection from the southern African
country's winter winds. The organization is also distributing 90,000
litres of water a day, providing sanitation facilities and supporting
chronically ill people with supplies for home-based care.
UNICEF said
it is continuing to step up its operations throughout the country
by helping to organize additional mobile medical clinics and planning
the further distribution of blankets and shelter materials for children
and their families.
The forced evictions
of hundreds of thousands of people, including 220,000 children,
have worsened the already dire situation in a country that has the
world's fourth-highest rate of HIV prevalence and is grappling with
fuel shortages, a growing food emergency, declining economic performance
and the sharpest rises in child mortality in the world, it said.
After conducting
an assessment of Zimbabwe's current needs, the UN Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said the two greatest
requirements were shelter and food. The UN and its partners would
decide whether to expand existing programmes, or to issue a new
appeal for assistance, it said.
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