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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Demolitions
in Zimbabwe hamper Swiss aid work
Matthew
Allen, Swiss Info.org
July 30, 2005
http://www.swissinfo.org/sen/swissinfo.html?siteSect=106&sid=5975797&cKey=1122741093000
Swiss aid agencies
say Zimbabwe’s controversial slum-clearance programme has severely affected
their work in the African country.
On Thursday Harare
said that the demolitions, which razed several townships to the ground,
had come to an end. But the United Nations estimates that the operation
has left about 700,000 people without homes.
The Swiss Agency for
Development and Cooperation (SDC) has channelled emergency cash reserves
into Zimbabwe to help people affected by the clearances.
The agency has already poured SFr1.39 million ($1.07 million) into the
country so far this year, roughly the same amount as was spent on Zimbabwe
for the whole of 2004, with SFr680,000 earmarked for food and milk distribution.
"Zimbabwe is in a vicious circle of structural and social collapse, made
worse by the town clearances," SDC spokesman Jean-Philippe Jutzi told
swissinfo.
"The main problem we face is corruption. We have to be vigilant to make
sure this money reaches the intended areas."
Swiss charity Heks
has been working in Zimbabwe since before the country’s independence in
1980. It said that its programmes had suffered a huge setback as a result
of the government’s policy.
Spokeswoman Barbara Müller told swissinfo that the worst affected
project was a workshop that had been in operation for eight years in the
township of Chitungwiza, providing training in carpentry and needlework
to enable local people to earn a living.
"The premises have been completely demolished and much of the equipment
has also been lost," said Müller.
"Former trainees have also had their workshops destroyed, taking away
their ability to make a living for themselves."
Müller added
that the extent of the damage was not yet clear, but confirmed that several
staff members had lost their homes.
"We must find out how we can get together and continue our work under
the changed circumstances. The people who have lost everything... are
resilient and will carry on despite this setback."
The Zimbabwean government has defended the slum-clearance campaign, arguing
that it was a means of reducing crime.
It has also pledged to build new homes for those who have been uprooted.
In a related development,
the Geneva-based World Council of Churches has donated SFr500,000 in aid
and issued a protest to Zimbabwe’s government.
It said the clearances of slums had been carried out "at a time when the
rural areas are particularly unable to absorb those expelled from the
urban areas because of the effects of drought".
The protest comes in the same week that the UN Security Council discussed
a report on the demolition of the slums.
The report, compiled by UN special envoy Anna Tibaijuka, said the campaign
violated international law.
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan has described the clearance programme
as a "catastrophic injustice to Zimbabwe's poorest citizens".
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