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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
No
refuge for evicted people
Institute
for War & Peace Reporting (IWPR)
(Africa Reports No 40, 14-Aug-05)
By James
Makwembere in Harare
August 14, 2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_040_4_eng.txt
Some of the
people evicted from their homes in Zimbabwean towns in recent weeks
are trickling back to their destroyed homes, hoping to rebuild their
lives and start afresh.
But many find
that as soon as they start building on the site of their flattened
shack, they are forced on to police trucks to be ferried out of
town again.
The government's
Operation Murambatsvina – Drive Out the Rubbish - was ostensible
to clean up Zimbabwe’s decaying towns and clear out criminals and
people working illegally. But many thousands of homes have been
bulldozed, with devastating social effects for some of the country's
most vulnerable people.
Ten weeks after
President Robert Mugabe’s police began the mass destruction programme,
countless numbers of poor people are struggling to pick up the pieces.
Most of the displaced are living in abject conditions, surviving
on charity. Their children’s education has been disrupted, perhaps
terminally, as there are no schools in the so-called "transit camps"
to which the families have been removed.
The government
said it plans a three trillion Zimbabwean dollar (940 million US
dollar] rehousing programme. But that is an empty promise, as the
government is close to bankrupt, and the funding does not appear
in the national budget figures.
The fate of
squatter camps like Porta Farm and Hatcliffe, on the outskirts of
the capital Harare is demonstrative of the effects of the government
campaign. The dazed residents have been creeping back furtively,
only to be greeted by the rubble of what a short time ago were their
houses.
Nixon Ndongwe
had a house at Porta Farm for 12 years before it was knocked down.
Like others who have nowhere else to go, Ndongwe, his wife Melody
and their three children made their way quietly back to Porta Farm
after officials suddenly announced they were closing the transit
camp where the family had been dumped.
They are among
perhaps 2,000 people who have returned to the homes which police
first smashed and then burned when they moved in in July.
They now survive
on help from well-wishers, particularly churches. "We came
back from Caledonia Farm [transit camp 30 kilometres outside Harare]
last week," a dejected Ndongwe told IWPR. "This is what
we have been saying all along - that we just don’t have anywhere
to go."
Families like
the Ndongwes felt they had no choice but to go back to Porta Farm
after the government failed to deliver on a promise to allocate
them with new land plots, but closed the transit camp anyway.
Despite the
government’s public claims that it has allocated people new housing
plots, Ndongwe and many thousands of others have not benefited because
they are unable to meet all the conditions. To apply for one of
the limited places, they would need a rent card, a marriage certificate
and a salary slip – none of which people them are likely to possess.
"My life
has just been destroyed because of government’s actions," said
Ndongwe. "Because of the government I lost my house. We have
no food. They are telling everyone that we were given plots, but
it’s not true."
It was, ironically,
President Mugabe who ordered the creation of Porta Farm back in
1991, when 30,000 people were rounded up from squatter camps scattered
across Harare and housed in the new settlement so that they would
be invisible from view during that year’s Commonwealth summit.
Those now returning
to Porta Farm and Hatcliffe have not yet put up permanent shacks,
fearing that the government will return and destroy them again.
Instead, at sunset they put up makeshift shelters of corrugated
iron and plastic, hoping to ward off the chilly night temperatures
that dip below zero in the short but sharp southern African winter,
and dismantle them before sunrise.
"We are
afraid that they might come back and drive us away. We saw what
they did to our homes and can’t take chances any more," said
Benedict Chiwora, whose shack at Porta Farm was destroyed in the
blitz. "So we only build something for the night in case they
come for us."
Chiwora added
that he had been told by Harare City Council that he would note
be allocated a housing plot because he did not have a pay slip.
Last week, the
police came back, and loaded the Ndongwes and others onto trucks,
and dumped them on the road to the eastern border city of Mutare.
As the transit
camp at Caledonia Farm, inmates were ordered onto trucks last week
and driven away to unknown destinations.
Also last week,
police evicted hundreds of homeless families who had been given
refuge in churches in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe’s second city, where pastors
and priests were providing temporary sanctuary for victims of Operation
Murambatsvina.
Riot units raided
the churches and loaded the dispossessed people into trucks. Police
said they had instructions "from the bosses to take the victims
to Tsholotsho", referring to a rural community in an area of severe
drought some 120 km northwest of Bulawayo.
The police raids
have deeply angered the Churches in Bulawayo, a coalition of churches
which has come together because of the demolition programme and
the resulting humanitarian crisis.
"The removal
of the innocent, poor, weak, voiceless and vulnerable members of
society by riot police was uncalled for and unnecessary," said
the coalition in a statement. "It is inhuman, brutal and insensitive
and in total disregard of human rights and dignity."
Meanwhile police
barred churches and non-government groups from entering Helensvale
Farm, a transit camp 20 km from Bulawayo that is the second largest
holding facility for families whose homes have been bulldozered
and burned in the city.
"There
have been no provisions for the people at the transit camp since
we were ordered off Helensvale farm," said the Reverend Ray
Motsi, a spokesman for the church coalition. "And we do not
know what the people are eating now because we did not supply them
with long-term food and other provisions. The reports we got from
the camp are worrying."
Pastor Moyo,
another of the church aid coordinators, said amenities at the camp
were almost non-existent, and that armed police are stationed at
the entrance gates to Helensvale Farm to check people entering and
leaving the camp.
The government
has reacted angrily to a highly critical United Nations report on
Operation Murambatsvina, saying the findings are "biased, and
did not take into consideration the effort of the government to
provide accommodation".
The report,
order by UN Secretary General Kofi Annan, said the operations had
been carried out in a haphazard manner and that those responsible
for the clearances should be prosecuted.
*James Makwembere
is the pseudonym of an IWPR contributor in Zimbabwe.
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