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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
ZIMBABWE:
UN hopes for greater access to displaced
IRIN News
August 15, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=48597
JOHANNESBURG
- The United Nations country team in Zimbabwe will meet with government
representatives to finalise an appeal to help those made homeless
by the controversial Operation Murambatsvina ('Drive out Filth')
campaign in urban areas.
UN Resident Coordinator Dr Agostinho Zacarias told IRIN on Monday
that the team had made concrete progress in formulating the appeal.
"The government of Zimbabwe has received our proposal - the draft
appeal - and they are looking at it. They said they would be coming
back to us with suggested amendments or adjustments they want made,"
Zacarias said.
Although he hoped the final appeal would be launched this week,
Zacarias noted that this could only happen "after our discussions
with the government, and we have to coordinate with our colleagues
in New York [at UN headquarters]".
Operation Murambatsvina affected over 700,000 people after the government
demolished informal homes and businesses in the country's urban
centres.
The campaign was heavily criticised by UN Special Envoy Anna Tibaijuka,
who said it "breached both national and international human rights
law provisions guiding evictions" and had resulted in a humanitarian
crisis.
News reports last week quoted Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights
(ZLHR) as saying the government was preventing aid from reaching
displaced families.
About 2,260 people have been living at Hopley Farm on the southern
outskirts of the capital, Harare, where they had gone for a week
or more "without a decent meal, clean water or sanitary facilities
or temporary shelter", ZLHR said in a statement.
Zacarias told IRIN that "WFP [World Food Programme], IOM [International
Organisation for Migration], UNICEF [the UN Children's Fund] and
MSF [Medecins Sans Frontieres] have all been able to access the
people at Hopley Farm since late last week" after negotiations with
authorities.
"Of course, the situation regarding access [to people in need] is
on the agenda for our discussions with the government. We are not
quite sure how many other 'Hopley Farms' there might be around the
country but ... we had difficulty in accessing the people there.
We have to negotiate access while we discuss strategies on how to
address the situation in its entirety," he noted.
Government participation in drafting the appeal was crucial to this.
"This appeal is the result of wanting to organise things with the
government ... the really important point is bringing the government
along with us, so that it opens up the humanitarian space [in the
country]," Zacarias stressed.
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