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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
approval delay halts S. African humanitarian shipment
Delia Robertson,
VOA News
August 17, 2005
http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-08-17-voa28.cfm
Johannesburg - The
South African Council of Churches has been waiting since the beginning
of August for Zimbabwe government import approval for a shipment of more
than 37 tons of humanitarian assistance. The aid is destined for Zimbabweans
who recently lost their homes and businesses in the government's forced
removal campaign.
For weeks, three truckloads
of maize, beans, cooking oil, and blankets have been ready to leave for
Zimbabwe.
On August 1 they were
sealed by South African customs officials, and blessed by Anglican Archbishop
Njongonkulu Ndugane. But within hours the South African Council of Churches,
the SACC, which has coordinated the relief, was told that the Zimbabwe
government required proof that the maize meal was not from genetically-modified
crops.
The Zimbabwe government
then refused to accept a certification from the supplier - demanding that
the South African government provide one.
This was done a week
ago, but SACC spokesman Ron Steele says the Zimbabwe government has still
not approved the shipment.
"Unfortunately these
are being held up now for over two weeks because of paperwork," he said.
"All that we require from the Zimbabwean authorities is a permit allowing
us to bring the goods in duty free, and so far this has been an ongoing
struggle to get this paperwork done."
Pearson Chigiji, the
political officer at the Zimbabwe High Commission in Pretoria told VOA
that the necessary paperwork to obtain the import permit has been forwarded
to Harare; and he said, it is receiving the full attention of the Zimbabwe
government. But he declined to say how long it would take and refused
to provide contact information for officials in Harare who would know.
Reverend Steele said
thousands of people have been dumped in the completely undeveloped camps
without power, or access to clean water. He said that at the camps he
went to, the government had provided only chemical toilets and plastic
sheeting. He says that food and blankets are urgently needed and that
the delay in receiving the import permit is causing a great deal of frustration.
"One does not want
to say they are obstructing, but they are playing by the rules and just
making it very, very difficult - the bureacracy and the red tape," he
said. "I know that everybody is very frustrated, the church leaders here
in South Africa are now really getting quite angry about the delay and
I know they have taken up the matter with the South African authorities."
Last month U.N. envoy
Anna Tibaijuka issued a damning report on the crackdown, saying that 700,000
people had lost their homes or livelihoods and that a further 2.4 million
had been affected to varying degrees. The Zimbabwe government has issued
its own 45-page report rejecting the U.N. findings.
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