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Monthly
Monitoring Report - July 2005
Zimbabwe Peace Project (ZPP)
August 18, 2005
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Executive
Summary
"Operation
Restore Order, while purporting to target illegal dwellings and
structures, and to clamp down on alleged illicit activities, was
carried out in an indiscriminate and unjustified manner, with
indifference to human suffering ........." (UN special
envoy to Zimbabwe Anna Tibaijuka on Operation "Murambatsvina")
 The
widely discredited ‘clean up’ exercise continued to dominate the
month of July, with the much awaited UN report, albeit damning,
occupying the crest of media stories on the controversial ‘clean
up’ blitz.
The unfolding
drama created by the Operation Murambatsvina left in its
wake, a trail of destruction in various forms including, inter
alia, loss of shelter, politically motivated violence and associated
human rights abuses.
In a futile
attempt to ‘hide’ the ills brought about by the UN-condemned blitzkrieg,
the national authorities laboured to deodorise the human rights
violations by insisting that the campaign was positive.
Events chronicled
below serve to indicate the extent to which the perceived disastrous
crusade caused untold suffering countrywide.
In a very serious
development at Taratu farm (Chipinge north) on 8 July, the
MP Morris Sakabuya, in the company of two officials from Chipinge
town council N and D reportedly forced the Ps, a white elderly couple
who own the farm to hide at least three dozen families who had been
staying in the open after being displaced by Operation Murambatsvina.
This came after a false alert was made that the UN special
envoy Annah Tibaijuka’s team would visit the constituency to assess
the ‘clean up’.
In what could
be an outright case of human rights abuses, it was reported that
M, whose dwelling in the MacGregors section of Sakubva high density
area in Mutare Central was destroyed during Operation
Murambatsvina, reportedly died on 7 July of pneumonia due
to exposure as he was now living in the open.
Traditional
leaders reportedly continued to victimise individuals in the name
of cleansing their villages of ‘undesirable elements’. It was reported
in Bikita West on the 10th that SM and JC, who
were among scores of people displaced by the ‘clean up’ campaign,
were reportedly asked to prove their allegiance to the ruling party
before getting the chiefs’ approval for them to resettle in such
villages like Makuwe and Munyika.
The capital
city also had its fair share of Operation Murambatsvina-induced
human rights violations. For example it is alleged that on the 12th,
JM of the MDC was allegedly assaulted by RM, a Zanu PF supporter
in Budiriro 3 after the said victim expressed support of the damning
UN report on the contentious ‘clean up’ campaign.
In a very unusual
occurrence in Dzivarasekwa on the 5th,
three MDC supporters, TN, CC and M were allegedly assaulted by five
Zanu PF supporters for helping the police to destroy vendors’ stalls.
The police are said to have acted immediately to arrest the alleged
perpetrators.
The Midlands
province reported a high number of human rights violations as a
result of the far-from-peaceful ‘clean up’ exercise. For example
in Mberengwa West on 3 July, a gang of suspected Zanu PF
supporters led by BM allegedly assaulted AC in Chegato ward using
an assortment of weapons including an axe handle after the said
victim was heard vehemently criticising the ‘clean up’ campaign.
It is said the victim only came to after relatives rushed him to
Chegato hospital where he received treatment.
The divisive
‘clean up’ campaign has left a dent on the country’s human rights
record. It is the ZPP’s view that this works against the interests
of the country to earn such an undesirable ‘accolade’ and has once
again made Zimbabwe the centre of unwanted international attraction.
The ZPP continues
to urge national policy makers to dutifully review their domestic
policies, if at all they intend to be seen as credible candidates
to steer the country out of the quagmire we find ourselves in.
We also urge
the government to work closely with relevant bodies, internationally
or locally in coming up with peaceful solutions to the humanitarian
crisis created as a result of Operation Restore Order.

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