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ZIMBABWE: Annan "concerned" with government refusal of
aid
IRIN News
November 01, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=49892
JOHANNESBURG
- Although victims of Zimbabwe's recent urban clean-up campaign
remain in desperate need of humanitarian assistance, the government
has rejected offers of help from the United Nations (UN).
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan's spokesman said in a statement
that Annan was "deeply concerned by the humanitarian situation in
Zimbabwe" and disturbed by the continued suffering.
A UN report estimated that Operation Murambatsvina - which the government
said was aimed at clearing slums and flushing out criminals - had
left more than 700,000 people homeless or without a livelihood after
kicking off in mid-May.
Annan made a "strong appeal to the government of Zimbabwe to ensure
that those who are out in the open, without shelter and without
means of sustaining their livelihoods, are provided with humanitarian
assistance in collaboration with the United Nations" and other aid
agencies.
Months after the eviction campaign the UN continued to receive reports
that tens of thousands of people were still homeless and in need
of assistance.
"He is particularly dismayed to learn that the government of Zimbabwe's
ad-hoc inter-ministerial cabinet committee has rejected offers of
UN assistance," Annan's spokesman noted.
Zimbabwe's Minister of Local Government, Public Works and Urban
Development stated in an official letter to the UN that there "is
no longer a compelling need to provide temporary shelter [to people
left homeless by the clean-up campaign] as there is no humanitarian
crisis".
The minister also claimed that the government's interventions had
addressed the most urgent shelter needs.
However, the secretary-general's spokesman commented, "The above
statements directly contradict the report by the Secretary-General's
Special Envoy on Human Settlements Issues in Zimbabwe, Ms Anna Tibaijuka,
as well as most recent reports from the United Nations and the humanitarian
community. A large number of vulnerable groups, including the recent
evictees as well as other vulnerable populations, remain in need
of immediate humanitarian assistance, including shelter. Furthermore,
there is no clear evidence that subsequent government efforts have
significantly benefited these groups."
The spokesman noted that the government had taken the decision to
decline assistance despite extensive consultations on relief efforts
in the past few months between the UN and Harare. "Meanwhile, the
impending rainy season threatens to worsen the living conditions
of the affected population."
An aid worker in Harare told IRIN there was no indication that the
government's attempt to ease the suffering of those affected by
the clean-up had worked. Houses being built under the government's
'Garikai' (Live Well) programme were being occupied by civil servants,
police and soldiers, "while those affected by the clean-up are being
sent to rural areas".
The humanitarian community had been "waiting for that letter from
the minister", hoping it would give them the go-ahead to provide
assistance, but the offer was turned away.
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