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Disgusted
by the demolition of poor people's homes and market stalls by Government
of Zimbabwe
Southern Africa Federation of the Disabled (SAFOD)
June
20, 2005
Save our
souls (SOS)
TO: Southern
African Development Community (SADC)
African Union (AU)
United Nations (UN)
SUBJECT:
Disgusted by the demolition of poor people's homes and market
stalls by government of Zimbabwe
1. The Southern
Africa Federation of the Disabled (SAFOD) is an organization of
national federations of organizations of disabled people from Angola,
Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland,
Zambia and Zimbabwe, with its offices in Zimbabwe and Botswana.
SAFOD was formed in 1986 and was registered as a non-profit making
and non-partisan organization in Zimbabwe in October 1989 and Botswana
in October 2004. Since its formation, SAFOD has coordinated and
implemented a number of development programmes designed to address
the socio-economic rights of disabled people in Southern Africa.
SAFODs
mission is: To help society to transform itself into a
new society where all people, including disabled people, women and
workers, men and children are treated with dignity, respect and
on the basis of equality.
2. It is in
view of the above that as SAFOD we are appalled and disgusted by
the destruction of peoples homes and businesses by the Zimbabwean
Government in the so-called clean-up campaign Operation Murambatsvina
(translated as drive out the rubbish). The campaign
which has been in force for close on to three weeks now has seen
thousands of people living in the urban areas of the country being
evicted from their homes and market stalls. During the forced evictions
which are being carried out without notice and without court orders,
police and other members of the security forces have been using
excessive force to either burn or pull down homes and informal market
stalls, destroying property, and beating up individuals.
In Harare alone,
the capital city of Zimbabwe, an estimated 300 000 families have
so far been displaced by the clean-up campaign, and there are police
threats that this campaign will spread to other areas beyond the
urban centres.
Thousands of
informal traders were arrested during the crackdown for not
possessing trading licences, and their goods were either destroyed
or confiscated. Why on earth should a government do this to its
own defenceless law-abiding citizens?
As SAFOD we
are particularly concerned with the situation of disabled men and
women, and their families, who have been affected by this diabolic
operation. According to World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates,
disabled people represent a significant percentage of any population;
they constitute not less than 10% of the population. Being the poorest
of the poor, and therefore unemployed, a majority of disabled urban
dwellers were living in the type of housing units that were destroyed.
For those who were running small businesses such as fruit and vegetable
stalls, hair salons, flea markets, etc, also had their businesses
destroyed. The forced destruction and/or closure of informal businesses
and settlements has obviously worsened the situation of disabled
people and their families in the country.
Some of the
affected disabled people were women that had been assisted with
funding by SAFOD and other local and international agencies to set
up their own income generating projects that have now been destroyed.
These people no longer have the means to earn a living and are sleeping
out in the cold. Their future is bleak and there is no clear solution
to their predicament. What is clear is that government itself cannot
offer any meaningful solution to this problem as all they have done
so far is to either auction or abuse peoples property, and
to remove some of the affected people to some remote farms they
have designated as Transit Camps. These farms are not
only just bush and crowded but also have no suitable toilets and
clean water.
At one such
farm called Caledonia, for example, people are living in small refugee-type
of tents which are not suitable for human habitation. People are
living as refugees in their own country, and children of affected
families are no longer attending school. One shudders to imagine
the situation of HIV and AIDS patients who have been receiving home-based
care and were living in the homes that have been demolished by the
Government.
3. As Operation
Murambatsvina or Restore Order is a nation-wide
campaign, there are fears that this exercise will spread fast to
outlying areas of the country, including smaller towns and growth
points. This, in our view, is a programme that is not in the interest
of anybody, whether rich or poor. Whereas the rest of the world
is talking about making poverty history through the
realization of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), the Zimbabwe
Government, through its policies, is promoting impoverishment of
its own citizens. Someone somewhere should intervene to stop the
on-going activities. This is an urgent SOS to the SADC, African
Union, and the United Nations. We urge you to urge the Zimbabwe
Government to immediately stop this operation and assist the affected
people, especially disabled people, to get on with their lives and
business operations without interference. The international community
is being further urged to render any form of support that can help
the affected people to start all over again!
We thank you
in advance for your support.

Alexander M.
Phiri
Director General
SAFOD
CC:
- Disabled
Peoples International (DPI)
- Pan African
Federation of the Disabled (PAFOD)
- African Decade
Secretariat
- Civil Society
Organisations
Visit the SAFOD
fact sheet
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