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Rights
Group: Zimbabwe evictions violate international law
Lisa
Schlein, VOA
June 09, 2005
http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-06-09-voa36.cfm
The human rights
group, the Center on Housing Rights and Evictions (COHRE) says Zimbabwe's
mass evictions campaign could amount to a crime against humanity.
The group adds that
the pattern of violations in Zimbabwe's mass eviction campaign horrendous
and undeniable. It says the government of Robert Mugabe is in flagrant
breach of the right to housing enshrined in several international human
rights conventions ratified by Zimbabwe.
COHRE's Deputy Director,
Jean du Plessis, says the continued demolition of slum dwellings may constitute
a crime against humanity. He notes the statute of the International Criminal
Court clearly prohibits the deportation and forcible transfer of populations
under certain conditions.
"Even if a case could
have been made that these communities are living illegally and they should
not be there and in terms of national law they need to be removed, the
procedures followed at the most basic level are totally incorrect and
unjust," he said. "In terms of no advance notice given, no alternatives
being considered for where people are going to stay and simply breaking
down peoples' houses. And, this is internationally recognized as the way
not to do it."
Since the campaign
started three weeks ago, COHRE estimates more than 200,000 people have
been forcibly and brutally evicted from their homes. More than 22,000
people have been arrested for so-called illegal trading.
It says thousands
of homeless people, many of them children, are forced to sleep on the
streets in bitterly cold weather. It notes winter temperatures have dropped
to below five degrees celsius at night.
The government of
Zimbabwe says Operation Restore Order, as it is called, is necessary to
prevent illegal trading in commodities and foreign currency.
Mr. du Plessis notes
Zimbabwe's economy is in crisis, with 70 percent of the population out
of work. He says the informal economy is the only way poor people can
survive. He says President Mugabe's eviction campaign has deprived these
people of their only remaining sources of income and shelter.
"If you then take
a community that has organized itself to survive and you take away their
housing and you destroy the place where they stay and where they are secure
and their networks, you set them back by a very long period," he said.
"They have to redo all of that again in order to survive. So, we have
absolutely no doubt that people are going to die. Many people are going
to die as a consequence of these particular evictions."
COHRE has sent an
urgent letter to President Mugabe and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Among its requests, the organization calls on the government to stop the
evictions, to provide emergency relief supplies to those displaced and
to provide alternative and adequate accommodation to those who have been
made homeless.
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