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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Lawyers
appeal to AU over mass evictions
Rangarirai
Mberi, The Financial Gazette
June 16, 2005
http://www.fingaz.co.zw/fingaz/2005/June/June16/8720.shtml
THE Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) has written to the African Union’s
Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights over state-led mass evictions
that rights and opposition groups say have left up to a million people
destitute.
The rights lawyers’
move came as Australia announced it was tightening travel sanctions against
Zimbabwean government officials in response to the evictions, while the
United Nations special envoy for housing, Miloon Kothari, said UN secretary-general
Koffi Annan might make a statement soon on the evictions.
ZLHR projects lawyer
Harangu Nyamurindira confirmed to The Financial Gazette yesterday that
the lawyers had written to the African Union’s Commission on Human and
People’s Rights, the first stage towards lodging an official appeal to
the AU to intervene to end the dismantling of informal buildings and home
industries.
"We have written
a letter to the commission in which we are seeking recommendations from
the commission on this matter. This is a preliminary stage," Nyamurindira
said.
The Commission was
set up in 1987 to monitor human rights on the continent.
A statement from
Canberra on Tuesday said Australia would now demand visas from diplomats
travelling to Australia as a way to censure the Zimbabwean government
for what it described as a retributive drive against people the ruling
ZANU PF party "considered opposed to it".
In Geneva, Kothari,
who has angered the government by describing the mass evictions as "a
new form of apartheid", told the press that Annan had expressed concern
over the operation. Aid agencies were also being barred from reaching
affected families, Kothari said.
A joint blitz by police
and local government authorities has destroyed illegal homes and informal
market stalls in an operation government says is designed to restore Zimbabwe’s
decaying cities and weed out criminal elements said by police to have
been sheltering in illegal settlements. Thousands of families have been
sleeping in the open after police destroyed their homes.
The opposition Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC), which draws much of its support from urban
areas, has claimed that up to one million people have been directly affected
by the operation.
Information and Publicity
Minister Tichaona Jokonya, while conceding that many had been left homeless
by the operation, this week however disputed the opposition’s figures,
saying those affected were much less than 20 000.
Jokonya said the affected
people were being moved to Caledonia farm, a transit camp outside Harare.
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