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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Zimbabwe:
More deaths as mass evictions continue unabated
Amnesty
International
AI Index:
AFR 46/021/2005 (Public)
News Service No: 180
30 June 2005
http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGAFR460212005
Amnesty International
has received information that at least three have died -- including
a pregnant woman and a four-year-old child -- during a chaotic mass
eviction at least 10,000 people from Porta Farm, an informal settlement
on the outskirts of Harare established by the government more than
10 years ago.
"Over the
last 48 hours, Porta Farm – a settlement of at least 10,000 people
-- has been obliterated. People have watched their lives being completely
destroyed – and many are now being forcibly removed in trucks by
police. At the moment we are not sure where they are being taken,"
said Kolawole Olaniyan, Director of Amnesty International’s Africa
Programme.
Some residents
have resisted the attempt to forcibly remove them and have been
injured in clashes with the police. Local human rights monitors
report that during the attempted forced removals this morning two
women -- one pregnant and the other extremely ill -- fell off the
trucks into which they were being herded. A four-year-old child
was reportedly run over by a truck. There are unconfirmed reports
of a second child dying – circumstances are not yet clear.
Amnesty International
called for an immediate halt to the mass forced evictions.
This week’s
mass evictions and today’s deaths take place as United Nations Special
Envoy Anna Kajumulo Tibaijuka visits Zimbabwe to look at the evictions
and their impact. Human rights groups in Zimbabwe have reported
on the situation at Porta Farm to Anna Kajumulo Tibaijuka.
An AU representative
will also arrive in Zimbabwe today to carry out a fact-finding mission.
Bahame Tom Nyanduga, Special Rapporteur of the African Commission
on Human and Peoples’ Rights responsible for Refugees, Asylum Seekers
and Internally Displaced Persons in Africa, will be in Zimbabwe
between 30 June and 4 July
2005. Amnesty
International welcomes this move by the AU to examine the humanitarian
and human rights crisis in Zimbabwe and strongly urges the Special
Rapporteur to investigate the situation at Porta Farm and to engage
with civic and human rights groups as fully as possible.
"Although
we welcome this visit by the AU representative and look forward
to seeing his report, we are concerned that his time in Zimbabwe
is very brief," said Kolawole Olaniyan. "We urge the AU
representative to see as much as possible in affected communities
– and not just visit those areas designated by the government. We
hope that he will have unfettered access to all areas."
Background
The
Zimbabwean government attempted to evict the residents of Porta
Farm last September using tear gas and excessive force. At least
11 people died following police misuse of tear gas. Amnesty International
called for a full investigation into the deaths, but none is known
to have taken place.
From 1 June
this year, Amnesty International members have been sending urgent
communications to the Government of Zimbabwe calling for an end
to the mass forced evictions and expressing concern that Porta Farm
could once again be a target.
Although it
is not clear where the Porta Farm residents are being taken, reports
indicate that some are being transported to Caledonia Farm, which
has been described as a transit camp. Amnesty believes that conditions
at Caledonia Farm are extremely poor with insufficient space, shelter,
water and sanitation.
Public Document
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