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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Zimbabwe:
Secret footage reveals desperate plight of homeless
Amnesty International
AI Index: AFR
46/026/2005 (Public)
News Service No: 229
August
19, 2005
http://news.amnesty.org/index/ENGAFR460262005
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the video online
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On 20 August,
Amnesty International will release secret footage recently smuggled
out of Zimbabwe. The footage graphically illustrates the plight
of the victims of the Zimbabwean government's Operation Murambatsvina
-- or Operation "Drive out the rubbish".
The footage
was filmed earlier this month and includes shots of victims currently
being held in Hopley Farm -- an informal camp on the outskirts of
Harare, set up after an official transit camp was closed by the
government. The plight of the homeless people at Hopley Farm was
only made public when human rights lawyers raise grave concern about
the situation and notified humanitarian agencies. Access by the
humanitarian agencies was denied until late last week.
"Rather
than confront the massive humanitarian crisis that its actions have
created, the government of Zimbabwe is compounding suffering and
human rights violations by attempting to hide the most visible signs
of internal displacement," said Audrey Gaughran, Amnesty International's
researcher on Zimbabwe.
"We now
know about Hopely Farm -- but how many other locations are there
that the world is not aware of? How many thousands of ordinary Zimbabweans
are now living in these horrifying conditions? We are calling on
the Government of Zimbabwe to immediately make public all the locations
to which it has transported victims of Operation Murambatsvia and
to allow full and unfettered humanitarian access to them."
Last month,
the UN released a damning report on the effects of Operation Murambatsvina.
Transit camps in Harare and Bulawayo were swiftly closed down and
the inhabitants taken, mainly under cover of darkness, to be scattered
in various rural areas -- such as Hopley Farm -- or sent back to
the sites of their demolished homes. Humanitarian actors and NGOs
believe the swift closure of the camps was a response to the UN
report.
Operation Murambatsvina
is estimated to have affected some 700,000 people. The Transit Camps
housed perhaps 5,000 - 6,000. The vast majority of the victims of
home demolitions appear to have been absorbed into now severely
overcrowded households in urban and rural areas or are sleeping
outside in small groups scattered across the country.
For an interview
on the issues raised by the footage, please contact:
Audrey Gaughran, Amnesty International, London: +44 (0)7881 787
063
Otto Saki, Zimbabwean Lawyers for Human Rightsmailto:jrose@amnesty.org,
Harare: +263 91 257 247
The material
is available for downlink at the following times from the following
unencrypted satellites:
0900 - 0915
GMT and 1300 - 1315 GMT
PATH 1 (covering
Europe): W2 XP B6 CH H
Downlink freq: 11189.83 Y
FEC: ¾
S/R: 5.632
PATH 2 (covering
Africa): AB3 MCPC XP C7 (BIT RATE: 7.785)
Downlink freq: 3727 RHCP
FEC: 7/8
S/R: 29.95
A script of
the footage is available here: http://news.amnesty.org/index/ENGAFR4619082005
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