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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Amnesty
International's concerns at the 56th session of the Executive Committee
of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees - Zimbabwe
extract
Amnesty International
AI Index: IOR 41/060/2005
October
03, 2005
http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGIOR410602005?open&of=ENG-ZWE
Introduction
Around the
world Amnesty International continues to document serious violations
of the human rights of refugees, asylum seekers and internally displaced
persons (IDPs). The reluctance of states to provide access to procedures
and effective protection to individuals who are forced to leave
their homes and places of origin remains of concern to the organization.
As an observer at the 56th session of the Executive Committee (EXCOM)
of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) Amnesty
International takes the opportunity to present its concerns on some
of the major contemporary challenges in international refugee protection.
Amnesty International
reminds the members and observers of the EXCOM and the UNHCR that
the purpose of international protection is fundamentally to enable
a refugee to have access to and to enjoy full respect for her human
rights, including through the principle of non-refoulement. However,
an unbalanced focus by the international community on refugee numbers
and statistics frequently downplays and obscures the human rights
of the human beings behind these figures; including when, in the
words of the Note on International Protection(1), ""some
politicians and elements of the media play on xenophobic fears and
[seek] to reduce asylum-seekers and refugees to statistics which
must be kept down.""
While much is
made of the large numbers of refugees returning, or being expected
to return, to their country of origin; such as for example in the
case of Afghanistan or Sudan, the mere fact of the return of large
numbers does not in itself guarantee that the return is sustainable
and is taking place in safety and dignity. Nor does such return
guarantee that the individual returnee will be protected; including
being able to work, to educate her children, to be free from gender-based
violence. Equally, while searching for a durable solution, the plight
of the individual refugee and her protection needs must remain at
the centre of any response. Rushing to achieve solutions which are
unlikely to prove durable in the long term or to place refugees
at risk must be avoided, by host states and by the international
community, and it is also necessary to ensure that solutions are
not imposed on individuals.
In this document,
Amnesty International sets out four thematic areas that are of pressing
concern to the organization, illustrated by specific situations
in countries that the organisation has either visited or engaged
in research and advocacy in the period since the last meeting of
EXCOM. These thematic areas are; protection from refoulement, access
to procedures, access to solutions, and protection of IDPs.
1. Protection
from refoulement
""Reaffirms
the fundamental importance of the observance of the principle of
non-refoulement . . . of persons who may be subjected to persecution
if returned to their country of origin irrespective of whether they
have been formally identified as refugees.""(2)
.....
2. Access
to procedures
""Some
countries continue to penalize asylum-seekers for unauthorized entry
and to detain them, often for lengthy periods, and sometimes on
a mandatory basis. Such practices prejudice fair process, as they
can diminish access to legal assistance and interpretation services,
and may exacerbate prior trauma . . . In many States, asylum seekers
and refugees who have gained entry do not have valid identity documents
and are vulnerable to harassment, arrest, detention and deportation
""(8)
....
3. Access
to solutions
""The
ultimate goal of international protection is to achieve a durable
solution for refugees.""(11)
....
4. Protection of IDPs
""We
want to be predictably engaged in situations of internal displacement""(28)
While much has
been made of the fact that the number of refugees of concern to
UNHCR has declined in the last year, it is of concern that similar
focus has not been placed on the spiralling numbers of IDPs. The
Note on Intetrnational Protection indicates that, during the last
year, there was an increase of nearly 2 million persons of concern
to UNHCR, most of whom were IDPs. To this figure can be added the
substantial number of persons who do not currently fall under UNHCR's
mandate. There are now roughly 25 million IDPs in the world.(29)
Amnesty International
welcomes UNHCR's recent ""predisposition""
to involve itself in IDP situations where such involvement is appropriate,
recognising the agency's unique expertise in dealing with
situations of displacement. The recent developments, including the
system of ""clusters"" recently discussed
in the context of the Inter-Agency Standing Committee, which aim
to revitalise the international response to situations of internal
displacement are similarly welcome. UNHCR must be vigilant to ensure,
however, that adequate staffing and training arrangements are put
in place to ensure an adequate response to IDP situations in which
it is involved, including its involvement as ""cluster
lead"" on global issues of IDP protection, emergency
shelter and camp coordination. It must also be assured that UNHCR's
involvement in IDP situations does not materially affect its ability
to deliver on its core refugee protection mandate. In addition,
Amnesty International is of the view that the response of the international
community to internal displacement, regardless of which cluster
such response is organized within, must be firmly premised on international
human rights law and standards, including the UN Guiding Principles
on Internal Displacement.
The organisation
calls on the international community, including states represented
at EXCOM, to ensure that no IDP who has been forced to flee her
home or village of origin is left in a protection vacuum, held hostage
to bureacratic inertia or gaps in inter-agency coordination, and
unable to access a solution to her plight. Ultimately, however,
it must be recognized that the primary duty and responsibility for
ensuring protection of and humanitarian assistance to IDPs lies
with the state in which its nationals are displaced.
4.1
Human rights violations on a massive scale: Operation Mrambatsvina
-the case of IDPs in Zimbabwe
In May 2005
the government of Zimbabwe embarked on Operation Murambatsvina,
a programme of mass forced evictions and demolition of homes and
informal livelihoods. The Operation, which was carried out in winter
and against a backdrop of severe food shortages, targeted urban
areas countrywide. In a report released on 22 July 2005 the Special
Envoy of the Secretary-General of the UN, Mrs Anna Tibaijuka, estimated
that some 700,000 people lost their homes, their livelihoods, or
both during the operation.(30)
Operation Murambatsvina
has resulted in human rights violations on a massive scale in Zimbabwe.
Moreover, the operation took place in a context of a longer-term
failure of the government of Zimbabwe to respect human rights and
uphold the rule of law.The mass evictions in Zimbabwe were carried
out without notice, court orders, due process, legal protection,
redress or appropriate relocation measures, in violation of Zimbabwe's
obligations under international human rights law.(31) While the
evictions themselves constitute a grave violation of human rights,
Amnesty International also has serious concerns about further violations
of human rights in the wake of the evictions.
Massive
internal displacement and forcible relocation of people to rural
areas without shelter, food, water or access to health care or sanitation
Amnesty International
is concerned that Operation Murambatsvina has resulted in enormous
internal displacement of people and, as the UN has stated, a ""humanitarian
crisis of immense proportions"". Initially the majority
of those evicted remained outside without shelter, crowded into
remaining houses with family or friends, or received shelter in
churches. In numerous cases people were forcibly put on police or
government trucks and taken to rural areas. In the weeks after the
evictions began, homeless and destitute urban people began returning
spontaneously to the rural areas in search of help from relatives.
Since the start
of Operation Murambatsvina the police and government authorities
have stated publicly that people should ""return to their
rural areas"". This has been despite an acknowledged
poor harvest and severe food shortages in the rural areas. Amnesty
International believes the entire relocation operation constitutes
forcible relocation, as forcing people into a situation of displacement
through the destruction of their homes and livelihoods is a form
of coercion akin to forcing people onto government trucks in order
to relocate them.
Information
of the situation of those who have returned to the rural areas is
scarce. In some cases relatives have taken in displaced persons,
but as in the urban areas where the number of inhabitants in a household
has swollen, there are serious concerns about the sustainability
of the situation. Food shortages are reported to be increasingly
severe and IDPs seeking protection in urban areas are not always
welcome.(32)
No comprehensive
assessment of the present location of those who have lost their
homes during Operation Murambatsvina has been undertaken and it
seems very unlikely that the government of Zimbabwe would facilitate
such an assessment. One NGO estimated that approximately 30 per
cent of people had returned to rural areas, but this reflected those
that returned to a village. NGOs and churches have also reported
finding people living in the bush in makeshift shelters. Some are
attempting to ""hide"" from the authorities
for fear of being moved again and losing more possessions -
they report that they have been living outside since their homes
were destroyed, but have been moved on several times.(33) Food and
safe water for those IDPs living in small bush camps are scarce
and sanitation usually non-existent.Many
IDPs remaining in the urban areas also continue to live outside
or under extremely inadequate shelter. These include people sleeping
outside in gardens, on verandas, etc. It appears that the majority
of Operation Murambatsvina victims may remain in the urban areas(34),
while a significant minority has been scattered across rural areas
countrywide.
Prior to the
release of the report of the UN Special Envoy several thousand people
were also housed in transit camps or in churches. The transit camps
and church-assisted groups, although numbering less than 10,000,
were an identifiable concentration of IDPs. Since the release of
the UN report they have also been scattered.
People
in transit camps: Closure of camps; further relocation and ""dumping""
of people in areas with no shelter or access to food, sanitation
or health services; conditions in unofficial camps
According to
Amnesty International's information, three so-called transit
camps were established in connection with Operation Murambatsvina:
Caledonia Farm in Harare (which accommodated some 5,000 people),
the Sports Oval in Mutare (which accommodated several hundred people)
and Helensvale Farm in Bulawayo (which accommodated some 1,500 -
2,000 people). Conditions at all camps were reported to be extremely
poor, with inadequate shelter, food, water and sanitation.(35)
The Harare and
Bulawayo camps were swiftly closed in the days following the government
of Zimbabwe's receipt of a highly critical UN report on the
mass evictions. The Sports Oval had been closed during the UN Special
Envoy's visit.(36) IDPs residing in these camps were dumped
in small groups in various rural areas, and were forced to seek
refuge at District Administrator's offices, business centres,
bus stops and police stations, with little or no food, and in the
majority of cases, no shelter.
Unofficial
camps: Hopley Farm, Harare
Those removed
from Caledonia Farm transit camp that had no urban or rural options
were taken to Hopley Farm on the outskirts of Harare, where they
were joined by other displaced victims of Operation Murambatsvina.
The population of Hopley Farm is estimated at several thousand.
They were placed there by the government with no shelter, no toilets,
no food and inadequate water. The government not only failed to
provide for basic needs, but also failed to alert the humanitarian
community or the UN in order to ensure that the people received
assistance The Hopley population is ""guarded""
by police officers, who initially prevented humanitarian actors
from access them. The future of those at Hopley Farm - many
of whom are victims of repeated evictions - is unclear.
Amnesty International
is aware of another unofficial IDP camp where the government has
placed evictees - approximately 28 people are living in a small
camp near Cowdray Park in Bulawayo. Unconfirmed reports suggest
other such IDP camps may exist in different parts of the country.
Denial
of access to humanitarian assistance
Amnesty International
considers that where a State arbitrarily denies its consent to humanitarian
assistance, when it is unable or unwilling to carry out its obligations
to ensure adequate food, water, shelter and medical care, this constitutes
a violation of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights (ICESCR).
Despite the
recommendations made in the report of the UN Special Envoy that
there should be immediate, full and unfettered access to humanitarian
assistance for the victims of the evictions and demolitions, the
Zimbabwean authorities continue to obstruct and curtail the humanitarian
operations of the UN and NGOs. A UN Flash Appeal to raise funds
for humanitarian assistance for the victims of Operation Murambatsvina
has been severely delayed reportedly because the government is unhappy
with the language and with the role of NGOs in distributing aid.
A UN Flash Appeal to raise funds for humanitarian assistance for
the victims of Operation Murambatsvina was severely delayed, and
subsequently abandoned, reportedly because the government was unhappy
with the language and with the role of NGOs in distributing aid.(37)
A Common Response Plan was sent to donors on 13 September by the
UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, Jan Egeland.
Amnesty International is concerned that the absence of a standard
formal Appeal may undermine fundraising and therefore limit the
assistance that a UN humanitarian program can provide in Zimbabwe.
Humanitarian
actors have reported to Amnesty International that while negotiation
with the authorities has eventually enabled them to supply food,
water and some other relief items they have generally been prevented
from providing temporary shelter to those living in the open. NGOs
report that the authorities say they do not want people ""to
become comfortable, they want them to move back to the rural areas"".
Several humanitarian actors also report that the government of Zimbabwe
is unwilling to allow tents as they would be too visible a sign
of the IDP problem the government is unwilling to acknowledge.
Recommendations
Operation Murambatsvina
took place in a context of a longer-term failure of the government
of Zimbabwe to respect human rights and uphold the rule of law.
Amnesty International believes the government of Zimbabwe must acknowledge
and address this wider failure to uphold human rights.
Amnesty International
urges the government of Zimbabwe to:
- Fully implement
the UN Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement in their policy
and practice towards IDPs, including ensuring protection of the
human rights of IDPs without reservation or discrimination;
- Consistent
with UN Guiding Principle No. 25 (2) which provides that ""consent
[to accept offers of humanitarian assistance] shall not be arbitrarily
withheld, particularly when authorities concerned are unable or
unwilling to provide the required humanitarian assistance""
and Zimbabwe's obligations to ensure for persons on its
territory freedom from hunger and deprivation, Zimbabwe should
immediately make an urgent appeal for humanitarian aid for the
victims of Operation Murambatsvina and all other person in Zimbabwe
who are in need of food aid and other humanitarian assistance,
and guarantee the free and unimpeded passage of international
aid;
- Establish
conditions, as well as provide the means, for IDPs to return voluntarily,
in safety and with dignity, to their homes or places of habitual
residence, or to resettle voluntarily in another part of the country,
and to facilitate their reintegration or integration;
- Respect the
rights of victims of Operation Murambatsvina to an effective remedy,
including access to justice, and appropriate reparations which
can involve restitution, rehabilitation, compensation, satisfaction
and guarantees of non-repetition, redress and compensation.
Amnesty International
calls on the UN and African Union to:
- Recommend
and facilitate an independent observer mission to monitor the
humanitarian operation in Zimbabwe the aftermath of Operation
Murambatsvina and ensure the protection of IDPs and other vulnerable
groups
.********
·
(1) UNHCR, Note on International Protection, A/AC.96/1008, note
9, 4 July 2005
(2) EXCOM Conclusion No. 6 (XXVIII), 1977.
(8) UNHCR, Note on International Protection, A/AC.96/1008, note
15 & 12, 4 July 2005
(11) EXCOM Conclusion No. 90 (LII), 2001
(28) UN High Commissioner Guterres in his closing address to UNHCR's
Annual Consultations with Non-Governmental Organizations, 29 September
2005.
(29) UNHCR, Note on international protection, A/AC.96/1008, note
37, 4 July 2005
(30) Report of the Fact-Finding Mission to Zimbabwe to assess the
Scope and Impact of Operation Murambatsvina by the UN Special Envoy
on Human Settlement Issues in Zimbabwe, page 32
(31) Zimbabwe is a State Party to ICESCR. General Comments no. 4
(1991) and no. 7 (1997) of the UN Committee on Economic, Social
and Cultural Rights state that "forced evictions are prima
facie incompatible with the provisions of the Covenant and can only
be carried out under specific circumstances".
(32) Solidarity Peace Trust, "Hide and Seek": Murambatsvina
Part II An account of finding the forcibly displaced in rural Matabeleland,
July - September 2005", 20 September 2005
(33) Amnesty International interviews with victims of Operation
Murambatsvina, August 2005; Research by Solidarity Peace Trust,
September 2005.
(34) Amnesty International interviews with victims of Operation
Murambatsvina and NGOs in Zimbabwe, August 2005; Combined Harare
Residents Association (CHRA) & Action Aid International, "A
study on the impact of "Operation Murambatsvina/Restore Order"
in 26 wards of Harare high density housing areas", July 22,
2005. Amnesty International also visited high-density urban suburbs
during the day and at night and found evidence of people living
and sleeping in gardens and on verandas.
(35) Report of the Fact-Finding Mission to Zimbabwe to assess the
Scope and Impact of Operation Murambatsvina by the UN Special Envoy
on Human Settlement Issues in Zimbabwe.
(36) When Amnesty International visited the Sport Oval in August
a small group of people remained there, living in a large make-shift
tent, guarded by police officers.
(37) Integrated Regional Information Networks (IRIN), " ZIMBABWE:
Govt won't agree on appeal for victims of cleanup", 29 August
2005
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