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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Evicted
and Forsaken: Internally displaced persons in the aftermath of Operation
Murambatsvina
Human Rights Watch (HRW)
Vol. 17, No. 16(A)
December 2005
http://hrw.org/reports/2005/zim1205/
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Summary
We
have been out in the open since the end of May when our house was
demolished during Operation Murambatsvina. We are not getting any
assistance from anyone. I have two children staying with me but
I sent the other two to the rural areas. My husband does not have
a rural home and I don’t think he would appreciate it if we went
to my rural home. I don’t have the money to send my children to
school. The kids have colds because of staying outside and in the
cold. I can’t afford medical assistance. Sometimes we sleep without
eating a meal or anything. We don’t know what’s going to happen
once the rains come.
Displaced mother
of four living by the edge of a forest in Victoria Falls, September
26, 2005.
An unprecedented
government campaign of forced evictions and demolitions in the urban
areas of Zimbabwe known as Operation Murambtsvina, caused a massive
internal displacement crisis. For the last six months, hundreds
of thousands of displaced men, women and children have been denied
basic protection and assistance, including shelter, food, sanitation
and health services. The authorities have been blatantly violating
human rights of the displaced, including by forcibly relocating
them to rural areas, and have put their very survival at risk by
deliberately obstructing the international humanitarian assistance.
Earlier this
year, Human Rights Watch documented the human rights implications
of the Zimbabwean government evictions campaign, the so-called Operation
Murambatsvina (Clean the Filth). In September-October 2005, Human
Rights Watch deployed a new research mission to Zimbabwe to look
into the plight of the internally displaced persons (IDPs) in the
aftermath of the operation. The researchers carried out site visits
to numerous locations in four of Zimbabwe’s provinces and conducted
over fifty interviews with the internally displaced, human rights
activists, local authorities, lawyers, church officials, representatives
of local and international humanitarian agencies, and the U.N. staff
in Zimbabwe.
This report,
based on the findings of this investigation, documents the Zimbabwean
government’s denial of assistance and protection to hundreds of
thousands of the internally displaced and further examines the role
of international agencies, and in particular the U.N. country team,
in addressing the humanitarian crisis in Zimbabwe.
In the immediate
aftermath of the Operation Murambatsvina carried out by Zimbabwean
authorities in May-June 2005, the international community strongly
condemned the disastrous humanitarian and human rights consequences
of the evictions. The United Nations Special Envoy deployed to Zimbabwe
by the U.N. Secretary-General in June 2005, estimated that 700,000
thousands people lost their shelter, livelihood, or both as a result
of the evictions, and that about 570,000 of them have been internally
displaced.
The Special
Envoy’s report concluded that the operation "has precipitated
a humanitarian crisis of immense proportions," and called on
the government of Zimbabwe to "recognize the virtual state
of emergency" and take urgent measures to ensure the provision
of relief to the victims. The Special Envoy’s appeal has been reiterated
by other U.N. experts, including the Representative of the Secretary-General
on the Human Rights of Internally Displaced Persons.
The government
of Zimbabwe, however, has ignored these appeals and recommendations,
and continued to defy its obligations under international law. Up
to this date, the government refused to acknowledge the scale of
the crisis precipitated by the evictions campaign, and continued
to blatantly violate the human rights of the people displaced by
Operation Murambatsvina.
Six months into
the crisis, the government has made no arrangements to provide temporary
shelter to the internally displaced, many thousands of whom continue
to live in the open, in disused fields or in the bush; or rudimentary
shelters made from the debris of destroyed houses; or who squeeze
into tiny rooms with family members who have agreed to shelter them.
The government’s
Operation Garikai - reconstruction program, allegedly initiated
to provide accommodation to those who lost shelter as a result of
the evictions - in reality has little to do with an effort to assist
the internally displaced. The criteria for allocation of housing
under the program, which include a proof of formal employment, a
specified salary, and the payment of the initial deposit and monthly
installments, will make the housing unaffordable to the vast majority
of the displaced.
The government
has also taken few measures to provide the internally displaced
with other vital forms of assistance, including food, potable water,
sanitation facilities, and health services. It also failed to address
the desperate situation of vulnerable groups - widows, orphans,
female- and children-headed households, chronically ill and elderly
persons - on whom the evictions took a particularly heavy toll.
In blatant disregard
of the recommendations of the U.N. Special Envoy and the requirements
of international law as reflected in the Guiding Principles on Internal
Displacement, the government of Zimbabwe has denied international
humanitarian agencies access to the majority of the internally displaced,
and deliberately obstructed the provision of international assistance
and protection to the IDPs. The authorities prevented the U.N. and
other international agencies from providing tents or other temporary
shelter to the displaced and prevented the distribution of food
to people displaced by the evictions.
Zimbabwean authorities
also engaged in a concerted effort to coerce the people displaced
by the evictions to leave the cities and move to the rural areas.
In different areas across the country Zimbabwe Republic Police threatened,
harassed, or beat the IDPs, forcing them to relocate to the rural
areas where many have no homes or family and where social service
provisions and economic opportunities are minimal. Fearing further
displacement, many have resorted to hiding during the day and only
returning to the places of their temporary residence at night, to
avoid detection and harassment by the police. In addition, the government
tried to compel the relocation by ensuring that international assistance
is not provided to those who choose to stay in the urban areas,
meanwhile using the food packages as an incentive for families to
move to the villages.
The government
of Zimbabwe bears the primary responsibility to assist and protect
the internally displaced within its jurisdiction, and the deliberate
elusion from this duty constitutes a breach of its international
obligations.
The government’s
refusal to acknowledge the crisis and its deliberate obstruction
of humanitarian aid was the main obstacles preventing the U.N. country
team in Zimbabwe from providing adequate assistance and protection
to the internally displaced. At the same time, Human Rights Watch
also found serious flaws within the U.N.-led humanitarian assistance
program in Zimbabwe. The problems include the U.N. country team’s
failure to assess and monitor the situation of the internally displaced
and devise a realistic response strategy that would take existing
challenges into account; inattention to protection concerns both
in the planning and implementation of programs and overall failure
to structure the program in such a way as to place safeguards against
human rights violations.
The U.N. agencies
involved in humanitarian response in Zimbabwe have been reluctant
to confront the government over its blatant disregard of the human
rights of the displaced and protest the continued obstruction of
humanitarian assistance.
While the U.N.
cannot be held responsible for the Zimbabwean government’s recalcitrance,
it does bear a responsibility to protect and assist the hundreds
of thousands of people whose fundamental rights have been violated
as a result of Operation Murambatsvina, and the very survival of
many currently at risk.
Human Rights
Watch calls on the government of Zimbabwe to take urgent measures,
in accordance with its international obligations, to ensure the
provision of protection and assistance to people displaced by the
evictions; to allow international agencies full and unimpeded access
to the displaced; and stop any actions aimed at relocating the IDPs
to rural areas against their will. African Union and African Commission
on Human and People’s Rights to impress upon the government of Zimbabwe
its responsibilities with respect to human rights of the displaced,
and urge the government to allow immediate access to the country
to regional monitoring mechanisms.
The U.N. agencies
in Zimbabwe and at the headquarters must engage in active and assertive
advocacy with the authorities to ensure that the internally displaced
persons fully enjoy their rights, including unhindered access to
protection and humanitarian assistance.
Note on communication
with the government and use of names in this report
In
mid-October, Human Rights Watch wrote to the Zimbabwean government
requesting clarification on the issues raised in this report, but
so far has received no response from the government. In this report,
names of displaced persons and other witnesses have been changed
or withheld to protect their security.
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