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Zimbabwe criticized for human rights abuses
Rowan
Reid, VOA News
December 01, 2005
http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-12-01-voa43.cfm
Human Rights
Watch says the Zimbabwean government is creating a humanitarian
crisis by denying displaced people access to food aid and shelter.
The rights organization also criticized the United Nations for failing
to devise an appropriate strategy to provide aid for these people.
Human Rights
Watch says that six months after the Zimbabwe government's crackdown
on informal traders and settlements, most of the people evicted
are still without adequate food, water or shelter. The rights organization
says hundreds of thousands of Zimbabweans continue to suffer from
exposure and malnutrition.
The crackdown
that began in May was described by the government as a clean-up
campaign. In August, U.N. envoy Anna Tibaijuka said 700,000 people
had lost their homes or livelihoods and that a further 2.4 million
people had been affected in varying degrees by the crackdown.
In its report,
released in Johannesburg, Human Rights Watch says that most of those
evicted in the crackdown are living in shelters made of debris from
their old houses or whatever else they can find. The rights group
says these people are receiving virtually no aid or medical attention
and the effects are starting to show.
Human Rights
Watch researcher Tiseke Kasambala says the most vulnerable people,
children and those living with HIV are the worst affected.
"We have found
that children have now developed malnutrition as a result of a lack
of food and we visited a number of children in hospitals in the
Harare city hospital suffering from pneumonia from sleeping out
in the open, in the cold, for months on end," she said.
Ms. Kasambala
says the Zimbabwean government is preventing international organizations
from providing aid and the displaced are regularly harassed by police.
"It has prevented
them from delivering food to those out in the open, it has prevented
the erection of tents or shelter for the displaced. There was another
instance in Mutare where police came and burnt plastic sheeting
which the displaced had been using to cover their furniture and
protect themselves from the rain," she added.
The report is
also highly critical of the United Nations, which it says does not
have an adequate strategy to help the displaced people.
Researcher Kasambala
says the United Nations has failed to tackle the Zimbabwean government
over the human rights abuses and will need to if it is to provide
any assistance.
"The United
Nations has used quiet representation with the government as a strategy
for gaining further access to the displaced and out of fear that
if it does otherwise it will be expelled from the country," she
said. "Our findings indicate that this strategy has yielded few
tangible results. Evictions and further displacements continue to
take place and the government has prevented the United Nations from
adequately assisting the majority of the displaced."
The report calls
for the Zimbabwe to allow international humanitarian organizations
full access to all displaced people. Human Rights Watch says it
will lobby African Union members and the United Nations to increase
the pressure on the Zimbabwean government.
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