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This article participates on the following special index pages:

  • Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles


  • Respite and protection for Epworth residents facing renewed threats of eviction
    Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR)
    April 19, 2006

    Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) has obtained an order in the High Court of Zimbabwe protecting persons in Epworth who had been threatened with eviction. Further, the court has ordered that the Epworth Local Board not seek payment of money from residents save lawful rates and water charges. The court also ordered the Epworth Local Board to reconnect water points which they apparently destroyed during Operation Murambatsvina as well as connect our client’s home to the water system as the place was already serviced.

    Background
    The Epworth Local Board has, since holding a meeting around the 19th of March 2006, been demanding payment of sums of about sixteen million five hundred thousand dollars ($16 500 000.00) from residents of Epworth, in particular those who reside in the Overspill area. The Board threatened all those who did not pay these sums with eviction from the area as such failure was purported to constitute a failure to live in an urban area and those who had failed to pay were told they would be forced to go to the rural areas. The Overspill area of Epworth was apparently serviced over 10 years ago through the benevolence of a non-governmental organisation, Plan International. The Epworth Local Board has since then failed to cause the connection of water for the residents of the area despite repeated requests. On demanding payment of the sixteen million five hundred thousand dollar ($16 500 000.00) sum noted above, the Board also stated that only those who paid this sum would have their water supplies connected.

    The residents later received letters from the Epworth Local Board requesting that they come to the Local Board’s offices and the sums stated at this meeting were variously endorsed on the letters as service fees, stand allocation deposits and by various other titles. It remains unclear what these sums were for and why they were to be paid. If they were deposits, this confusion is further compounded by the lack of knowledge as to how much in total should be paid.

    On the 5th of April 2006, ZLHR filed an urgent chamber application in the High Court of Zimbabwe at Harare on behalf of Winnie Chiwashira, an affected resident of Overspill in Epworth, seeking an interdict against eviction and compelling the Epworth Local Board to open water points in Epworth as the well-being of Epworth residents was affected negatively by the threats of eviction and failure to access clean water. The matter was set down for the 10th of April 2006.

    The Epworth Local Board, having been served with the papers, failed to appear to defend the matter. An order was therefore granted against the board barring them from evicting the residents or threatening them with eviction and compelling the Board to open water points in Epworth as well as connect our client’s home to the water supply system.

    It is clear that there was and is no basis for the local authority to claim these amounts from the residents of Epworth. Indeed, Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights finds cause for concern in the actions of various local authorities which have continued to claim amounts of money from innocent and often uninformed people particularly in the aftermath of Operation Murambatsvina even though these authorities know fully well that these claims are unlawful.

    It is also sad to note that threats to the residents’ health occasioned by the failure to connect their water supplies is being used by a local authority as fodder for making extortive claims. These actions constitute a gross abuse of power.

    These threats of eviction and non-connection of water supplies are a direct impingement upon the fundamental rights and freedoms of individuals as protected under international law and are also a contravention of obligations assumed under various international instruments to which Zimbabwe is a state party. Further, such actions flout various local statutes relating to the health of the public and the protection of the environment as well as a complete abrogation of the legal procedures open to local authorities when they seek to make claims from the public.

    Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights therefore calls upon the Minister of Local Government, the Epworth Local Board and other local authorities to immediately bring an end to such conduct as this where unlawful claims are made on the public which is already burdened by the increasingly difficult socio-economic conditions and still haunted by the continued impact of losses incurred under Operation Murambatsvina. These parties are also called upon to respect the rights of the citizenry to hold their property. It is incumbent on local authorities by virtue of their very positions that they should pay the greatest respect to the health and well-being of persons within their locality.

    In the meantime ZLHR would like to make individuals who find themselves in similar circumstances aware of their legal rights as determined in the previously mentioned court case and urges them to insist that such rights are respected by any renegade local authorities or individuals purporting to act on their behalf. Any action to the contrary should be reported to local residents’ associations and/or ZLHR offices in Harare for further action.

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