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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Zimbabwe:
Housing policy built on foundation of failures and lies
Amnesty
International
September
08, 2006
http://news.amnesty.org/index/ENGAFR460152006
View Quantifying
destruction - satellite images of forced evictions
Read the latest Amnesty International reports
- Zimbabwe: Quantifying Destruction
Report
- Zimbabwe:
No justice for the victims of forced evictions
Amnesty International today
condemned the Zimbabwean government's much publicised housing programme
set up ostensibly to help the victims of Operation
Murambatsvina, a programme of mass forced evictions which left
hundreds of thousands homeless.
Operation Garikai/Hlalani
Kuhle (Better Life) was launched in June 2005, with the government
claiming that it would provide better housing to those who lost
homes during Operation Murambatsvina.
One year after the mass
forced evictions, Amnesty International returned to Zimbabwe to
investigate what, if any, action had been taken by the Zimbabwean
government to restore the human rights of the hundreds of thousands
of victims of Operation Murambatsvina.
The findings, contained
in two reports released today, reveal that contrary to government
statements almost none of the victims of Operation Murambatsvina
have benefited from the rebuilding, with only some 3,325 houses
constructed -- compared to the 92,460 homes destroyed during Operation
Murambatsvina -- and construction has ground to a halt in many areas.
Moreover, although the government
has presented Operation Garikai/Hlalani Kuhle as a programme under
which houses are built by government for victims of Operation Murambatsvina,
in reality many people are being allocated small bare plots of land,
often without access to water and sanitation, on which they have
to build their own homes with no assistance.
Satellite images of just
four sites in Zimbabwe show more than 5,000 houses destroyed --
demonstrating that the government's much-publicised rebuilding programme
has produced fewer houses nationwide than were destroyed in just
a fraction of the country.
"Operation Garikai is a
wholly inadequate response to the mass violations of 2005, and in
reality has achieved very little," said Kolawole Olaniyan, Amnesty
International's Africa Programme Director. "Hundreds of thousands
of people evicted during Operation Murambatsvina have been left
to find their own solutions to their homelessness. Very few houses
have been constructed. The majority of those designated as 'built'
are incomplete -- lacking doors, windows, floors and even roofs.
They also do not have access to adequate water or sanitation facilities."
"Many of the few houses
that have been built are not only uninhabited, but uninhabitable."
Furthermore, in most sites
visited by Amnesty International researchers, houses and land plots
were allocated to people who had not been forcibly evicted during
Operation Murambatsvina. Researchers found that in most parts of
the country, no assessment has ever been carried out to identify
the victims of Operation Murambatsvina or to establish where they
are now. In addition, government officials have made it clear that
at least 20 percent of the housing will go to civil servants, police
officers and soldiers -- rather than those whose homes were demolished
in Operation Murambatsvina.
Tens of thousands of people
-- mainly poor women -- lost their livelihoods as informal traders
and vendors during Operation Murambatsvina, as well as their homes.
Despite having destroyed their only source of income, the government
expects the few victims of the mass evictions to whom houses or
unserviced land plots are "available" to pay for them.
"The Zimbabwean government
has attempted to cover up mass human rights violations with a public
relations exercise," said Kolawole Olaniyan. "The victims of Operation
Murambatsvina were amongst the poorest people in Zimbabwe. The evictions
and demolition of their homes drove them into even deeper poverty
-- losing what little they had, such as clothes, furniture and even
food. Now the Zimbabwean government is unabashedly asking them to
pay for incomplete and sub-standard structures -- or for the stands
on which to build a home -- at prices that would have been well
beyond their reach even before their homes and livelihoods were
destroyed last year."
A widow whose rental accommodation
was destroyed described to Amnesty International how she and her
son now live in a bathroom in a house shared by three families.
In Victoria Falls, researchers found a man living in a room intended
to be a toilet; his rental cottage was destroyed last year. Several
thousand people remain living in the open, under makeshift shelters.
Currently, 83 percent of
the population of Zimbabwe survives on less than the UN income poverty
line of US $2 dollars a day. The unemployment rate stands at about
80 percent.
Amnesty International called
for Operation Garikai/Hlalani Kuhle to be subjected to an urgent
and comprehensive review to bring it in line with the Zimbabwean
government's human rights obligations. It also called on the government
of Zimbabwe to seek international assistance to address the immediate
housing and humanitarian needs of its population if it cannot do
so itself.
"Operation Garikai/Hlalani
Kuhle is a total failure as a remedy," said Kolawole Olaniyan. "Moreover,
in its execution it has resulted not in remedies but in further
violations of human rights."
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