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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Zimbabwe:
Quantifying Destruction Report
Amnesty International
September 08, 2006
http://www.amnesty.org/resources/pdf/Zimbabwe_Quantifying_Destruction.pdf
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some of the images from this report
Introduction
Between
May and July 2005 some 700,000 people in Zimbabwe lost their homes,
their livelihoods or both as a direct consequence of the government’s
Operation
Murambatsvina1, a programme
of mass forced evictions and demolitions of homes and informal businesses.
In some areas entire settlements were razed to the ground. While
the demolitions took place right across the country, the majority
of the destruction occurred in high density urban areas in Harare,
Chitungwiza, Bulawayo, Mutare, Kariba and Victoria Falls. In these
areas tens of thousands of poor families lived in what are known
as backyard cottages or extensions - these were small, often brick,
structures built on residential plots around the main house, sometimes
attached to the main house, and sometimes a little way separate
from it. They varied in size from one to several rooms. In urban
areas these backyard structures were the only source of accommodation
for poor people, who could not afford to buy a plot of land and
build their own home. The government and local authorities in Zimbabwe
provide almost no cheap rental accommodation.
Operation
Murambatsvina occurred countrywide. This report contains "before"
and "after" satellite images of four sites affected by
Operation Murambatsvina: Porta Farm settlement and portions of both
Hatcliffe and Chitungwiza, all located around the capital, Harare,
and Killarney, an informal settlement on the outskirts of Bulawayo
in the south of Zimbabwe.2
These images, which represent only a fraction of the demolitions,
provide compelling visual evidence of the scale of the destruction
and human rights violations which took place in Zimbabwe during
2005. Using satellite technology it has also been possible to count
the number of structures destroyed at these sites, providing quantitative
evidence of the demolitions. In just the four areas covered by the
satellite images more than 5,000 structures were destroyed. The
government of Zimbabwe maintains that all of the homes demolished
were "illegal" structures. However, the homes and settlements
destroyed included informal settlements of long standing where the
government itself had placed people, homes on sites where people
held government leases, and areas where court orders existed prohibiting
the evictions.3
Despite
the claims of the government of Zimbabwe, forced evictions and demolitions
without due process, even of structures deemed to be "illegal",
are not permitted under international law. The United Nations (UN)
Commission on Human Rights considers that "the practice of forced
evictions constitutes a gross violation of human rights, in particular
the right to adequate housing",4
while the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights,
which monitors compliance with the International Covenant on Economic
Social and Cultural Rights, to which Zimbabwe is a state party,
has stated that "instances of forced eviction are prima
facie incompatible
with the requirements of the Covenant and can only be justified
in the most exceptional circumstances, and in accordance with the
relevant principles of international law."5
The mass evictions of Operation Murambatsvina were carried out without
adequate notice, court orders, due process, legal protection, redress
or appropriate relocation measures. They resulted in hundreds of
thousands of people being made homeless in winter.
About
this report
The
satellite images in this report were commissioned by Amnesty International
and were analysed by the American Association for the Advancement
of Science, with funding from the MacArthur Foundation in the United
States.
1. Operation Murambatsvina
means ‘drive out rubbish’ in Shona.
2. Amnesty International
researchers visited Porta Farm, Chitungwiza and Hatcliffe in August
2005 and witnessed the visible evidence of demolitions and evictions
at all these sites. Interviews were conducted with residents of
Porta Farm, Chitungwiza, Hatcliffe and Killarney, also in 2005.
The residents of Porta Farm and Killarney, both of which were destroyed,
were interviewed in various locations to which they had moved in
the aftermath of Operation Murambatsvina, including churches and
a holding camp set up by the government. Amnesty International researchers
subsequently visited Porta Farm, Hatcliffe and Killarney in April
and May 2006, and interviewed
people who had returned to Killarney and Hatcliffe. Porta Farm was
deserted and access was restricted by
wildlife officers who claimed they were there to prevent poaching
of fish from the nearby lake.
3. Report
of the Fact-Finding Mission to Zimbabwe to assess the Scope and
Impact of Operation Murambatsvina bythe
UN Special Envoy on Human Settlement Issues in Zimbabwe, 22 July
2005. See also: Amnesty International,"Zimbabwe:
shattered lives – the case of Porta Farm", AI Index AFR 46/004/2006,
31 March 2006.
4 UN Commission
on Human Rights, Resolution 1993/77, para 1.
5 CESCR General
Comment No. 4 on right to adequate housing (1991), para. 18.
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