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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Political
Repression disguised as Civic Mindedness: Operation Murambatsvina
one year later
Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum
November 30, 2006
http://www.hrforumzim.com/frames/inside_frame_special.htm
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Background
It is more than one year since the launching of Operation
Murambatsvina, (literally translated as clean-up the filth)
or Operation Restore Order. In Harare this programme was put into
operation by the Chairperson of the government-appointed Harare
Commission but the programme was also implemented countrywide. It
was supposedly aimed at putting a stop to illegal activities in
contravention of municipal by-laws, such as the erection of illegal
structures, illegal vending, touting by commuter omnibus rank marshals,
illegal street garaging, illegal cultivation, dealing illegally
in foreign currency and prostitution.
This operation
caused major devastation and large-scale suffering and led to a
highly critical report by the UN Special Envoy on Human Settlement,
MsAnna Tibaijuka.
This report
makes an audit of whether or not the Government of Zimbabwe has
addressed the concerns of the United Nations and implemented the
recommendations of the UN Special Envoy.
The Zimbabwe
Human Rights NGO Forum (the Forum) has previously issued two reports
on the effects of Operation Murambatsvina,1
and some of its member organizations have mounted legal actions
on behalf of some of those affected, as well as providing various
forms of relief to the victims, in the past, the Forum has issued
reports subsequent to similar international missions or interventions
in the Zimbabwe crisis, and has provided reviews of the benchmarks.
This was particularly the case with the Abuja Agreement,2
and was also the case with the Food Riots in 1998. The rationale
for issuing such reports is very clear: in a situation where the
Zimbabwe government both declines to follow agreements or recommendations,
and even denies the findings of international bodies, it is incumbent
upon Zimbabwean civil society to act as a watchdog upon the government,
and to alert the international community to the failings of the
Zimbabwe government.
This report
will not provide a detailed audit of developments subsequent to
Operation Murambatsvina, but will rather evaluate the recommendations
of the UN Special Envoy with reference to the compliance of the
Zimbabwe government to these recommendations. As will be seen below,
the UN Special Envoy made twelve specific recommendations, and the
Forum will evaluate these, both from the view-point of compliance
or non-compliance with them by the Zimbabwe government, as well
as providing some comment upon the validity of the recommendations
themselves. There are a number of areas in which the report and
its recommendations can be questioned, but, the Forum contends that
these criticisms strengthen rather than weaken the UN Special Envoy's
report.
It is worth
commenting that the views expressed by the UN Special Envoy were
supported by her UN colleague, Mr. Jan Egeland, the Humanitarian
Special Envoy when he visited Zimbabwe in December 2005. In his
report to the UN, Mr. Egeland was forthright in his assessment of
the scale of the disaster deliberately inflicted on the Zimbabwean
people. This is an extract from his statement to the UN Security
Council on 19 December 2005.
Finally, Mr.
President, I have just returned from Zimbabwe and South Africa.
As I reported to you in April, the humanitarian situation in the
sub-region is already very serious, due to severe food insecurity,
widespread HIV/AIDS and inadequate basic services. More than ten
million people in the region are in need of food assistance. The
situation could deteriorate further in 2006 and beyond, particularly
in Zimbabwe and Malawi, unless actions are taken to meet immediate
needs and to reverse the decline in key sectors. In Zimbabwe, the
humanitarian situation has worsened significantly in 2005. More
than three million people - almost one third of the population -
will receive food through the World Food Programme in January and
even more will receive assistance come April. Annual maize production,
the basic staple, is one third of what it was several years ago.
Basic services continue to deteriorate, particularly in the health,
water and sanitation sectors. Inflation currently reaches over 500
percent. In this context, and as I told the Government in my meetings
in Harare, the massive urban eviction campaign of hundreds of thousands
of people was "the worst possible action, at the worst possible
time".
We are now entering
the peak of the "lean season." Food prices are rising
fast, placing some basic commodities out of reach for a growing
portion of the population. I welcome the Memorandum of Understanding
finalized by the Government and WFP, which will ensure these emergency
needs are met, and I also hope it will lead to better collaboration
between the Government and the humanitarian agencies in other sectors.
Yet we must recognize that this huge need for food assistance is
symbolic of the vicious cycle that we are caught in. It was raining
when I was leaving Zimbabwe, but all expected that next year's harvest
would be poor because of a lack of skilled agricultural labor force,
the devastating toll of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, counterproductive
agricultural policies and practices, and a lack of inputs such as
fertilizer, seeds and tools. It is not sustainable to provide food
assistance for millions of people year after year without making
the necessary investments to get out of this situation. We can have
a new approach that again will provide food security for all Zimbabweans.
This will require major efforts from all, nationally as well as
internationally. There is no substitute for engagement and dialogue
at all levels in order to address the humanitarian crisis in Zimbabwe.
From my discussions
with the Government of Zimbabwe, I am convinced that the UN and
the humanitarian community at large must try to engage more actively
with the Government to address the enormous humanitarian crisis.
We did reach agreement on some issues during my mission: a more
active and systematic dialogue on food security; a more hands-on
approach to resolving bureaucratic problems for humanitarian organizations
through "one-stop-shops" at both the Government and the
UN; and the initiation of a shelter programme for households affected
by the eviction campaign. However, sustained progress will require
the following: The Government must stop further evictions and be
more flexible in allowing shelter and other programmes for those
affected. It must ensure that beneficiaries are assisted solely
on the basis of need; The UN and our humanitarian partners, as well
as the donors, should be guided in their own response by the needs
of the population. We should provide the appropriate level of assistance
where and when we identify the needs. Beyond food aid, we need to
invest in food security, livelihoods and basic services; The Governments
in the region and Africa at large should engage more proactively
with Zimbabwe to find constructive solutions, also given their interdependence
and the risks of increased migratory movements; All parties must
understand the importance of neutral and impartial humanitarian
assistance.
There has been
little or no attempt by the Zimbabwe government to deal with any
of these UN recommendations. This failure to address these issues
has meant that the lot of ordinary Zimbabweans has significantly
worsened. It would seem that the preoccupation by the Zimbabwe government
with security and maintaining political power overrides any concern
for the citizens that it is constitutionally bound to protect.
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Visit the Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum fact
sheet
1. See Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum Order out
of Chaos, or Chaos out of Order? A Preliminary Report on "Operation
Murambatsvina". (Harare, June 2005); Zimbabwe Human Rights
NGO Forum The Aftermath of a Disastrous Venture. A Follow up report
on "Operation Murambatsvina". (Harare August 2005.).
2. See Zimbabwe
Human Rights NGO Forum Evaluating the Abuja Agreement (Harare 2001);
Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum Evaluating the Abuja Agreement:
Two Months Report,(Harare 2003) Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum
Zimbabwe, the Abuja Agreement and Commonwealth Principles: Compliance
or Disregard? (Harare 8 September 2003).
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