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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Murambatsvina:
Lest we forget
Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR)
May 20, 2010
The Coalition
Against Forced Evictions (CAFÉ) on Thursday 20 May 2010 petitioned
the government to acknowledge the devastation caused by the controversial
Operation Murambatsvina and to assist victims and survivors of the
widely condemned "clean-up campaign" that left more
than 700 000 people homeless.
CAFÉ
is an alliance of Non Governmental Organisations consisting of Amnesty
International Zimbabwe, Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR), Combined
Harare Residents Association (CHRA), Zimbabwe Chamber of Informal
Economy Associations (ZCIEA) and victims and survivors of Operation
Murambatsvina from Hatcliffe Extension, Hopley Farm and Gunhill
informal settlement.
CAFÉ
handed over the petition to Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai at
his Munhumutapa offices.
The petition
implored the government to acknowledge responsibility for displacing
people and to take action to protect hundreds of thousands of people
abandoned to survive in substandard settlements five years after
the mass forced evictions and demolition of housing and informal
trading structures.
CAFÉ
urged the government to provide adequate alternative accommodation
or compensation to victims of the clean up campaign who were left
homeless and jobless.
The Prime Minister,
who acknowledged the widespread displacement of people through Operation
Murambatsvina, pledged to set up an inter-ministerial committee
comprising of Ministers of National Housing and Social Amenities;
Education, Sport, Arts and Culture; Health and Child Welfare; and
Local Government, Urban and Rural Development, which will craft
a government response to victims and survivors of forced evictions,
to be discussed and endorsed by Cabinet. On its part, CAFÉ
undertook to present a comprehensive report on the communities affected
and recommendations for redress to government.
President Robert
Mugabe's previous administration began demolishing informal
settlements across the country on 18 May 2005. The demolitions and
evictions affected more than 700 000 people who were left without
a home or livelihood or both. Most people were driven deeper into
poverty by the forced evictions.
Although the
government embarked on a re-housing programme, known as Operation
Garikai/Hlalani Kuhle later in 2005, purportedly to provide shelter
for the victims, the programme was a dismal failure and now appears
to have been abandoned.
On Tuesday 18
May 2010 - 5 years to the day on which the evictions commenced
- CAFÉ said it is a scandal that, five years on, victims
of Operation Murambatsvina are still surviving in plastic shacks
without basic essential services. The coalition said the needs of
victims of the clean-up campaign are at risk of being forgotten
because their voices are consistently ignored.
The coalition
said people affected by Operation Murambatsvina have rapidly become
invisible; forced to relocate to rural areas, absorbed into existing
overcrowded urban housing or pushed into government designated settlements.
Those still in cities remain at risk of further forced evictions
with no security of tenure.
Visit the ZLHR
fact
sheet
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