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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Legal
recourse for evictees
International
Bar Association (IBA)
Extracted from IBA Weekly Column on Zimbabwe – No 074
June 20, 2005
Since the Zimbabwean
government began its campaign of razing shacks in the country’s
urban areas on 19 May, ostensibly to remove ‘criminal elements’
from urban areas, more than 21,000 so-called ‘illegal structures’
have been destroyed and more than 32,000 people have been arrested,
many during a recent strike against the evictions. In the process,
people’s homes and businesses have been destroyed, leaving thousands
of ordinary Zimbabweans destitute.
Wellington Murerwa,
quoted on Zimonline, said: ‘I have lost the only source of income
that I had after my vegetable stall was destroyed. Since 1981 the
only place I have known as a home with my family was a backyard
shack, and I cannot start all over again.’ According to estimates,
more than two million Zimbabweans live in backyard corrugated-tin-and-wood
shacks in urban areas - drawn to the cities from rural areas where
sources of income are scarce and livelihoods are threatened.
Various organisations
and human rights groups have condemned the forced evictions, including
the Zimbawean Teachers‘ Association which described ‘the mental
and physical anguish, social humiliation, psychological stress,
and extent of material deprivation (as) too excessive to imagine’,
Zimbabwe Doctors for Human Rights, Amnesty International and the
United Nations Special Rapporteur on Human Rights, Miloon Kothari.
Kothari said in a statement that evictions should ‘never result
in rendering individuals homeless or vulnerable to the violations
of other human rights’ and that governments must ensure that
adequate alternative housing is available before evictions are implemented.
He also reminded the Zimbabwe government that UN Commission on Human
Rights resolutions have called ‘the practice of forced eviction
(...) a gross violation of human rights’. Kothari made specific
reference to the UN’s International Covenant on Economic, Social
and Cultural Rights, ratified by Zimbabwe in 1991, which declares
forced evictions as ‘prima facie incompatible with the provisions
of the Covenant’.
While analysts
argue that this ‘Operation Murambatsvina’ (‘drive out trash’) is
the government’s way of punishing urban voters who favoured the
opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) over the ruling
Zanu-PF in the recent parliamentary elections, for those left without
shelter or a source of income, the real question is: what now?
Under the Zimbabwean
Constitution, citizens have no explicit socio-economic rights. But
there are legal options which the evictees could pursue, argues
Gabrial Shumba, a human rights lawyer and director of the Zimbabwe
Exiles Forum in South Africa. However, their chances of getting
speedy - or any - legal redress are slim.
Shumba says
under Zimbabwean law, the Urban Councils Act could be invoked. The
Act states that adequate notice must be given before evictions take
place. The government gave the owners of the shacks no such prior
warning. The country’s Consitution, in Section 15, guarantees people’s
right to dignity and protects against ‘inhuman and degrading treatment’.
The evictees could justifiably argue that they were treated inhumanely
and in a degrading manner when they were thrown out of their homes
and their belognings were bulldozed.
However, in
light of the severely compromised judiciary, which has systematically
been populated with pro-government judges who have shown clear bias
in politically sensitive cases, the evictees case is ‘hopeless’,
Shumba argues. An urgent application by Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human
Rights on behalf of a group of evictees failed. The ruling could
be appealed in the Supreme Court, but for the above reasons the
evictees have little chance of a fair hearing.
‘Once they
have exhausted the Zimbabwe legal system, the next step is to go
through the African system,’ Shumba says, referring specifically
to the African Commission on and the African Charter on Human and
People’s Rights, to which Zimbabwe is a signatory. In a case brought
before the Commission in 2001 involving Nigeria’s Ogoni people,
it found that there is ‘an implicit right in the African Charter
on Human and People’s Rights to adequate housing and that the destruction
of houses and evictions violate that right,’ Shumba says.
The relevant
articles in the African Charter include Article 14 which guarantees
the right to property and states that ‘(i)t may only be encroached
upon in the interest of public need or in the general interest of
the community and in accordance with the provisions of appropriate
laws’. The government is likely to describe this ‘operation’ necessary
for the removal of ‘criminal elements’ and therefore in the interests
of Zimbabwe’s security.
Article 16 guarantees
the individual’s right to ‘the best attainable state of physical
and mental health’ and enjoins member states to ‘take the necessary
measures to protect the health of their people’. It could be argued
that the Zimbabwean government did the opposite in this case, causing
the evictees undue stress and threatening their physical health
by throwing them out of their homes and destroying their sources
of income.
Shumba also
believes that Article 18 may be applicable in this case. This section
requires the state to protect the family ‘as the natural unit
and basis of society’ from physical harm. While the right to
shelter is not explicitly mentioned, the right to property and the
protection of the individual’s and the family unit’s health were
severly adversely affected by the ‘wanton destruction’ of
their homes and businesses by the government, Shumba argues.
However, given
the clear pro-government bias in the judiciary and the long time
it takes for cases to be heard by the African Commission on Human
and People’s Rights, the evictees‘ chances of legal redress are
almost non-existent, at least not in the short term. Brian Raftopoulos,
professor of Development Studies at the University of Zimbabwe,
said, quoted on Zimonline: ‘It may well be that the ruling party
is looking to remove ‘surplus’ elements of the urban population
ahead of the next presidential election by drawing them into more
controllable rural political relations. The long-term implications
of this process do not bode well for democratic politics.’
Shumba believes
that political rather than legal action is now necessary to halt
human rights abuses in Zimbabwe. ‘My feeling is that there comes
a time when legal mechanisms are failing the citizen, that recourse
to political solutions are the best option. It begs political more
than legal intervention. It is only fair to observe that this is
a situation in which the international community should act quickly.
Human rights violations in Zimbabwe cannot be prevented through
legal means.’
* This
column is provided by the International Bar Association -
An organisation that represents the Law Societies and Bar Associations
around the world, and works to uphold the rule of law. For further
information, visit the website
www.ibanet.org.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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