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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Habitat
International Coalition protests evictions in Zimbabwe
Housing and
Land Rights Network, Habitat International Coalition
June 10,
2005
H.E. Ambassador C.
Chipaziwa
Permanent Mission of the Republic of Zimbabwe to the United Nations (Geneva)
Chemin William Barbey 27
1292 Chambésy
Geneva, Switzerland
Transmitted by Fax: +41 (0)22 758–3044
Your Excellency:
We have received corroborating information from a variety of sources confirming
that the Government of Zimbabwe is carrying out massive evictions in throughout
Zimbabwe that already have rendered 200,000 people homeless in two weeks.
Some 30,000 street vendors and people working informally have been detained
and if the eviction drive continues, 2 to 3 million people could be affected.
Most victims are now sleeping in the streets and without shelter in the
countryside, when the country is in winter season. At least two children
have died as a result of the harsh conditions of homelessness.
The government’s Operation Murambatsvina has happened without
any notice, except apparently in Harare, where government-appointed Mayor
Sekesai Makwavarara gave inhabitants notice of eviction in May, and told
them that they had until July 2005 to vacate. However, evictions started
in different places in the country as early as 17 May and, in the night
of 26 May, authorities forcibly drove more than 10,000 people from their
homes in the informal settlement of Hatcliffe Extension in northern Harare
alone.
The overwhelming presence of police at the scene have engaged in excessive
use of force added to the deprivation arising from these illegal evictions.
Most victims are those who have been living in informal shacks in and
around the cities, while others were legal residents, such as those in
Hatcliffe Extension. The vast majority of evicted residents have not been
offered any alternative place to settle, and the authorities have told
them only to go back to the rural areas wherever they come from. If they
do so, they will have no means of subsistence.
Today, many of the evictees are legal residents from previously government-supported
cooperatives that were supposed to help poor Zimbabweans achieve better
living conditions. Eviction has left them destitute and demoralized.
Under most circumstances, forced evictions are prima facie in violation
of international law. These mass evictions already have grossly violated
200,000 people’s human right to adequate housing, but also have had an
impact on the dwellers’ congruent rights linked to adequate housing, such
as the right to food, right to water, right to health, right to education
and the right to earn a livelihood. In the right to adequate housing,
the Zimbabwean authorities have denied in particular the following elements:
legal security of tenure and freedom from dispossession; information;
participation and self-expression; and resettlement. All are recognized
in international law, especially in the International Covenant on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights that Zimbabwe has ratified on 13 August 1991.
These rights are also emphasized in General Comments no. 4 (1991) and
no. 7 (1997) of the United Nations Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights (CESCR), which state that "forced evictions are prima facie
incompatible with the provisions of the Covenant and can only be carried
out under specific circumstances", imposing certain requirements which
State parties to the Covenant must respect, including the necessity to
inform the affected people, agree on a plan with them, and provide adequate
compensation.
The UN Special Rapporteur on the right to adequate housing recently stressed
that "forced evictions carried out in the manner alleged would constitute
a gross violation of human rights, in particular of the right to adequate
housing, as has been stressed by a unanimously adopted resolution of the
UN Commission on Human Rights" (see resolution E/CN.4/RES/1993/77).
In general, women and children are always the most affected by forced
evictions, especially when in already vulnerable conditions (widows, orphans),
thus this type of mass action grossly violates their rights, as enshrined
in international law as well.
Zimbabwe also ratified the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms
of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) on 12 June 1991. CEDAW’s Article
14.2(h) requires States to ensure adequate living conditions for women
in rural areas. The Convention on the Rights of the Child, which Zimbabwe
ratified on 11 October 1990, specifically requires that States protect
children’s right to adequate housing (Article 27.3). The International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, ratified by Zimbabwe on 13 August
1991, prohibits cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment and/or punishment
(Articles 7) and the arbitrary use of force (Article 17). The evictions
currently underway in Zimbabwe are in violation of all of these binding
international norms.
If evictions take place at all, international law and expressed consensus
establish that they can legally occur only in exceptional circumstances
and in conformity with human rights criteria. These include requirements
of consultation, due process, consent, ensuring alternative housing in
advance, and fair compensation, as set forth by the Committee on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR) in General Comment No. 7.
At the regional level, the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights
also established that authorities are required to explore alternatives
and option with the affected community prior to eviction, to provide adequate
notice and information, to assure the availability of replacement accommodation,
as well as an opportunity to appeal an eviction order. As in CESCR’s General
Comment No. 7, the African jurisprudence affirms that no one may be made
homeless as a result of an eviction. (See Social and Economic Rights
Action Centre (SERAC) and The Centre for Economic and Social Rights (CESR)
v. Nigeria, 2001.)
While the Zimbabwean authorities have claimed that these cruel evictions
are based on the requirements of law enforcement, they also have contravened
the minimum requirements of law-enforcement official by using force outside
the principles of necessity and proportionality, as elaborated in the
Code of Conduct for Law Enforcement Officials (Article 3), which the General
Assembly adopted in resolution 34/169, 17 December 1979. Moreover, the
nature of the evictions also violates the General Provisions of the UN
Basic Principles on the Use of Force and Firearms by Law Enforcement Officials
(1990). The African Charter on Human and People’s Rights affirms these
same principles, in particular under Article 6, which recognizes the right
to freedom from arbitrary arrest or detention.
These violations may also constitute crimes against humanity. The Rome
Statute of the International Criminal Court has codified the deliberately
widespread or systematic transfer of a civilian population as a crime
against humanity, under Article 7(1)(d) and Article 7(2)(d). The present
forcible transfer of large parts of the Zimbabwean population to rural
areas, relegates them to a state of dispossession, deepened impoverishment,
and without a source of livelihood or means of sustenance. The grave conditions
resulting from these evictions give argument to the suggestion that the
Security Council direct the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court
(ICC) to investigate and prosecute these serious crimes.
Your Excellency,
We urge you
to do your utmost to reverse this tragic destruction of lives and property.
An urgent and effective response is required also to reduce the already
heavy toll that the current evictions have taken on the internal and external
legitimacy of the Zimbabwean government. This can be achieved through
the following actions:
- immediately cease
the mass evictions taking place around the country;
- to ensure that
adequate alternative housing is immediately provided for already displaced
populations;
- initiate dialogue
with affected communities in accordance with human rights principles,
especially CESCR General Comment no. 7;
- investigate and
prosecute the use of excessive force by the police during the current
eviction drive;
- comply with the
State's obligations under international law to respect everyone's right
to adequate housing, including legal security of tenure and freedom
from dispossession; information; participation and self-expression;
and resettlement; as well as the rights to food, water, health, education
and the right to earn a livelihood.
Thanking you in advance
for your attention to this matter, we look forward to hearing from about
your remedial response.
Respectfully,
Joseph Schechla
Coordinator
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