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Vendors
'victimised' by Zim market ban
Mail &
Guardian (SA)
January 12, 2006
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=261145&area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__africa/
Human rights
lawyers in Zimbabwe on Thursday slammed the authorities' closure
of a popular Harare fruit and vegetable market on public health
grounds, saying informal vendors were being victimised.
Earlier this week, Harare's state-appointed commission which has
replaced the opposition-led council, announced the closure of Mbare
Musika market amid reports of increasing cases of cholera in Zimbabwe.
Fourteen people have already died from the disease, three of them
in Harare.
Mbare Musika is Harare's biggest outdoor market. Like many other
parts of the capital, it is strewn with piles of uncollected rubbish.
The authorities said they were worried conditions at the market
would contribute to the spread of cholera, a highly-infectious disease.
The Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) said in a statement
that while the association appreciated public health concerns, the
city's health crisis had been caused by "the commission's unlawful
actions".
"The Harare commission has regrettably chosen to ignore their duty
to repair malfunctioning waste disposal systems and omitted to remove
refuse for many months, as is their duty under local legislation,
by-laws and regulations, as well as under international human rights
instruments," the statement read.
The lawyers said the action had violated the vendors' rights to
earn a livelihood.
"It is the commission's own unlawful actions... which have led to
the public health crisis, and for which these same persons [vendors]
have now been subjected to additional victimisation by having their
source of livelihood guillotined without due process," the statement
added.
Meanwhile, despite the commission's promise to clean up the market
this week, garbage is still lying uncollected there, the government
Herald newspaper reported on Thursday.
Reports said dozens of farmers were left stranded with their produce
at Mbare Musika earlier this week after authorities closed it down.
Some vendors are now trying to set up an alternative informal market
in the high density suburb of Hatcliffe, despite a ban on vending
from undesignated areas, according to the paper.
Last year, the authorities chased away thousands of street sellers
as part of its controversial urban clean-up campaign called Operation
Murambatsvina. - Sapa-DPA
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