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This article participates on the following special index pages:

  • Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles


  • Municipal police loot food for clean-up victims
    ZimOnline
    November 01, 2006

    http://www.zimonline.co.za/Article.aspx?ArticleId=377

    HARARE – Senior Harare municipal police officers looted food worth over $97 000 meant for last year’s clean-up victims and suspended four worker representatives for exposing the theft, a council audit report reveals.

    Harare’s municipal police and soldiers were at the forefront in demolishing city backyard cottages, shanty towns and informal business kiosks during the widely condemned Operation Murambatsvina (Operation Drive out Rubbish) that left at least 700 000 people without shelter or means of livelihood.

    A United Nations report compiled after the demolitions said another 2.4 million people were also indirectly affected by the exercise which President Robert Mugabe said was necessary to rid Zimbabwean cities of squalor and crime.

    According to the audit report, dated 17th August 2006, the municipal police officers helped themselves to tinned food rations meant for victims of the clean-up exercise during breakfast and council management meetings.

    The food was donated by international aid agencies for distribution to the poor and homeless after the home demolition exercise.

    "The allegations contained in the anonymous letter have been proved to be true. The municipal police managers confessed to having consumed Operation Murambatsvina tinned food rations worth $97 142, 37.

    "No authority was sought for the consumption," says the report.

    The four council workers who blew the whistle on their colleagues were however suspended without pay, in a clear case of victimisation.

    The four, G Jembe, H Mazamnhi, M Sadomba, I Sigauke were suspended last June and are now pursuing legal action to be reinstated to their positions.

    Chairwoman of the state-appointed commission running Harare Sekesai Makwavarara was not immediately available for comment on the matter.

    The Zimbabwean government has been reluctant to allow food aid into the country for victims of the clean-up exercise.

    More than 30 tonnes of food donated by the South African Council of Churches took over a month to be handed over to the clean-up victims because the authorities would not timeously clear the aid. - ZimOnline

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