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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
The
ultimate betrayal
Sokwanele
June 10, 2005
http://www.sokwanele.com/articles/sokwanele/ultimatebetrayal_10june2005.html
On the eastern
outskirts of the City of Bulawayo, on a derelict piece of land not
far off the main Bulawayo-Harare Road, there stands a small squatter
camp. The area is called Killarney. Homeless, unemployed destitutes
started coming to this deserted patch of scrub, beyond the farthest
reaches of the residential suburbs, some years ago. They came with
virtually nothing apart from the ragged clothes they stood up in,
yet within a few months, and out of a few scraps of timber, corrugated
iron and assorted junk, they managed to erect a number of makeshift
structures. A typical African shanty-town arising apparently out
of nothing on the bare veldt. This was no picture postcard scene,
but at least the residents had a roof over their heads, walls to
keep some of the cold out, and a place to call home - and importantly,
within walking distance of an urban centre where the able-bodied
could look for work. Quite a community was established under these
austere circumstances. The 350 or so families shared one thing in
common - abject poverty - which in the last resort is quite a powerful
bonding agent. They regulate life together so as to maintain order
and decency with a measure of dignity. A few have made desperate
efforts to cultivate some vegetables, though in the poor, stony
ground and with no water on hand, their efforts are largely futile.
The Killarney
residents received no help from the authorities. No water, electricity
or other facilities were available to them. Bulawayo City Council
was aware of their presence and for obvious reasons the city fathers
were not too happy at the informal settlement. Nevertheless, not
having any other housing available to which they could move these
poor people, and out of compassion for their plight they refrained
from moving them on forcibly. Residents of Bulawayo who were aware
of the acute needs of these desperate people, assisted them in small
ways and a local pastor played a superb role in ministering to both
their physical and spiritual needs. Food from a network of caring
support groups was distributed to the people through the pastor,
and he also organised regular Sunday worship.
But now ZANU
PF politics intrudes on this hitherto peaceful scene. The nation-wide
so-called Murambatsvina campaign (meaning, clear away the trash)
comes to town. Armed, baton-wielding riot police descend on one
informal settlement after another across the city - many operating
legally with all the required permits to show for it - and in their
wake there is left a trail of destruction, burning and looting (the
looting carried out by none other than the police themselves). The
people of Killarney wait with bated breath. Will they be next in
line for the bulldozers and sledge hammers or is it just possible
that they will escape the attention of Mugabe's marauding thugs?
On Tuesday (June
7th) word comes to the community - the police are on their way.
Expect them within the next 24 hours. In the meantime the people
can mitigate their misery by removing from their makeshift shelters
any items of value. So they set to work stripping down from these
structures such items as the broken sheets of asbestos and plastic
which provided some cover from the elements, and removing their
few pathetic belongings. Now they have no shelter, and it is cold
these winter nights on the bare plain. Ironically they have rendered
themselves homeless all over again - out of fear for an even worse
fate at the hands of Mugabe's baton-wielding storm troopers.
At the time
of writing the police had still not arrived at Killarney. They are
expected at any time (and Sokwanele will try to keep readers appraised
of developments). In the meantime however, and as perhaps the ultimate
betrayal of the poor, Mugabe and his ZANU-PF lieutenants have used
the weapon of fear to persuade them to destroy their own poor shacks.
Removing the
trash ZANU PF style?
Visit the Sokwanele
fact sheet
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