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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
"Clearing
away the Trash" - Victoria Falls
Sokwanele
June 15, 2005
http://www.sokwanele.com/articles/sokwanele/clearingawaythetrash_15june2005.html
 "Operation
Murambatsvina" ("Clearing away the trash") reached Victoria Falls
on May 30. There were three phases to the operation. The first was
carried out by the C.I.O. or secret police operatives, who moved
quickly through the informal traders in the market and elsewhere
and then through those living in the wooden dwellings (called "Baghdads"),
warning them to move their belongings immediately or they would
be destroyed. Close on their heels there followed the riot police,
dubbed "a pack of vicious dogs" by Victoria Falls residents, executing
phases 2 and 3, which essentially saw the total destruction of all
these structures.
Many of the
informal traders it should be noted selling vegetables, shoes and
clothes, were operating with legal permits and in places allocated
to them by the local Council. In the same way most of the residents
of the "Baghdad" dwellings were lawful tenants of the Council, holding
legal documents to confirm their title and having paid rent to the
Council for many years. The reason given by Mugabe's uniformed thugs
for their barbaric actions, namely that they were removing illegal
structures was a blatant lie. Moreover so far as any of the structures
did not comply with building or planning regulations it was of course
the local authority, the Council, which was empowered under section
199 of the Urban Councils Act to take corrective action (after due
legal process). The police had no legal right whatsoever to take
the action they did. Their conduct was not only inhumane and barbaric,
it was also plainly illegal.
After sweeping
through the high density suburb of Chinotimba the police moved into
the low density township, where they continued their wanton destruction
of Baghdads - again notwithstanding that most of the structures
were in good repair and had provided essential accommodation to
workers and their families. They seem to relish the task, though
when they got tired of demolishing the structures they handed the
sledgehammers to the owners and ordered them to destroy their own
houses. Once the wooden houses had been knocked down the so-called
agents of law and order had them torched, and when the flames subsided
they ordered the residents to sweep up the mess. Intercepting one
old man, who had piled a few timbers salvaged from his house into
a trolley and was desperately trying to escape attention, the police
upturned the trolley and set the contents ablaze. There are unconfirmed
reports that one re sident who resisted the destruction of his house
was beaten to death.
A resident of
Victoria Falls who lives some 3 kilometres from Chinotimba described
how, for two days after attack, the evening sky over the high density
area was a lit up with bright red glow from the burning of the houses
and there was a pungent smell of burning in the air.
It is understood
that between 3 and 4 thousand dwellings were thus destroyed in one
clean sweep through the town and up to 60,000 people rendered homeless.
One local employer alone who had provided his workforce of 140 with
adequate housing, approved with a valid permit from the Council,
saw the whole lot razed to the ground. So great was the anger felt
by the residents at this gross violation of their human rights,
that one middle-aged woman to whom our reporter spoke described
the atmosphere as "electric". Armed police patrolled through the
almost deserted streets of the town.
Having thus
destroyed a swathe of housing, Mugabe's uniformed thugs then turned
their unwelcome attention to the business community in the town.
Dressed in full combat gear and brandishing their rifles, they walked
into business premises at will and insisted on carrying out immediate
searches. Needless to say they had obtained no search warrants or
court orders.
The pretext
given for their illegal entry and search operation was that they
were looking for forex. Where safari operators were concerned they
took it upon themselves to down-load information from the computers,
as they said, "to investigate any illegal currency dealing or use
of FCA accounts." It appears that none dared to challenge this outrageous
behaviour. As one rather shocked businessman observed dryly later,
"What do you say to a thug holding a gun to your head? You say,
'yes sir'".
Nor was the
low density housing area spared either. Apart from instantly destroying
any structures that they considered illegal, the police carried
out random searches of houses. Where they found more than one television
set or deep freeze in a house for example, they would demand to
see an invoice or receipt for the additional items, and if the householder
was unable to produce the documentation requested on the spot, they
would confiscate the items concerned. Nothing further has been heard
of the confiscated goods. Political commentators have speculated
that the property looted by the police in this and other centres
across the country is intended to reward them for their part in
Operation Murambatsvina - in other words, an extension of Robert
Mugabe's corrupt system of patronage.
A week after
the initial sweep through Chinotimba the police returned, effectively
to terrorize those residents who still remained there, now sleeping
in the open. Several hundred former residents had sold their few
possessions to raise enough money for the bus fares back to the
rural areas, but many more remained, hoping desperately to find
some alternative accommodation and in the meantime sleeping under
the stars where their homes had once been. Nor were their prospects
of obtaining other accommodation good. Using the law of supply and
demand to their own benefit some residents fortunate enough to still
have their own houses intact, were charging as much as $ 700,000
monthly rent for a single room.
So closes another
chapter in the saga of misery that the dictator and those loyal
to him, are inflicting upon the suffering nation. And when, we ask,
will the too-long suffering people of Zimbabwe say "Enough is Enough"?
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