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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
A
government fighting its own people!
Masimba Taonengwere
Nyamanhindi
June 22, 2005
The recent announcement
by the government that it was banning urban agriculture has confirmed
to all reasonable minded persons that the government in Zimbabwe is on
a deliberate and systematic warpath with its citizens. The recent ban,
the latest step of government abuse of its citizens in the on-going 'Operation
Murambatsvina, which is fast turning out to be 'Operation Murambavanhu'
is clear testimony to the vindictive nature of the government which we
have in this country. It clearly is a retributive exercise targeted at
the urban poor, long considered to be enemies of the state, on the premise
that they are not for the ruling party.
As the ongoing Operation
continues, it has left behind a trail of destruction and relentless suffering
for the people of this country. Most importantly, it becomes inevitable
to point out that the people of Zimbabwe had increasingly turned informal
due to the failure of the formal economy. Zimbabwe currently has an unemployment
rate of over 80% and its economy has been shrinking over the last five
years. Zimbabwe's population which is formally employed is reeling under
the effects of uncharacteristically high inflation, spiralling costs of
basic commodities, transport woes and persistent fuel problems - all directly
linked to government's incompetence.
Urban agriculture,
is becoming a means of livelihood diversification in the developing world,
and is increasingly been seen as a means of alleviating urban poverty
if properly planned. The Food Agricultural Organisation, (FAO) describes
Urban Agriculture as practices within and around cities that compete for
resources (land, water, energy and labour that could also serve other
purposes to satisfy the requirements of the urban population. In essence
Urban Agriculture has been necessitated by the expansion of the urban
areas in Asia and Africa - slightly more than one-third of the populations
of Asia and Africa are urban, according to a paper on Urban and Peri-urban
Agriculture by the Food and Agricultural Organisation, (FAO).
As a result, as Africa
and parts of Asia will become increasingly urbanised, urban poverty and
food insecurity could worsen. To that effect, expansion of cities is driven
by economic growth and/or by migration from rural to urban and peri-urban
areas as agricultural and rural employment opportunities decline or lag
behind population growth. Other factors that contribute to rapid urban
expansion are: social unrest, natural disasters (drought) and lack of
educational opportunities and medical facilities in rural areas. Zimbabwe
today is a classic illustration of a failed nation, having embarked on
a disastrous land redistribution process that is evidently failing to
achieve desired goals. Zimbabwe has also over the years continued to experience
persistent droughts, and the rural areas evidently lack social amenities
and basic medical facilities - many hospitals and clinics in the rural
areas now do not have any medication. Recently this publication revealed
that in some parts of the rural areas, sick patients are being carried
to clinics on ox-drawn carts. Evidently, this has resulted in massive
rural urban migration and of course the occurrence of urban agriculture.
It therefore is callous
for any government in a developing country to just wake up one day on
the wrong side of the bed and declare that urban agriculture is wholly
banned. Of course, the exercise has its own risks, which include environmental
and health risks from inappropriate agricultural and acquacultural practices;
increased competition for land, water, energy and labour and reduced environmental
capacity for pollution absorption. But the disadvantages of such an exercise
have to be weighed against the advantages of instituting clearly planned
urban agriculture. The United Nations, through Food and Agricultural Organisation
(FAO), clearly spells out that quantity of food available is increased
through Urban Agriculture. Poor urban dwellers often lack the purchasing
capacity to acquire adequate amounts of food. In Zimbabwe, food is not
readily available, supermarket shelves are empty, and where the food is
available, the prices are exorbitant.
Urban Agriculture reduces food insecurity by providing direct access to
home-produced food to households and to the informal market. Much of the
urban agriculture is for own consumption with occasional surpluses sold
into the local market and has the advantage of creating potential agricultural
jobs and incomes. In Urban Agriculture, there is less need for packaging,
storage and transportation of food, non-market access to food for poor
consumers, availability of fresh, perishable food and waste recycling
and re-use possibilities. Yet Zimbabwe has taken a bold and ill-informed
decision to put a halt to this practice, in the process directly affecting
the poor and increasing the suffering of Zimbabweans. This is unacceptable!
Perhaps the most nauseating part of this intention is how it will affect
women, and ultimately children. The whole saga - the Operation Clean-Up,
has clearly disadvantaged women because they form a substantial part of
the informal sector, including urban agriculture, and are involved in
livelihood diversification. Studies done in developing countries have
pointed out that women have increasingly turned to work in the informal
sector. In Philippines, for example women control 79% of street enterprises;
and in the 7% that are owned by couples, women are the major decision-makers.
In Senegal, 53% of vendors are women; this is according to a research
done by Dankleman and Davidson in 1988. Furthermore, a research paper
on Urban Agriculture and Women's Socio-Economic Empowerment: A case study
of Kiswa and Luwafu Area in Kampala City, Uganda show that Urban Agriculture
is important to urban dwellers' livelihoods and specifically to women
who dominate the informal sector. It shows that women dominate urban agriculture
due to a number of socio-economic factors that include gender division
of labour, low incomes, food security and a desire to earn personal income.
In fact it has increased the socio-economic status of urban women as they
become financially independent, more often than not providing for their
children.
With the rate at which this operation is going, it is becoming evident
that the operation is just but a human catastrophe that urgently requires
the attention of the United Nations. When the rest of the world is making
frantic efforts to try and map out ways of alleviating poverty that is
becoming a permanent feature in its confines, especially in the developing
world, Zimbabwe is making frantic efforts to try and impoverish its citizens
through vindictive and ill thought out actions like this latest 'Tsunami'.
Yet we are persuaded to conclude that the abuse of the Zimbabwean citizens
by their own government is not merely an act of omission in itself, and
does not occur by mere default, rather, the abuse is a direct result of
deliberate human actions, which are all politically founded, in an unrestricted
disregard for the disastrously negative and potentially irreversible repercussions
on the welfare of the ordinary man.
*Masimba Taonengwere
Nyamanhindi is a development communicator based in Harare. He can be contacted
at nyams0@lycos.com
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