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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
is being hypocritically vilified by West
John Vidal
July 01, 2005
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=244336&area=/insight/insight__africa/
For a month
now, the BBC, CNN, ITV and others have been reporting what has been
portrayed as one of the greatest humanitarian and human rights disasters
in years. At least 200 000 people -- sometimes this figure grows
to 250 000 or even 300 000 -- are said to have been forcibly evicted
from slum areas of Harare in Zimbabwe. The figure peaked last week
at 1,5-million, last week the BBC reckoned that bulldozers were
now "crashing through the homes of 500,000 people".
In fact, only
about 1,2-million people live in Harare and no one is suggesting
that half the population has fled in terror or that most of the
city has been wrecked. So where are all these allegedly terrorised
people? A few thousand have been filmed in makeshift camps but not
many more. Who is trying to count the numbers? They are almost always
attributed to an unnamed person in an unnamed United Nations (UN)
agency. But read the only UN statement on the evictions and it says
nothing of 200 000 people.
The evictions
-- which are clearly happening on a wide scale -- have been seized
on by the West, and the former colonial power Britain in particular,
as another reason to demonise President Mugabe and further humiliate
long-suffering Zimbabwe. It's open season on the Harare regime and
it appears that anyone can say anything they like without recourse
to accuracy or reality. Whipped into a frenzy of hypocritical outrage,
the European Union(EU) , Britain and the United States (US), as
well as the World Bank -- all of which have been responsible for
millions of evictions in Africa and elsewhere as conditions of infrastructure
projects -- have rushed to condemn the "atrocities".
The vilification
of Mugabe is now out of control. The UN security council and the
G8 have been asked to debate the evictions, and Mugabe is being
compared to Pol Pot in Cambodia. Meanwhile, the evictions are mentioned
in the same breath as the genocide in Rwanda and ethnic cleansing
in the Balkans -- although perhaps only three people have so far
accidentally died. Only at the very end of some reports is it said
that the Harare city authority's stated reason for the evictions
is to build better, legal houses for 150 000 people.
Perspective
is needed. The summary removal of people at gunpoint from their
homes is indefensible, almost certainly unnecessary, and probably
economically counter-productive, but it is not unusual in the developing
world. Every year millions of poor people are evicted to make way
for tourism, dams, roads and airports, for events like the Olympics,
and for the gentrification and beautification of cities, national
parks and urban redevelopments.
Nor is it new.
Forced evictions, brutal land grabs and slum clearances were all
used by Britain's own rulers in the past to enlarge their estates,
build bigger, more modern cities, construct reservoirs, make way
for railways and lay out fine parks and fashionable areas for the
newly rich to live. Rapidly developing countries are now doing the
same as the rich world did during its own industrial and urban development.
The difference
is mostly in numbers. According to UN-Habitat, the Nairobi-based
agency that concerns itself with the urban environment, hundreds
of millions of the world's poor are technically illegal squatters
living in slum communities like those in Harare, liable to be moved
on by private landowners or by governments. In the past five years,
slum clearance programmes have forced more than 150 000 people out
of their homes in Delhi; 300 000 people were evicted to make way
for Olympic sites in Beijing; 100 000 were moved on in Jakarta;
250 000 were forced out of dam sites in India; and as many as a
million in Lagos and Port Harcourt in Nigeria. There are many more.
Yet those who
like to call themselves "the international community"
say nothing about these mass evictions and the world's press has
been mostly silent. For the World Bank to condemn the Zimbabwean
evictions was particularly rich. According to its own calculations,
the bank has funded projects that have required the eviction of
at least 10-million people.
So why are the
Harare slum clearances so different? As international monster of
the moment, Mugabe is unacceptable to Britain and the West mainly
because he has chosen to evict whites and redistribute land grabbed
in colonial times. The fact that the African Union and other African
leaders are not prepared to condemn him for the Harare evictions
reflects the fact that they, too, recognise the injustice of the
colonial land ownership inheritance and do not want to see Africa
bullied again by the West.
But there may
be another reason why African leaders have not condemned the evictions.
Urbanisation is overwhelming most African cities, which have been
flooded by impoverished people forced off the land. According to
the UN's 2003 study of urbanisation and slums, the driving force
behind the slums of Africa and Asia is not bad governance or tyrants,
but laissez-faire globalisation, the tearing down of trade barriers,
the privatisation of national economies, structural adjustment programmes
imposed on indebted countries by the IMF, and the lowering of tariffs
promoted by the World Trade Organisation.
Like every city
in the world that has tried to clear its slums, Harare will find
that history repeats itself. This year, Zimbabwe faces massive food
shortages that will force more of the urban poor into destitution
and drive yet more people off the land into the cities to look for
work. The poor, punished for their poverty rather than for voting
one way or another, will become poorer and the shacks and shelters
so brutally pulled down in the past month will just go up somewhere
else.
However, an
alternative to forced evictions is emerging right under Mugabe's
nose. Last year, 250 homeless Zimbabweans, members of the Federation
of Slum and Shackdwellers, negotiated the provision of land from
the city authority. They have now planned the layout of their community,
worked out the costs of the homes and are ready to build. Where
are they? Harare.-- © Guardian Newspapers 2005
*John Vidal
is the Guardian's environment editor
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