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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
The
many faces of displacement: IDPs in Zimbabwe
Internal
Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC)
August 21, 2008
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on the IDMC website
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Executive
summary
Hundreds of thousands of people have been internally displaced in
Zimbabwe as a result of the actions of their own government. Most
recently, tens of thousands of people have been displaced by a campaign
of state-sponsored violence following the elections on 29 March
2008. In 2005, an urban clear-up operation referred to as Operation
Murambatsvina (Operation "Clear the Filth") was
estimated by the United Nations to have made 570,000 people homeless.
Hundreds of thousands of farm workers and their families have been
displaced as a result of the government's fast-track land
reform and resettlement programme, which started in 2000. Other
groups of people have been arbitrarily displaced for different reasons
at different times.
Zimbabwe does not have any of the outward signs of other large displacement
crises, such as camps for internally displaced persons (IDPs); the
crisis is to a large extent hidden. There are no official government
statistics relating to these displaced populations; indeed, the
government has consistently failed to acknowledge both the reality
of displacement, and that its policies have caused internal displacement.
Government obstruction means that no agency has been able to conduct
a comprehensive survey to determine the number of IDPs. Indeed,
so sensitive is the issue of displacement in Zimbabwe that IDPs
in Zimbabwe are nsot even called IDPs but instead have come to be
referred to as "mobile and vulnerable populations".
Most if not all of the hundreds of thousands of displaced people
in Zimbabwe are in desperate need of humanitarian assistance and
protection.
However, in today's Zimbabwe, displacement is by no means
the only cause of vulnerability. Against the background of the general
political and economic crisis in Zimbabwe the question must be asked
whether IDPs there are in need of assistance and protection by virtue
of their being displaced, or whether their circumstances are in
fact no different from the majority of Zimbabwe's citizens
who have been left struggling to cope with the combined effects
of hyperinflation, unemployment levels above 80 per cent, food shortages,
fuel shortages, power cuts, water cuts, and the breakdown of education
and health services. The answer to this question is clear: internally
displaced people are indeed among the most vulnerable groups in
Zimbabwe. Thus according to UNICEF: "The most acute humanitarian
needs include those of populations affected by serious food insecurity,
HIV and cholera outbreaks as well as those displaced during the
fast-track land reform programme, Operation Murambatsvina (OM) and
more recent re-evictions" [emphasis added].
While large numbers of Zimbabweans are struggling to cope with the
impact of the country's economic meltdown and the government's
widespread human rights violations, IDPs are generally less able
to cope with the hardships of Zimbabwe's shrinking economy
and diminishing livelihood opportunities. While in the current circumstances
it is sometimes difficult to distinguish between IDPs and the general
population in Zimbabwe in terms of humanitarian needs, that assessment
is likely to change if and when Zimbabwe is set on a path to recovery.
At that time, many of Zimbabwe's displaced people will be
less able to take advantage of new opportunities, and many will
have needs for assistance over and above those of the general population.
An appropriate response to those needs will have to be formulated,
and a strategy for providing durable solutions for IDPs must be
developed.
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