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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Bishop
condemns Harare evictions
BBC News
June 12, 2005
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/4085340.stm
The Roman Catholic
Archbishop of Harare has condemned the Zimbabwean government's policy
of demolishing thousands of homes and businesses.
Speaking to the BBC,
Archbishop Robert Ndlovu described the move as "inhuman".
President Robert Mugabe's
government says the houses and markets being demolished in the capital
are illegal.
But the opposition
has accused the authorities of punishing the urban poor who voted against
the ruling Zanu-PF party in elections earlier this year.
The UN says some 200,000
Zimbabweans have been made homeless in the two-week clearance operation
carried out by police.
Police say the demolitions
are part of an operation to deal with illegal activities across the country.
Some 30,000 people have been arrested.
Archbishop
Ndlovu told BBC radio that both opposition and government supporters were
suffering from the demolitions.
"The way the exercise
was carried out was inhuman," he added.
"Bearing in mind this
is the winter season in Zimbabwe, we felt that it was really inconsiderate.
"Now people are sleeping
in the open - there are small children there."
When the operation
began last month police said those evicted would be taken to alternative
accommodation.
But an MP for the
opposition Movement for Democratic Change in Harare said people had nowhere
to go.
The UN has demanded
that Mr Mugabe stop the eviction operation, which it describes as a new
form of "apartheid".
Zanu-PF won two thirds
of the votes in a general election in March which the opposition says
was rigged.
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