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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
ZIMBABWE:
Church leaders disturbed by suffering of homeless
IRIN
News
July
11, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=48068
JOHANNESBURG
- A delegation from the South African Council of Churches (SACC),
visiting Zimbabwe to assess the impact of the ongoing urban cleanup
campaign, are "disturbed" by what they've witnessed.
Thousands of
informal settlements and markets have been demolished in the cleanup
campaign, launched in May, and at least 375,000 people left homeless;
the authorities have claimed it was part of an urban renewal strategy
that will eventually build 10,000 homes at a cost of US $300 million.
The government
wants people evicted from illegal settlements to either move directly
to their place of birth in rural areas, or to one of two temporary
transit centres outside the capital, Harare, and the eastern city
of Mutare. A third facility was to be completed in Bulawayo in the
south of the country.
Spokesman Eddie
Makue said the SACC delegation, together with the All Africa Conference
of Churches (AACC), had toured the Caledonia transit camp outside
Harare, which was set up to temporarily shelter those rendered homeless
by the cleanup campaign, and met with civil society and church leaders
in Zimbabwe.
The delegation,
led by Anglican Archbishop Njongonkulu Ngundane and SACC president
Professor Russell Botman, was also scheduled to tour Mbare township,
which was severely affected by the cleanup.
The group aimed
to meet with both the ruling party and the opposition before returning
to Johannesburg.
"We will
make a statement tomorrow, as it's going to be important for us
to share our observations, after the delegation briefs the SACC
central committee [on Tuesday morning]," Makue said. The AACC
representative in the delegation is also to report back to the pan-African
body's central committee.
He noted that
"what we are observing [in Zimbabwe] is very close to the statement
released by the World Council of Churches".
In its statement
on 24 June, the World Council of Churches condemned the mass forced
evictions taking place in Zimbabwe and called on the government
to end the "rapid, ruthless and arbitrary manner" in which
the cleanup operation was being conducted.
The council
observed that the campaign was being prosecuted during winter, and
at "a time when the rural areas are particularly unable to
absorb those expelled from the urban areas because of the effects
of drought".
Makue added
that "for now ... what we can say is that the church leadership
is very disturbed by what we have seen: the suffering of the people
in the Caledonia camp is quite profound".
The SACC was
discussing with local clergy what assistance it could provide to
those in need. "[But] we recognise our own limitations as well,
and we are very appreciative of the fact that the main caregivers
in the Caledonia camp are UNICEF [UN Children's Fund] and Christian
Care, the service arm of the Zimbabwe Council of Churches."
Meanwhile, rights
group Amnesty International has urged the "African Union (AU)
to challenge attempts by the government of Zimbabwe to frustrate
the AU's investigation of the current human rights crisis in Zimbabwe".
This followed
reports that the AU envoy sent to Zimbabwe to evaluate the impact
of the controversial demolition of informal settlements and shops
had left the country last week without completing his mission.
AU spokesman
Adam Thiam confirmed to IRIN that Bahame Tom Nyanduga, a member
of the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights, Special
Rapporteur Responsible for Refugees, Asylum Seekers and Internally
Displaced Persons in Africa, had left Zimbabwe last Thursday.
Amnesty said
the government of Zimbabwe had reportedly claimed there were "procedural
irregularities" regarding Nyanduga's visit.
"By trying
to block the work of an African Union representative through the
use of blatantly obstructionist procedural excuses, the government
of Zimbabwe is showing its real fear: that African Union criticism
will force other African governments to finally tackle the human
rights and humanitarian crisis in Zimbabwe publicly and effectively,"
said Kolawole Olaniyan, Director of Amnesty International's Africa
Programme.
"It is
deplorable that the government of Zimbabwe has treated the African
Union and a respected member of its Commission in this way,"
Olaniyan commented. "We urge African Union member states to
uphold the African Union's credibility and integrity, and reaffirm
their commitment to human rights and accountability by refusing
to allow governments to deflect attention from human rights violations
by resorting to the flimsy excuse of 'procedural irregularities'."
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