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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Zim facing 'humanitarian crisis', says SA archbishop
Mail & Guardian (SA)
June 12, 2005
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=245133&area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__africa/
South Africa's
Anglican archbishop of Cape Town believes Zimbabwe is facing a "humanitarian
crisis" following the government's campaign of shack demolitions
that has left at least 300 000 people homeless, his spokesperson
said.
Matthew Esau,
in remarks late on Monday after Archbishop Njongonkulo Ndungane
and an 11-member ecumenical group of South African church leaders
had met Zimbabwe opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, said that
Ndungane had the impression that "certainly Zimbabwe is in
a humanitarian crisis".
"The situation
here reminded him [Ndungane] of Somalia," said Esau, in reference
to the effects of the Indian Ocean tsunami that battered the East
African country's coastline last December, which Ndungane had seen
for himself.
"In Somalia
it [the crisis] was naturally-caused, and here it's caused by a
government," noted Esau.
Since mid-May,
Zimbabwean police have been demolishing houses, cottages, backyard
shacks, flea markets and squatter camps as part of what the government
says is a campaign aimed at curbing crime and easing pressure on
overcrowded towns and cities.
In addition
to creating homelessness, up to 750 000 people have lost their livelihoods,
human rights groups say.
Tsvangirai's
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) says the police are trying
to drive opposition supporters out of urban areas into the countryside
where Mugabe's ruling Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic
Front (Zanu-PF) is dominant.
Esau said Ndungane,
together with his counterparts who include officials from South
Africa's Methodist, Dutch Reformed and Roman Catholic churches,
held a 45-minute meeting with Tsvangirai on Monday evening.
The delegation,
which arrived on Sunday, is due to return to South Africa on Tuesday.
On Monday the group toured Caledonia Transit Centre, outside Harare,
where they were reportedly "shocked" by the conditions
under which at least 5 000 displaced people are living.
Esau said the
church leaders' findings would be presented to a meeting of the
central committee of the South African Council of Churches where
"proposals for the way forward" will be discussed.
When asked if
what the church leaders had witnessed in Zimbabwe would be used
to try to influence the South African government's policy towards
Zimbabwe, Esau replied: "That's certainly not being ruled out."
South African
President Thabo Mbeki has been criticised by the West and Zimbabwe's
MDC for his government's policy of "quiet diplomacy" towards
Mugabe's government.
They say Zimbabwe's
economically-powerful neighbour is in a prime position to pressure
Harare into carrying out democratic and human rights reforms. -
Sapa-DPA
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