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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
SOUTH AFRICA-ZIMBABWE: Church aid to leave for Harare soon
IRIN
News
August 11, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=48550
JOHANNESBURG
- Two trucks carrying 37 mt of food aid and another laden with blankets
for Zimbabweans affected by the government's controversial cleanup
campaign are expected to leave South Africa for Harare soon, according
to a South African Council of Churches (SACC) spokesman.
"We have finally got the necessary documents saying that the maize
in the truck has not been genetically modified - so we hope to get
the necessary clearance certificate from the Zimbabwean authorities,"
said Rev Ron Steele on behalf of the SACC.
The trucks have been waiting in a depot in Johannesburg since last
week after the Zimbabwean government demanded documents confirming
that the maize was not genetically modified.
Christian Care, an NGO, will distribute the goods for the Zimbabwe
Council of Churches. "The food aid is destined for the transit camps
outside Harare," said Steele.
A report by UN Special Envoy Anna Tibaijuka said about 700,000 people
had been affected by the demolitions in and around urban centres,
which "breached both national and international human rights law
provisions guiding evictions" and had created "a humanitarian crisis".
Meanwhile, the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) has announced that it
will rent housing for more than 100 evicted families with disabled
children and provide them with transport.
UNICEF said it had joined the UN World Food Programme, the International
Office of Migration (IOM), the Zimbabwe Red Cross Society and local
NGOs in providing hundreds of thousands of people with blankets
and plastic sheeting for protection from the cold, along with sanitation
facilities, food and shelter. The organisations are also supplying
chronically ill people with home-based treatment.
"We have been working around the clock for the better part of three
months and are improving the situation for tens of thousands, but
such is the gravity of the situation that we are asking the international
community to support the people of Zimbabwe," noted UNICEF's Country
Representative, Festo Kavishe.
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