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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Report
of the Fact-Finding Mission to Zimbabwe to assess the Scope and
Impact of Operation Murambatsvina by the UN Special Envoy on Human
Settlements Issues in Zimbabwe
Mrs. Anna
Kajumulo Tibaijuka
July 18, 2005
http://www.unhabitat.org/zimbabwe_report_2005.asp
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Executive
Summary
On 19 May 2005, with little or no warning, the Government of
Zimbabwe embarked on an operation to "clean-up" its
cities. It was a "crash" operation known as "Operation
Murambatsvina", referred to in this report as Operation Restore
Order. It started in the Zimbabwe capital, Harare, and rapidly evolved
into a nationwide demolition and eviction campaign carried out by
the police and the army. Popularly referred to as "Operation
Tsunami" because of its speed and ferocity it resulted in
the destruction of homes, business premises and vending sites. It
is estimated that some 700,000 people in cities across the country
have lost either their homes, their source of livelihood or both.
Indirectly, a further 2.4 million people have been affected in varying
degrees. Hundreds of thousands of women, men and children were made
homeless, without access to food, water and sanitation, or health
care. Education for thousands of school age children has been disrupted.
Many of the sick, including those with HIV and AIDS, no longer have
access to care. The vast majority of those directly and indirectly
affected are the poor and disadvantaged segments of the population.
They are, today, deeper in poverty, deprivation and destitution,
and have been rendered more vulnerable.
Operation Restore
Order took place at a time of persistent budget deficits, triple-digit
inflation, critical food and fuel shortages and chronic shortages
of foreign currency. It was implemented in a highly polarized political
climate characterized by mistrust, fear and a lack of dialogue between
Government and local authorities, and between the former and civil
society. There is no doubt therefore that the preliminary assessment
contained in this report constitutes but a partial picture of the
far-reaching and long-term social, economic, political and institutional
consequences. In assessing the scope and impact of the operation
and the ability of the Government of Zimbabwe and of the humanitarian
community to respond, the Special Envoy's mission, supported
by the United Nations Country Team, met with President Robert Mugabe,
a crosssection ofmembers of his cabinet and various people and institutions.
These include central and local government officials, political
parties, religious leaders, civil society organisations, the private
sector, professional and trade associations, academia, the donor
and humanitarian community, as well as some of the people affected.
The mission was further informed by hundreds of written submissions
and testimonials, official records and legal documents, interviews,
articles and reports made by the media, and by site visits across
the country. Furthermore, the mission witnessed first-hand the process
of demolition and eviction and met with many of its victims.
The Special
Envoy's findings and their implications are as follows:
- Operation
Restore Order, while purporting to target illegal dwellings and
structures and to clamp down on alleged illicit activities, was
carried out in an indiscriminate and unjustified manner, with
indifference to human suffering, and, in repeated cases, with
disregard to several provisions of national and international
legal frameworks. Immediate measures need to be taken to bring
those responsible to account, and for reparations to be made to
those who have lost property and livelihoods. In parallel, other
confidence-building measures need to be taken to restore dialogue
between the Government of Zimbabwe and civil society.
- Even ifmotivated
by a desire to ensure a semblance of order in the chaotic manifestations
of rapid urbanisation and rising poverty characteristic of African
cities, none the less Operation Restore Order turned out to be
a disasterous venture based on a set of colonial-era laws and
policies that were used as a tool of segregation and social exclusion.
There is an urgent need to suspend these outdated laws and to
review them within the briefest time possible to ensure the sustainability
of humanitarian response and to set the stage for meaningful physical
reconstruction and the restoration of livelihoods;
- The humanitarian
consequences of Operation Restore Order are enormous. It will
take several years before the people and society as a whole can
recover. There is an immediate need for the Government of Zimbabwe
to recognise the virtual state of emergency that has resulted,
and to allow unhindered access by the international and humanitarian
community to assist those that have been affected. Priority needs
include shelter and non-food items, food and health support services.
- Any humanitarian
response can only be meaningful and sustainable if it contributes
to the long-term recovery and reconstruction efforts of the Government
and of its people. Zimbabwe is not a country at war and it remains
peaceful. By African standards, it has a well maintained physical
infrastructure. The international community should engage the
Government of Zimbabwe and help it to address some of the issues
and causal factors that led to the present predicament. These
include, first and foremost, the lack of security of tenure for
the poor. They also include conflicting and outdated housing and
urban development policies, overlapping jurisdictions, and a lack
of clear definition of and respect for the respective roles and
competencies between central and local spheres of government.
The humanitarian response provides a unique opportunity and entry
point to link the provision of temporary shelter and other forms
of humanitarian assistance with immediate security of tenure for
all those affected and to prepare the ground for overcoming the
failures and inherent weaknesses in governance.
In view of the
above, the Special Envoy proposes the following recommendations
for the Secretary General's consideration:
A.
Recommendations that the Government of Zimbabwe should be encouraged
to undertake:
a. On
Humanitarian Issues
Recommendation
1: An estimated 700,000 people in cities across the country
have either lost their homes or their livelihoods or both. The
Government of Zimbabwe should immediately halt any further demolitions
of homes and informal businesses and create conditions for sustainable
relief and reconstruction for those affected.
Recommendation
2: There is an urgent need for the Government of Zimbabwe
to facilitate humanitarian operations within a pro-poor, gender-sensitive
policy framework that provides security of tenure, affordable
housing, water and sanitation, and the pursuit of small scale
income-generating activities in a regulated and enabling environment.
Recommendation
3: There is an immediate need for the Government of Zimbabwe
to revise the outdated Regional Town and Country Planning Act
and other relevant Acts, to align the substance and the procedures
of these Acts with the social, economic and cultural realities
facing the majority of the population, namely the poor.
Recommendation
4: There is an immediate need to revive dialogue and restore
trust between different spheres of government and between Government
and civil society. This process should emerge from a broad-based
consultation among all Zimbabwean stakeholders.
b. On
Accountability and Legal Issues
Recommendation
5: The Government of Zimbabwe is collectively responsible for
what has happened. However, it appears that there was no collective
decision-making with respect to both the conception and implementation
of Operation Restore Order. Evidence suggests it was based on improper
advice by a few architects of the operation. The people and Government
of Zimbabwe should hold to account those responsible for the injury
caused by the Operation.
Recommendation
6: The Government of Zimbabwe should set a good example and
adhere to the rule of law before it can credibly ask its citizens
to do the same. Operation Restore Order breached both national and
international human rights law provisions guiding evictions, thereby
precipitating a humanitarian crisis. The Government of Zimbabwe
should pay compensation where it is due for those whose property
was unlawfully destroyed.
Recommendation
7: The wrecking of the informal sector by Operation Restore
Order will have detrimental effects at a time that the economy remains
in serious difficulties. Apart from drastically increasing unemployment,
the Operation will have a knock-on effect on the formal economy
including agriculture. The Government of Zimbabwe has to undertake
corrective policy reforms in macro-economic management and governance
issues, focusing on land reform and land tenure with a view to provide
secure tenure for the poor both in rural and urban areas.
Recommendation
8: The Government of Zimbabwe should grant full citizenship
to those former migrant workers and their descendants who have no
such legal status.
B. Recommendations
for the United Nations and the International Community
Recommendation
9: Operation Restore Order has precipitated a humanitarian
crisis of immense proportions. In an apparent response, the Government
of Zimbabwe has launched a counter programme, Operation Garikai
(Rebuilding and Reconstruction). The Government itself, even with
the best efforts, has limited capacity to fully address the needs
of the affected population without the assistance of the international
community. The United Nations should therefore work with the Government
of Zimbabwe to mobilize immediate assistance from the international
community to avert further suffering, and encourage the Government
to create conditions for sustainable relief and reconstruction
for those affected.
Recommendation
10: The United Nations, working with the African Union and
the Southern African Development Community, at the highest levels,
should assist the Government of Zimbabwe to promote real internal
dialogue among its various constituencies on the one hand, and
dialogue with the international community on the other hand, with
a view to working out the modalities of returning Zimbabwe into
the international fold.
Recommendation
11: Although a case for crime against humanity under Article
7 of the Rome Statute might be difficult to sustain, the Government
of Zimbabwe clearly caused large sections of its population serious
suffering that must now be redressed with the assistance of the
United Nations and the broader international community. The international
community should encourage the Government to prosecute all those
who orchestrated this catastrophe and those who may have caused
criminal negligence leading to alleged deaths, if so confirmed
by an independent internal inquiry/inquest. The international
community should then continue to be engaged with human rights
concerns in Zimbabwe in consensus building political forums such
as the UN Commission onHuman Rights, or its successor, the African
Union Peer Review Mechanism, and in the Southern African Development
Community.
Lessons
Learned
Recommendation
12: Operation Restore Order has to be understood within the
broader context of the urbanization crisis in Africa. It is recommended
that the international community draws lessons from the Zimbabwe
crisis for the entire African continent and actively support the
implementation of the Habitat Agenda. It makes a clarion call
to the international community to realize that without a more
concerted approach to promote urban environmental sustainability
(Goal 7, target 10 on water and sanitation, and target 11 on slum
upgrading and prevention of the Millennium Declaration), the other
countries in Africa could well experience another "Operation
Restore Order" sooner than later.
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