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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
UNICEF
rents housing for evicted Zimbabweans with disabilities
UN News
August 10, 2005
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=15357&Cr=zimbabwe&Cr1=
In the wake
of the housing and business evictions that have displaced hundreds
of thousands of people in Zimbabwe, the United Nations Children's
Fund (UNICEF) says it will rent housing for more than 100 evicted
families with disabled children and provide them with transportation
and business investment.
Updating its
report on its work since Anna Tibaijuka, the UN Special Envoy on
the evictions who is also the UN Human Settlements Programme's (UN-HABITAT)
Executive Director, issued a report last month saying some 700,000
people had lost homes or businesses in the Zimbabwean Government's
demolitions, UNICEF
said all of the more than 100 women in the Zimbabwe Parents of Children
with Disabilities Association are receiving emergency humanitarian
assistance.
One of them,
Barbara Fero, an HIV-infected widow whose home in the working-class
suburb of Mbare was demolished and whose nine-year-old daughter
is disabled, said the rented housing "is exactly what we need."
"Since the evictions
I have been constantly sick," Ms. Fero says. "I do not have a place
to take a rest, I cannot afford adequate meals, I am on ARV [anti-retroviral]
treatment and I cannot afford to get my next monthly supply. My
daughter, Elaine, needs to be accompanied to her school as the transport
is no longer reliable and I do not have money."
In partnership
with a local non-governmental organization (NGO), UNICEF gave the
Feros blankets against the southern hemisphere winter, as well as
cooking pots and soap.
UNICEF said
it had joined the UN World Food Programme (WFP),
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 organizations
are also supplying chronically ill people with home-based treatments.
"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," UNICEF's Representative in the
country Festo Kavishe said.
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