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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
ZIMBABWE:
Pilot project provides shelter to cleanup victims
IRIN News
August 17, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=48627
JOHANNESBURG - A pilot
project has been set up by various international humanitarian agencies
to provide shelter to Zimbabweans affected by the government's controversial
urban cleanup campaign.
Stephane Dujarric,
spokesman for UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, said the project was being
implemented by UN-HABITAT, in partnership with the UN Development Programme
(UNDP), the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) and the Zimbabwean
government.
Some 123 families
were benefiting from shelter packages provided by the partners. "If
the programme is successful, UNDP plans to reach 40,000 households countrywide,
in conjunction with government allocation of plots for housing,"
Dujarric noted.
The World Food Programme
had "redirected 1,450 mt of food from its ongoing efforts in the
country to assist the victims of the housing evictions" while the
UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) was providing water, sanitation and education,
and also helping to reunite displaced children with their families. The
IOM has been providing tents.
UNICEF spokesman James
Elder told IRIN the pilot project at Headlands, in Manicaland province
on the Mozambique border, was "in a way a case of UN best practice,
with all UN agencies [and the non-UN] IOM pushing in the same direction
under difficult circumstances to help the people of Zimbabwe".
He added that "the
main concern is the dislocation [of people] ... but one of the most interesting
things that I've found from a recent UNICEF assessment of the impact on
the population and children's schooling is that 90 percent of children
affected remain in school".
This underlined the
value Zimbabweans placed on education. "I think, obviously, they
are under economic stress, but it's such a positive development, and a
very clear example of their resolve and the sacrifices Zimbabweans are
making to ensure their children continue in school," Elder said.
"We want the international community to offer support to ensure that
this positive culture does not disappear."
Dujarric noted that
the planned humanitarian appeal for Zimbabwe was still being finalised
but in the meantime a number of UN agencies were providing food and various
other services to people affected by the mass evictions.
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