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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
ZIMBABWE:
Operation Live Well struggles to take off
IRIN News
August 19, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=48674
HARARE - The
painful lesson of the government's urban cleanup campaign, launched
three months ago in defiance of international opinion, is that it
is much easier to destroy shanty homes than to build the victims
proper accommodation.
A UN report estimated that Operation Murambatsvina ('Clean Out Garbage')
- which the government said was aimed at clearing slums and flushing
out criminals - left more than 700,000 people homeless or without
jobs after kicking off in mid-May.
Beginning in July, its successor, Operation Garikai/Hlalani Kuhle
(Live Well), under which the authorities promised to provide the
deserving displaced with decent and affordable accommodation, has
barely scratched the surface of those in need.
"What we have observed so far is that the government lacks the capability
to avail accommodation to people who were affected by Operation
Murambatsvina, and one is justified in being sceptical about the
whole project," said Mike Davis, chairman of the Combined Harare
Residents' Association.
"A lot of money was spent in destroying the structures - some of
them not classic shanties as government officials would want us
to believe - and these authorities now have a bigger financial and
logistical burden to honour their promise to provide acceptable
housing," Davis noted.
But according to humanitarian officials, although cash-strapped,
the government is quibbling over the wording of a "flash appeal"
to international donors to help fund assistance to the homeless.
"The government reacted negatively to the language of the flash
appeal - they said it was too harsh and seems to imply Zimbabwe
is facing an emergency," said one aid worker. "They're in denial;
they don't want to acknowledge that this is a humanitarian issue,
they want to present it as a normal housing development programme."
There are three recognised reconstruction sites around the capital,
Harare: Hatcliffe Extension, from where 17,000 people were originally
evicted under the cleanup programme, and Whitecliff and Hopely farms.
Hatcliffe Extension had been a longstanding settlement, with many
homeowners paying fees to the city council. In May the police deemed
the settlement illegal and cleared the area. Residents were ordered
to their rural home areas or a holding camp at Caledonia Farm, but
in July the government relented, and people with recognised stands
were allowed to return.
When IRIN visited Hatcliffe, about 18 km north of Harare, building
brigades of residents were digging foundations for two-roomed cottages,
each measuring about 70 sq metres.
A member of one brigade, who identified himself simply as Chamu,
said they had managed to dig foundations for a total of 200 houses.
"We are supposed to build houses for 4,000 people, even though I
understand that there should be a total of 15,000 housing units
at Hatcliffe. Some beneficiaries of Operation Garikai have been
given four sheets of corrugated asbestos per family for roofing,
but the way I see it, that will not be enough, meaning that residents
will have to use their own money to buy extra material," said Chamu.
Most of the residents who returned to Hatcliffe have set up makeshift
shelters next to their demolished homes, using whatever building
materials they could scrounge. There is no running water after a
World Bank-funded scheme was destroyed in the cleanup operation.
"Here and there some young mothers are sleeping in the open with
their babies, as they do not have plastic sheets to build huts.
It is so tragic that all these residents had adequate, if flimsy,
shelter three months ago, and now many cannot afford to replace
even the basic shelter," wrote opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) member of parliament for the area, Trudy Stevenson.
"What confuses us is that when we came here several years ago, the
government gave us title deeds, but said we should not build permanent
structures. Maybe the reason why they returned us here was that
they knew that we were legally entitled to our stands," said Hatcliffe
resident Simon Munyoro.
Hopley Estate, another site earmarked for housing development, currently
shelters close to 5,000 people. Most of them originally came from
Caledonia Farm and the unauthorised settlement of Porta Farm.
UN agencies provide water and food rations, and although the land
is being cleared, only an estimated quarter of all households have
received asbestos roofing sheets from the government to build their
own homes. The rest, as in Hatcliffe, are making do with what ever
they have been able to salvage.
At Whitecliff Farm, about 17 km west of the capital, the government's
plan for close to 10,000 new houses seems woefully off target.
When IRIN visited, there were only 97 units at roof level. The housing,
however, is reportedly earmarked for soldiers and civil servants
rather than the displaced. It will also not be for free - throwing
into question its affordability for Zimbabweans facing the country's
worst economic crisis since independence in 1980.
Timothy Mucheneripi (not his real name), a worker at the site, told
IRIN that the irregular supply of cement was hampering construction.
"Given the rate at which we are going, the rains might come without
much progress, even though we have been told to speed up the construction
of the first phase of houses because they should be occupied by
civil servants."
Davis pointed out that even if the promised construction of new
houses in Harare were to be completed, the municipality lacked the
capacity to provide adequate sewerage systems, as the existing network
was already seriously overloaded.
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