| |
Back to Index
ZIMBABWE:
Street vendors slip back quietly after urban clean up campaign
IRIN
News
October 06, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=49400
HARARE - Five
months after the Zimbabwean government cleared the streets of urban
centres across the country of vendors, beggars and street children,
informal traders are trickling back but are forced to play hide-and-seek
as police prowl the pavements on the lookout for illegal operators.
Pinos Muhacha leans against a wall, standing guard over empty cigarette
packets placed on a tattered cardboard box, a threadbare knapsack
on his back.
The empty cigarette packs act as a decoy for prying police as well
as a sign to customers that this is a vending site.
Muhacha is one of the vendors who dared to return to their former
trading place after police blitzed stalls in the capital, Harare,
as part of a slum clearance campaign dubbed 'Operation Murambatsvina'
(Drive Out Trash).
"It is still a cat-and-mouse game here on the streets - one has
to be constantly on the move," he says, taking out two half-empty
packs of cigarettes from his knapsack for a customer.
Muhacha's customer complains about the inconvenience of having to
search for vendors when they were readily visible before the blitz.
"Buying any fruit is now a hassle - at least in the past one could
buy a single avocado, an orange or a banana. The absence of vendors
has forced us to go into supermarkets, where fruit is sold in expensive
packages," he told IRIN.
"There are no jobs unless one decides to cross into South Africa
illegally or risk scaling the electrified fence into neighbouring
Botswana," Muhacha commented.
Informal traders who were forcibly cleared off the streets are back
in numbers, driven by deepening economic hardship to try and eke
out a living.
They had gone underground: some turned their homes into clandestine
mini-shops, while others set up along the streets of working-class
suburbs, ready to whisk their fruit and vegetables indoors at the
slightest hint of an impending police raid.
But reduced business due to overtrading in the suburbs eventually
prompted them to go back to the city streets and avenues where business
had always been brisk.
Vendors tested the waters first by operating only during early evenings
when workers jostled to get home on the few buses available.
"It is hunger that forces us to defy the police ban - how else do
city authorities expect us to feed, clothe and pay for lodgings
for our families when there are not enough jobs to go around? It
is the only alternative for survival," said Ndakaitei Gwinyai, a
46-year old divorcee from the working-class suburb of Mufakose.
Gwinyai said she had lost a major portion of her "investment" in
the form of fruit and vegetables in the initial raids, but that
had not deterred her from "trying her luck" once more because the
need to survive outweighed the risk.
"You know what is involved - if I get caught and get my wares impounded,
I take it as an unlucky day; if I elude police swoops my children
have food on their table. Have you ever agonised over watching your
children go hungry because you fear authorities?" she asked.
In the past two weeks Zimbabwean police have arrested an estimated
14,700 vagrants, street vendors and illegal foreign currency dealers
in the capital as police battled to enforce the urban clearance
campaign.
According to Harare city council spokesman Leslie Gwindi, "Council
plans to boost the number of its municipal police to enforce trading
by-laws in the city. We are determined to rid the streets of vagrants,
touts and idlers at all cost. We want to maintain order and retain
the status of 'The Sunshine City' that Harare previously enjoyed."
The vendors' return has also brought piles of uncollected garbage
back to streets and alleyways but municipal officials say there
is little they can do because of the crippling fuel shortage.
Town clerk Ngoni Chideya noted that besides the fuel shortage, his
council's garbage collection fleet has been hobbled by an acute
shortage of foreign currency to buy spares. "At times council buys
fuel on the black market to keep emergency services going - we prioritise
emergency services ahead of garbage collection."
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|