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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Mugabe
denies thousands homeless after cleanup
Reuters
November
04, 2005
http://za.today.reuters.com/
WASHINGTON (Reuters)
- Reports of thousands of Zimbabweans still homeless after a controversial
government clean-up program are "nonsense," Zimbabwean President
Robert Mugabe said in an ABC News interview shown late on Wednesday.
"That's nonsense...
anyone who wants facts should come and see what's happening. We
removed them from slums and put them in new places," Mugabe said.
"Obviously when
you destroy slums, even as you prepare new places for them, there
is a dislocation, disorganization of the family for that moment,"
Mugabe told ABC.
It was unclear
when the interview took place. ABC said it met with Mugabe when
he was in New York for a U.N. General Assembly meeting.
A U.N. statement
issued on Tuesday said the United Nations was getting reports that
tens of thousands of people were still homeless and in need of aid
since Zimbabwe's eviction campaign began in May 2005.
Mugabe's government
has refused aid from the world body because of the U.N.'s description
of the demolition program as a humanitarian crisis, and over calls
for the prosecution of those who led the campaign.
"Thousands and
thousands and thousands and thousands. You go there now and see
whether those thousands are there... Where are they? A figment of
their imagination. They exaggerated," Mugabe said.
Zimbabwe does
not welcome outside scrutiny by foreign media. The government has
arrested, deported or denied entry to dozens of journalists under
media laws forbidding foreigners from working permanently as journalists
in Zimbabwe. Visiting journalists require a temporary license from
a state commission to work.
Mugabe's government
says the rules were necessary to restore professionalism in the
private media, which it accuses of driving a Western propaganda
campaign against Harare over its seizure of white-owned farms for
blacks.
Mugabe, 81 and
in power for 25 years, is accused by his critics of wrecking the
southern African state by rigging major elections in the last five
years and pursuing controversial policies which have left him branded
a dictator.
In the interview,
he denied charges that the demolition program targeted supporters
of his political opponents.
"That's nonsense.
That's the message of the opposition, of course they would say that,"
Mugabe said, calling it a move to cleanup slums. "We are doing this
in every constituency, in every province. It's happening everywhere."
Mugabe also
told ABC that he would remain in charge of the country, after he
leaves office.
"I'll still
be in the party," he said. "The party is greater than government,
by the way, and my being president of the party is similar to my
being president of the country."
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