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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Donors wary of funding housing programme
IRIN
News
October 03, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=50162
Johannesburg - The Zimbabwean
government says it is willing to accept UN assistance to house people
affected by its urban clean-up campaign, but donors are not clamouring
to fund the programme. "The government wants us to build shelters
for its own list of beneficiaries, while we would like to help all
those in need and left homeless," said a western diplomat.
A UN report estimated that Operation Murambatsvina - which the government
said was aimed at clearing slums and flushing out criminals - had
left more than 700,000 people homeless or without a livelihood after
kicking off in mid-May. The Zimbabwean government had initially
rejected the UN offer to build temporary shelters as there was "no
humanitarian crisis", only to make an about-turn this week.
In its acceptance letter the government laid down specifications
for the construction of permanent brick and concrete one-room shelters.
The construction of 10 pilot houses for government approval was
likely to begin next week, said UN spokesman Hiro Ueki in the capital,
Harare. Subject to funding, the UN is to construct 2,500 housing
units during the first phase of the programme, which intends to
build 20,000 units at a total cost of US $18 million, he added.
"Imagine
the precedent we will be setting - any country can go ahead, demolish
informal settlements and ask the international community to rehabilitate
them," the diplomat commented. "Each unit is now going
to cost between US $500 and $1,000, and the total cost is going
to climb beyond the $18 million figure earmarked for the initial
proposal, which involved the construction of wooden shelters - for
that amount of money we could have helped everyone affected by the
clean-up operation," another envoy remarked. On Wednesday,
human rights and civic organisations appealed to African leaders
to address the humanitarian crisis in Zimbabwe. The
joint appeal, led by Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR), was supported by international
organisations that included the Housing and Land Rights Network,
the Habitat International Coalition, Amnesty International, Human
Rights Watch and the Centre on Housing Rights and Evictions. "We
want to highlight the failure of African leaders to condemn the
clean-up campaign and their non-compliance with the UN report's
recommendations to provide humanitarian assistance to those affected,"
said ZLHR's Otto Saki.
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