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Death
toll mounts for Zimbabwe's Operation Murambatsvina victims
Sokwanele
November 25, 2005
http://www.sokwanele.com/articles/sokwanele/deathtollmountsforopmurambatsvinavictims_25no2005.html
If anyone thought
for a moment that the suffering caused by Operation Murambatsvina
("Sweep away the filth") was over, or had abated, they would be
seriously mistaken. Nothing could be farther from the truth. Six
months on from the initial brutal assault which saw 700,000 people
in cities across the country losing either their homes, their sources
of income or both and a further 2.4 million affected in varying
degrees, the misery of the victims continues. Indeed for many it
has only intensified in the ensuing months. And the death toll among
the internally displaced persons (IDPs) increases week by week.
In her report
on this vicious programme the United Nations Special Envoy, Mrs
Anna Tibaijuka, noted in July that "the humanitarian consequences
… are enormous. It will take several years before the people and
society as a whole can recover". Mrs Tibaijuka further commented
that there was "an immediate need for the Government of Zimbabwe
to recognise the virtual state of emergency that has resulted, and
to allow unhindered access by the international and humanitarian
community to assist those that have been affected." She referred
specifically to the priority needs of providing shelter and non-food
items, food and health support services.
Although it
is almost beyond belief the fact is that the government of Robert
Mugabe has neither recognised the "virtual state of emergency" resulting
from this catastrophic programme, nor allowed unhindered access
to those international and humanitarian agencies able and willing
to help. On the contrary it has continued, and intensified, its
propaganda of denial and deceit, while at the same time obstructing
genuine offers of much-needed assistance. When the UN proposed an
international relief appeal to assist the homeless victims with
temporary shelter, Mugabe's ministers refused to cooperate. The
UN's "common response plan" for US$ 30 million was eventually launched
in September without the signature of Zimbabwe. Only belatedly and
under extreme pressure has the regime modified its stance, permitting
the world body to provide humanitarian assistance to some of its
suffering citizens, on terms yet to be made public. Where church
and civic groups have responded to the ongoing crisis with genuine
and generous relief measures for even a few hundred of the hundreds
of thousands of IDPs, with few exceptions they have been met with
suspicion, hostility and outright opposition by agents of the regime.
But the statistics
alone, as horrifying as they are, hardly convey the trauma, pain
and wretchedness of the victims. To put a name or a face to even
a handful of the victims somehow brings home the intensity of the
suffering in a way any number of statistics cannot do.
Like Patrick
Ncube, a young married man with two children. Until June 11 the
family had been living at Killarney, eking out a precarious existence
but with some dignity and cheerfulness. On that day however the
family's meagre home at Killarney was razed by Mugabe's "black boots"
- the so-called riot police who swept through the area (illegally)
destroying every structure in their path. The Christian community
in Bulawayo responded magnificently, ferrying as many as possible
of the traumatized victims to a place of sanctuary in one or another
of the city's churches. Patrick's family was accommodated in the
Agape Church in Bulawayo's Nketa township.
There they enjoyed
what were for them the unprecedented luxuries of warmth, shelter,
regular food, medical attention and a degree of security - until
July 21. At close to midnight on that day - a day which will forever
be remembered as a day of infamy for Robert Mugabe's despicable
regime - truck-loads of riot police invaded not only Agape Church
but about a dozen others across the city. Those sheltering in the
churches, including the frail elderly and some tiny babies, were
rudely awakened from their sleep and roughly man-handled onto the
waiting trucks by Mugabe's gun-toting, baton-wielding storm troops.
From there they were taken, in the cold of the winter's night, to
the temporary holding camp at Helensvale, some 20 kilometres north
of the city. Their stay in Helensvale was very short, just a matter
of days in fact, because the UN Envoy's report, of which the regime
had seen an advance copy, was about to be published and, fearing
the international fall-out, the regime was determined to "sweep
the filth" right out of view just as quickly as ever it could.
For this reason
Patrick and his family found themselves taken, without consultation,
and unceremoniously dumped, without food, water, blankets or prospect
of shelter at Spring Farm to the east of Bulawayo. There the family
was left to the mercy of the elements - the mercy also of the local
impoverished community which was none too pleased to welcome them,
with others, to share their few meagre resources. Eventually through
the tenacity and courage of a small team of volunteers, the churches
in Bulawayo re-established contact with the family and brought them
food and blankets and negotiated with the local community leaders
to afford them a place to stay for the time being - though not yet
a place of shelter.
For Patrick,
whose whole life had been a continuous struggle against dehumanizing
poverty, it was just too much. To a caring pastor who had shown
a remarkable degree of compassion for the family in their wretched
plight, he confessed that he felt a sense of guilt and failure.
He had failed to provide for his wife and children as a good husband
and father should. Nor was there any prospect that the situation
might improve. The family was now immeasurably worse off than when
they lived in their own fragile structure at Killarney. And the
local people who had been forced to find a space for the little
family clearly did not want them to stay. They had no ties of family
or clan. They simply did not belong. "I have nowhere to go", confided
Patrick. "No one wants us. The government wants us out of the way
- dead." And whether of the severe malnutrition that had been reducing
his immunity system dangerously, or out of utter despair, Patrick
Ncube obliged. He died within a few weeks - aged 39.
Or again one
could cite the case of Mavis Mkandla, her husband Luke and baby
daughter, Flora. Another small family living successfully, against
all the odds, at Killarney - until the riot police arrived on June
11 and razed their flimsy dwelling to the ground. This family also
benefited from the compassionate hospitality of one of the Bulawayo
churches until the riot police invaded the premises on that dark
night of July 21. For the Mkandla family also, as for the Ncubes,
a brief stay at the Helensvale centre followed, and then they were
moved on again, in the winter cold. In the Mkandla's case they were
dumped in the Nyathi area some 40 kilometres north-east of the city.
Mavis and Luke
had no previous connection with Nyathi. So they found themselves,
homeless and destitute, among complete strangers. Moreover the local
headman and chief were unsympathetic to their plight. No doubt it
was difficult enough for them to find support for the existing families
who had a claim of residence or affinity, without taking on additional
mouths to feed. So the traditional leaders informed Mavis and Luke
that they would need to live in the area for at least five years
before their plea for help could be considered. In the meantime
they must leave! A Catch-22 situation which effectively meant the
family could never establish itself in the area where they had been
dumped by the police.
What other option
did they have? Mavis and Luke walked back into Bulawayo with baby
Flora, and to the only place they knew where they might take refuge
for a short while - Killarney. Their old home had been reduced to
charred ashes now, but they "camped" secretly in the bush nearby,
making sure to keep well out of sight during daylight hours in case
the riot police should make a sweep through the area, as they tended
to do from time to time.
Until the forced
removal from Killarney in June Mavis had been in reasonable health.
She had no medical history to cause any concern. But now back in
Killarney after the trauma and incredible hardships of the last
five months, she began to complain of stomach pains. When the pain
continued her pastor took her to the United Bulawayo Hospitals.
There she was examined and kept under observation for a few days.
Whether the medical staff were able to diagnose her condition is
not known, but some time later she was discharged to her secret
"home" in Killarney. Within a few days she was dead. The cause of
death unknown. Mavis was buried on Sunday November 6.
The pastor who
conducted Mavis' funeral had barely returned to his own home when
the phone rang. A colleague advised him that Mavis' 6 month old
daughter, Flora, had also died. Would he please conduct the funeral?
He did two days later, with a broken heart for the beautiful baby
whom he had once held tenderly, and grown to love as he supported
the family through their terrible ordeal. Christian friends paid
for the little coffin that her father was obviously unable to afford.
Leaving just
one member of the little family to survive Operation Murambatsvina
- Luke Mkandla, aged 33, who grieves now for both his young wife
and baby daughter.
What consolation
can anyone offer this distraught young widower, or Patrick Ncube's
widow and children for that matter? Week by week the number of grieving
families increases. Another Bulawayo pastor told our reporter that
he conducts, on average, between 3 and 7 funerals a week. Of these
about a half are for the victims of this dastardly campaign. What
words of comfort can anyone offer the relatives of Mavis and baby
Flora or Patrick or the countless others who are dying across the
country week by week, the unseen, unrecorded victims of this crime
against humanity?
Nothing will
bring any one of them back of course but perhaps the one thing that
will bring a measure of consolation to the grieving families would
be the knowledge that the perpetrators of this gross crime will
one day be brought to justice. The criminals include the strategists
who first dreamed up the plan, as well as the compliant politicians,
army and police chiefs who went along with it, whether out of conviction
or fear. All of them, right down to the zealous Mugabe thugs who
executed the plan, must be brought to justice. In recommending that
all those responsible be held fully accountable, Mrs Tibaijuka noted
that their deeds were in breach of both national and international
law. Bringing them to justice therefore must be a priority for whatever
government is installed once Zimbabwe achieves freedom and democracy.
This is the least we owe to the victims, and indeed to ourselves
if we are to ensure that never again is such a crime against humanity
perpetrated in this land.
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