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Public
Perceptions of Operation Murambatsvina in Zimbabwe
Mass Public
Opinion Institute (MPOI)
March 01, 2006
http://www.afrobarometer.org/papers/AfrobriefNo29.pdf
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In mid-May 2005,
the Government of Zimbabwe (GoZ) launched, with little advance warning,
a massive ‘urban clean up’ campaign. The exercise was code-named
"Operation
Murambatsvina/ Restore Order" hereafter referred to as
OM. Murambatsvina is a Shona word meaning literally: "one who
refuses dirt." Initially, there were two separate ‘operations’,
one on "Murambatsvina" and the second on "restoring
order" but the two imperceptibly fused in the process of implementation
and the twin campaigns are now commonly referred to as one.
The Government
justified the program as a strategy to eradicate illegal dwellings
and to clamp down on alleged illicit activities, including informal
trade but especially foreign currency transactions in the black
market. However, the programme attracted massive and overwhelming
condemnation that forced GoZ to invite the United Nations to "see
for itself." Analysts and other observers in and outside the
country commented that the operation was carried out in an indiscriminate
and unjustified manner, considering its negative impact on people’s
livelihoods. The Operation was also criticized for breaching national
and international human rights law provisions guiding evictions.
Some commentators within Zimbabwe therefore renamed the crackdown
as "Operation Murambavanhu" meaning "Operation Anti-People."
The people themselves popularly referred to OM as a "Tsunami",
illustrating the scale of its destructive impact.
What do Zimbabweans
think about this crackdown? Do the direct victims of OM think differently
about the critical issues troubling the country compared to the
‘mainstream’ public opinion? These are only two of the many questions
that Round 3 of Afrobarometer survey of adult Zimbabweans sought
to answer.
Method
The survey was conducted from 9 to 26 October 2005, that is, after
operation Murambatsvina but before the senate elections of 2005.
The survey covered both urban and rural segments of all ten administrative
provinces in Zimbabwe. It was based on a double sample: a nationally
representative random main sample of 1096 respondents and a purposive
sub-sample of 104 respondents comprising victims of the Government’s
Operation Murambatsvina/Restore Order. In both cases, respondents
were Zimbabwean men and women of voting age. Because of disruptions
to fieldwork by some unruly political elements, completion of the
survey was aborted towards the end. We were able to collect 1048
interviews of the main sample and 64 of the sub-sample, totalling
1112 interviews overall. The Mass Public Opinion Institute (MPOI),
a Zimbabwean non-governmental research organisation, conducted all
fieldwork.
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