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ZIMBABWE: New threat of urban demolition
IRIN
News
April 07, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=52695
HARARE - Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights said it was ready to help people who
risked losing their homes after the City of Harare warned that it
would tear down illegal structures erected since last year's evictions
and demolitions.
On 26 March the council of the capital city announced that it was
issuing 30 days' notice of its intention to repossess undeveloped
stands.
The warning came on the eve of the first anniversary of Operation
Murambatsvina, in which the government demolished what it termed
'illegal' homes and businesses, depriving more than 700,000 people
of shelter and livelihood.
Tafadzwa Mugabe, a member of Lawyers for Human Rights, which provides
free legal advice, said it was important for residents to comply
with regulations, ensure that construction met council standards
and title deeds were in order.
"We are ready to assist people to meet the legal demands of local
authorities and the state to avert what happened last year," he
said. "Last time, residents were told to regularise their houses,
but before they could do that they were razed to the ground, and
that is what should be avoided."
Officials from residents' associations in the Harare suburbs of
Mbare, Glen View and Dzivarasekwa said council officials had already
started evicting residents from their uncompleted houses.
Police have also intensified efforts to remove illegal street traders.
IRIN witnessed
several fruit and vegetable vendors, most of them women with babies
on their backs, being arrested by police and their goods confiscated.
Last year the government insisted that everybody evicted from informal
settlements should return to their rural homes. Those without rural
roots - typically people of non-Zimbabwean origin - were put into
in holding camps.
One such facility is Hopley Transit Camp, just outside Harare, where
around 6,500 victims of Operation Murambatsvina are housed in temporary
shelters, some no more than plastic sheeting.
On Tuesday the government banned the international NGO, Christian
Care, from making general food distributions, reportedly on
the grounds that the settlement was seen as a stronghold of the
opposition Movement for Democratic Change.
"We have been told to do what is termed 'targeted' feeding," an
NGO employee said. "This means we can only feed the elderly, the
sick and child-headed families - we have been told to exclude those
able to fend for themselves. We have had no option but to go ahead
with the demands of the government, through its officers from the
ministry of social welfare."
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