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Police
in Bulawayo launch fresh blitz against vendors
ZimOnline
April 19, 2006
http://www.zimonline.co.za/headdetail.asp?ID=11972
BULAWAYO – Police
in Bulawayo have launched a fresh blitz against street vendors and
foreign currency dealers in a campaign which residents say is reminiscent
of last year’s controversial clean-up exercise.
Residents in
Zimbabwe’s second biggest city of Bulawayo, told ZimOnline yesterday
that the police had intensified the campaign against vendors and
the homeless with over a hundred people being arrested last weekend
alone.
The residents
said the police were being aided in the operation by Bulawayo municipal
police.
Bulawayo executive
mayor, Japhet Ndabeni-Ncube, confirmed the participation of municipal
police in the exercise saying the police had requested assistance
from his municipal police to rid the city of "criminal elements".
"We provided
the manpower after the police approached us to help them round up
the illegal traders in a bid to reduce crime in the city,"
Ndabeni Ncube said.
The police could
not be reached for comment on the matter last night.
But vendors
who spoke to ZimOnline said they were arrested at the weekend and
were only released from Bulawayo central police station after they
had paid admission of guilt fines.
"The majority
of vendors and homeless people have been arrested in the city and
those who were lucky were made to pay admission of guilt fines while
some are still detained at the central police station," said
a vendor who had just been released.
Some vendors
said they had been assaulted by the police despite having valid
business licences from the city council to carry out their activities.
The latest crackdown
by the police comes almost a year after the Harare authorities carried
out a similar exercise which displaced about 700 000 people and
directly affected another 2.4 million people, according to a report
by the United Nations.
The UN envoy
who compiled the report, Anna Tibaijuka, criticised the home demolition
exercise by President Robert Mugabe’s government as a gross violation
of the rights of the poor.
But Mugabe rejected
the criticism insisting the clean-up exercise was necessary to rid
cities and towns of squalor. - ZimOnline
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