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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
ZIMBABWE:
A year after urban purge conditions for displaced still grim
IRIN
News
May 08, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=53219
JOHANNESBURG - A year
after Operation
Murambatsvina ('Drive Out Filth'), the government's sudden campaign
to purge informal settlements, the lives of thousands of affected
Zimbabweans have not changed.
Uprooted last year
from homes built illegally in the capital, Harare, families with five
or more members have been squeezed into tiny living spaces authorised
by the government on the outskirts of the city, with no source of employment
and, in some cases, no access to medical facilities.
At night, families
of six or seven often share the mud floor of a temporary shelter or one
of the few new government-constructed brick houses - both about 12sq.m
- smaller than an average garage. If the families have yet to be allocated
a house, they are sometimes crammed into even smaller spaces. Those who
failed to make it to the camps have chosen to either reconstruct their
demolished dwellings or return to their rural homes.
According to the Zimbabwean
government, the operation was aimed at clearing slums and flushing out
criminals, but left more than 700,000 people homeless or without a livelihood
in the winter of 2005. As yet another winter sets in, living conditions
in the open fields serving as resettlement camps around Harare could not
be harsher.
Residents struggle
to protect themselves from the biting winds or a passing shower, using
plastic sheets as the doors and windows of unfinished brick houses or
self-erected wood and corrugated iron shacks.
Most do not have enough
to feed their families. Ethel Goche, 60, used to sell vegetables and firewood
in the streets of Harare to support her seven orphaned grandchildren;
now she struggles to make even 50 US cents a day. Goche has set up shop
in front of the permanent house allocated to her by the government in
the resettlement camp in Hatfield, about 15km north of Harare. But there
are few customers in the open field that surrounds her house.
"I grow vegetables,
which helps feed the children, but I have no money for their [school]
fees, which has gone up to Zim$2.5 million (about US$25) per term. I have
not seen that kind of money, so there will be no school for them this
time. I managed to sell a few things and raise enough money the last term,"
she added sadly.
With inflation at
913 percent, schools have hiked their fees by more than 1,000 percent
for the term beginning this month. There has also been a 12-fold increase
in the cost of essentials in the past two months.
According to the Consumer
Council of Zimbabwe, a family of four now needs at least US$350 a
month for essentials including non-food items, but average monthly incomes
are less than $100. The residents in the resettlement count themselves
lucky if they manage to earn one US dollar a day.
Local NGOs, like Christian
Care, provide monthly rations of maizemeal, vegetable oil and pulses,
made available by the UN's World Food Programme, to at least 3,000 households
identified as vulnerable in the resettlement camps around Harare. The
remaining majority have to find their own food, as the government does
not allow general food distribution in the camps.
In the Hopley Farm
resettlement site, about 10km south of the city, vulnerable families can
find it much harder to access food aid. An omnipresent security apparatus
runs the camp, estimated to house at least 2,000 families. "The security
authorities, who guard the camp, decide who gets on the list of vulnerable
families eligible for food or non-food aid. Each list is checked by the
authority," claimed a resident.
"We cannot complain
about anyone here, we don't know who might be a policeman or CIO [Central
Intelligence Organisation] official," added another. Some people
claimed that the security personnel had planted "spies" in the
camp to counter any rebellion; others alleged that sexual favours were
demanded in exchange for non-food items sent by humanitarian agencies.
The situation improved
after some of the problems were highlighted in the media last year, one
resident said. "Earlier, the relief workers used to leave the aid
items with the security, now they distribute directly to the beneficiaries,
but they [security] still decide who gets what," alleged another.
Last year the controversial
camp made headlines when Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights claimed that
the government was preventing aid from reaching displaced families. Some
2,260 people were removed from the Porta Farm settlement camp to Hopley
Farm shortly after the UN Secretary-General's Special Envoy on Human Settlements
Issues, Anna Tibaijuka, visited Zimbabwe. The lawyers alleged that the
residents had gone for a week or more without food, clean water, sanitary
facilities and temporary shelter.
The Minister of Local
Government, Public Works and Urban Development, Ignatius Chombo, defended
the presence of security personnel in Hopley and said they were needed
to protect the construction material lying in the area.
He also objected to
the use of the term "resettlement camps". He clarified: "These
areas [Hatfield, Hopley] have been earmarked for urban development after
they was recovered under the land reform programme. The people have been
allocated stands."
Chombo also justified
the need to "vet" families eligible for food aid, as "we
have a lot of outsiders, like Zambians and Mozambicans, making their way
to these areas, so we have to verify and ensure that those who receive
assistance are deserving Zimbabweans".
The government has
started building and allocating permanent houses in Hopley under its urban
renewal housing project. At least 50 tiny box-like houses have been constructed
in Hopley, while another 100-odd permanent shelters have been built in
the Hatfield resettlement camp. None of the hastily constructed houses
have been completed and lack ablution facilities and access to services
like water and electricity.
Under the urban renewal
project, Chombo said, the government had already constructed 7,000 houses
across the country and intended constructing another 15,000 by next year.
Each house costs almost US$3,000, which the owner has to pay back over
25 years.
The affected residents
argue that the government response is slow and inadequate.
The UN Children's
Fund (Unicef) is providing potable water to Hatfield; Médecins
Sans Frontières-Holland, a branch of the international medical
relief agency, has installed taps in the camp with the help of the Harare
Municipality; the Geneva-based International Organisation for Migration
(IOM) has assisted 650 families with shelter through community initiatives
in urban areas.
Addressing queries
on the affected families' inability to earn a livelihood, Chombo maintained
that informal traders affected by the operation, which had "helped
to sanitise the streets of Harare", had the right to operate in designated
areas of the city. "They [informal traders] know what they have to
do [to apply for a licence]".
But dispossessed informal
traders complained that they had to wait in queues for days at local authority
offices, attempting to get a licence. "We have just given up, I am
trying to see what else I can do," said one of them.
Chombo said the government
was also involved in setting up 17 education institutes to provide skills
to those who wanted to change professions. "They [affected residents]
are aware of these programmes; they know what to do."
Residents maintained
they had no other source of income. In areas like Epworth, one of Harare's
poorest suburbs, people have chosen to resist Murambatsvina by reconstructing
their demolished homes. "We cannot go anywhere else, this is our
home," said Judith, who has to support four children.
Others have sought
refuge in the unique rock formations outside Harare, away from the eyes
of offialdom. "We feel safe here," said a resident, even though
the authorities were aware of their presence.
"We have left
our fates to God," said another, "otherwise I don't know what
will become of my family and my life in the next few months."
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