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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Following
Harare roundup, thousands sent to new holding camp
Studio
7 staff and correspondents, VOA News
May 16, 2006
http://www.voanews.com/english/Africa/Zimbabwe/2006-05-16-voa86.cfm
Washington
- One year after launching a highly controversial campaign of evictions
and demolitions of unauthorized dwellings, Zimbabwean authorities
have established another holding camp on a farm outside Harare to
accommodate some 10,000 homeless people and street vendors rounded
up in the capital over the past several weeks. Civil society sources
said some of those displaced a year ago in Harare's so-called Operation
Murambatsvina (Shona for "Drive Out the Trash") have also been
moved to Melfort Farm, located in Goromonzi district about 40 kilometers
east of Harare. A highly placed police source said police officers
and central intelligence organisation agents have been deployed
to Melfort Farm, and cordoned it off. A Harare city official speaking
on condition of anonymity said Melfort lacked proper shelter and
sanitary facilities and that the only food being provided was that
seized from vendors.
Nongovernmental
organizations are protesting this seeming replay of Murambatsvina
and human rights groups including the Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights have lodged appeals with the United
Nations and the African Union. Concern in human rights circles increased
with a report in the state-controlled Herald newspaper quoting police
sources as saying there were 30 mysterious graves at the Hopely
Farm transit camp, established outside Harare about a year ago when
the original urban "clean-up" operation displaced hundreds of thousands
of people. Information Minister Tichaona Jokonya confirmed the existence
of the Melfort Farm holding camp, and said the establishment of
the new holding camp was necessary to cope with homelessness.Advocacy
manager Fambai Ngirande of the National Association of Nongovernmental
Organizations said the establishment of Melfort Farm was only the
latest instance of the Zimbabwean government displacing people to
improvised facilities.
Some
of the vendors detained by police in what Harare is calling Operation
Round-Up said they were taken to a farm owned by a government official
and obliged to harvest crops with no pay - in effect becoming conscript
labor against their will. Vendor and car washer Richard Shambahweta
Studio 7 that he had just gotten back to Harare on Tuesday after
spending four days on a farm somewhere in Mazowe district. Even
as the government seemed to have created a new population of the
displaced with Operation Roundup, thousands of people displaced
by Operation Murambatsvina remained in transit or holding camps
one year later. Worse, they say authorities are depriving them of
essentials like clean drinking water and blocking aid organizations
from providing assistance to force those in the camps to relocate
to rural areas. With the help of the National
Association of Nongovernmental Organizations, reporters this
week visited several such camps - but were barred from entering
the infamous Hopely Farm transit camp just south of Harare.
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