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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Zim
journalists denied entry to homeless settlement
Sarudzayi
Zindoga, Mail & Guardian (SA)
May 17, 2006
http://www.mg.co.za/articlepage.aspx?area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__africa/&articleid=271976
More
than 60 journalists in Zimbabwe who were touring areas affected
by the government's controversial Operation
Murambatsvina -- a slum-clearance programme that left thousands
homeless -- were on Tuesday denied entry to check on conditions
at the Hopley farm settlement for Murambatsvina victims in Harare.
The journalists had earlier toured areas in Chitungwiza, Mbare,
Epworth and Kuwadzana where the government has embarked on Operation
Garikai, which it claims will provide a better life for those left
homeless by Murambatsvina.
On arrival at the Hopley settlement, the journalists were greeted
by a security guard at a barricade. All persons entering the area
are required to state their reasons for visiting, which the journalists
did.
The official in charge at Hopley, Ezekiel Mupande, was then summoned,
but said he did not have the power to allow the journalists to complete
their tour unless they followed protocol and got permission from
his seniors.
However, Mupande went on to say that anyone was free to enter the
settlement. "You are free to enter, but this is an army project,
so protocol requires that you get a go-ahead from Kennel Gwanetsa."
It is a year since the infamous Operation Murambatsvina was launched,
and the people at Hopley, who were uprooted from places around Harare
-- the majority from Porta farm -- are yet to enjoy the promised
proper housing.
The painful scars are still showing one year down the line. At least
50 very small houses have been constructed at Hopley, yet there
are more than 600 families still living in plastic matchbox shacks.
According to Ashton Shumba, who resides at Hopley, he is not certain
of his future at the settlement, as the stands where homeless families
were made to stay are being claimed by civil servants. "We were
taken from Porta farm last year in July by the social welfare. They
told us that they were taking us to a permanent place where better
housing was going to be built for us."
But Shumba said that until now nothing has been done, and he and
his family are still living in their tiny shack on a stand that
an army officer claims belongs to him. Shumba said army and police
officials are claiming most of the stands, and although residents
are trying to resist, they do not know for how long they will be
able to do so.
"We do not know [until] when it's going to last because we are not
registered, and they are armed and we are not," he said.
Shumba also complained about the living conditions at Hopley. There
are no proper toilets; the few plastic ones are meant to be shared
between the men and women, and the men have opted to use the bush
and leave the toilets for the women for decency's sake.
This has resulted in human faeces lying scattered around the farm.
"Our health is now in danger as there so many cases of tuberculosis,
stomach problems and skin problems," said Shumba.
At nearby Hatfield camp, 100 houses have been constructed, but they
do not have sewer facilities and water. In Mbare, Harare's oldest
high-density suburb, many families who were renting in backyard
cabins have now settled on the spaces in front of their former homes.
The structures in Mbare are similar to everywhere else. One has
to kneel down to enter.
According to Minister of Housing Ignatius Chombo, the government
has already constructed 7 000 houses across Zimbabwe under Operation
Garikai and intends constructing another 15 000 by 2007.
Sadly, it seems the beneficiaries of Garikai are not the victims
of Murambatsvina. The Crisis
Coalition of Zimbabwe says the government has done nothing up
to now, and the United Nations has also not done anything to follow
up on UN envoy Anna Tibaijuka's visit last year, which led to a
UN report condemning the evictions.
Civil society and concerned parties on Tuesday embarked on an eight-week
commemoration of Murambatsvina as they mourned with those who are
now poorer than they were before Murambatsvina.
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