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This article participates on the following special index pages:

  • Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles


  • Zimbabwe capital destroys homeless shelters-lawyer
    Reuters
    June 15, 2006

    http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/RWB.NSF/db900SID/KHII-6QT5Q4?OpenDocument&rc=1&cc=zwe

    HARARE - Harare authorities on Thursday demolished informal shelters and market stalls in a small settlement of about 150 people, leaving victims of last year's government slum crackdown homeless once more, a lawyer said.

    Rights groups say thousands of Zimbabweans still live in poverty more than a year after President Robert Mugabe's government destroyed houses and informal businesses in urban towns in a drive it said was meant to root out crime.

    The United Nations, which was extremely critical of the operation, said it made more than 700,000 people homeless.

    On Thursday a human rights lawyer said municipal workers razed informal shacks at a Harare settlement housing people driven out of their homes in last year's crackdown.

    "These were makeshift shelters which were home to about 150 people. We had made a High Court application for an interdict on behalf of some of the residents but we were rather late," said the lawyer, who asked not to be identified.

    The main opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) says last year's demolitions were aimed against its urban support base, which has voted largely for the opposition since 2000 as the country battles a deepening economic crisis blamed on the government. Mugabe denies the charges.

    One faction of the MDC, which has since split into two, condemned Thursday's action.

    Police and council officials were not immediately reachable for comment.

    Critics say a government rebuilding exercise to replace the destroyed homes has dragged on too slowly, leaving many of the victims facing a second Southern Hemisphere winter with inadequate shelter.

    Last month Zimbabwe rights groups criticised neighbouring countries for failing to condemn strongly the slum clearances, which they say worsened the lot of urban residents already facing rampant inflation, chronic food and fuel shortages and rising unemployment.

    Mugabe denies responsibility for Zimbabwe's economic crisis, and in turn blames it on a campaign of sabotage he says his opponents have launched as payback for his controversial drive to forcibly redistribute white-owned farms among blacks.

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