|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Civil society remembers Operation Murambatsvina
Botswana
Daily News
June 20, 2006
http://www.upi.com/AfricaMonitoring/view.php?StoryID=20060620-186749-1493-r
GABORONE - Civil
society in Botswana Saturday commemorated Operation
Murambatsvina the Zimbabwean government undertook last year
to restore order in squatter settlements.
The event was
organised under the auspices of Botswana Civil Society Solidarity
Coalition for Zimbabwe (BOCISCOZ) in an endeavour to raise awareness
about the crisis in Zimbabwe and to sensitise Batswana about the
dangers of xenophobia.
Speakers at
the event lamented the brutality the Zimbabwean government has unleashed
on its people, which is not condemned by SADC leaders who hide under
the guise of silent diplomacy.
SADC and its
leaders have adopted a totally untenable strategy called silent
diplomacy, charged Taolo Lucas of the Botswana Congress Party (BCP).
SADC has turned itself into a brotherhood of heartless conspirators
who do not want to assist the Zimbabwean people against the tyranny
of Zimbabwe.
Lucas said this
flawed strategy had, among others, resulted in high levels of uncontrollable
crime, xenophobia and illegal immigration.
He called for
active engagement of Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe so as to
strike an amicable solution to the current crisis.
He stated that
commitments made by continental bodies such as SADC and African
Union (AU) must translate into tangible outcomes.
Transgressors
must receive sanction of sorts while rogue leaders and delinquent
states should be made to account or face isolation, he added.
A situation
obtaining in Africa where unelected despots are graced with membership
of continental bodies like the AU is unacceptable.
Samson Guma,
the MP for Tati East, advised that Batswana and Zimbabweans must
learn to co-exist with mutual tolerance, acceptance and a resolve
towards mutual enrichment.
We face problems
and fortunes, albeit at different measures and supply, he said.
We all at one point or the other disappoint one another, thus creating
opportunities for problems for one another of different profiles
at different frequencies.
Guma said the
spirit of botho that involved extending courtesy to others should
be the guiding principle in Botswana/Zimbabwe relations.
Kathleen Letshabo,
the vice president of the Botswana National Front (BNF)
condemned the Zimbabwe government for violating peoples basic human
rights.
Letshabo said
it was regrettable that the Harare government denied people the
right to good shelter by demolishing their houses and leaving them
homeless.
However, she
explained that she did not encourage illegal squatting but called
on governments to enact policies that equitably cater for all in
land allocation matters.
She also regretted
the fact that at times Batswana tended to ill-treat Zimbabweans
by, among others, paying them meagre wages for their services.
Why should we
apply those double standards as fellow neighbours? I think we should
treat these people the way we want Mugabe to treat them, she said.
She also challenged
SADC observer missions that oversee Zimbabwe elections, saying they
never disclose the truth.
It is clear
that elections in Zimbabwe were not free and fair but SADC always
wants to mislead us into believing that they were, Letshabo charged.
Meanwhile, a
United Nations (UN) report
on Murambatsvina last year condemned the operation as a disastrous
venture that had left more than 500 000 people homeless and jobless
while also violating international law and creating a humanitarian
crisis.
It also said
a further 2.4 million people had been affected by the countrywide
campaign that saw many shantytowns, ramshackle markets and makeshift
homes demolished.
UN special envoy
Anna Tibaijuka observed that while the campaign purported to target
illegal dwellings and clamp down on alleged illicit activities,
the operation was carried out in an indiscriminate and unjustified
manner, with indifference for human suffering.
In its rebuttal,
Mugabes government has defended the operation as an urban clean-up
drive and has promised to help the displaced rebuild.
Zimbabwe has
pledged to provide 1.2 million houses or building plots by 2008
but the report said economists were sceptical on whether government
could afford such a project at a time when Zimbabwe was wracked
by triple-digit inflation and in throes of a severe food crisis.
Even if motivated
by a desire to ensure a semblance of order in the chaotic manifestations
of rapid urbanisation and rising poverty characteristic of African
cities, nonetheless Operation Restore Order turned out to be a disastrous
venture, the UN report say. BOPA
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|