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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
ZIMBABWE:
Ruralisation is the new trend
IRIN News
July 26, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=54827
HARARE - In most countries
the problem is how to deal with the pressures of rural-urban migration;
in Zimbabwe the opposite is the case as city folk head to the countryside
to escape the rocketing cost of living.
The government's
three-month urban cleanup campaign, Operation
Murambatsvina ('Drive out filth'), bulldozed houses and market
stalls deemed "illegal structures" last year, affecting
over 700,000 people.
As a result of the mass
demolitions, the cost of rentals in the working-class suburbs of
the capital, Harare, shot up. But it is not just the price of accomodation;
with an inflation rate of 1,200 percent, most people struggle to
make ends meet, even those lucky enough to be in formal employment.
For a growing number
of Zimbabweans the solution seems to be to try and make a fresh
start in the rural areas, where life is cheaper.
Tsitsi Moyo used to live
in the high-density suburb of Kambuzuma, and earned a living selling
fruit and vegetables. "I had bought a piece of land under a
council-sanctioned housing scheme and managed to build a house for
myself and my three children," she told IRIN.
But it was deemed illegal
by the local authorities and in May last year it was demolished.
"As a widow, life was already difficult for me, but when my
house was brought down, I realised that I would not be able to fend
for myself and my children. A friend advised me to buy a piece of
land in the rural areas just outside Harare."
Moyo relocated to Matope
village in Goromonzi district, 50km northeast of Harare. A year
later she has set herself up with a patch of land and a vegetable
garden, and two moderately sized huts that serve as a cooking and
living area, and bedrooms.
With her children attending
a school in the village, she is able to concentrate on her new source
of income as a cross-border trader. She buys groceries in South
Africa, Zambia and Botswana for resale in Zimbabwe, where they are
either unavailable or too expensive.
It has been difficult
for Tsitsi and her children to adjust to a new life in the village,
but she has found it much cheaper: fresh vegetables are plentiful
and meat is affordable.
She does not feel alone
in her new rural home. "There are thousands of people who have
moved into this place from Harare since last year. We have naturally
tended to stick together because we sense the locals are not comfortable
with our presence here," and "some of the people who now
live here have respectable jobs in Harare but prefer to live here,
as they don't have to pay rentals".
But all is not well with
her rural neighbours. Thomas Matope, headman of Matope village,
admitted there were tensions between the "foreigners"
and the community. "Thousands of people from Harare have settled
in the district and this is causing a clash of cultures. Since they
started settling in our district, we have seen an increase in cases
of theft, prostitution and public violence."
Many of the new arrivals
have built homes, but do not farm. "It is easy to lay the blame
on the new settlers because they don't have land on which to grow
vegetables and raise chickens and goats, and I suspect they are
responsible for the thefts that we are experiencing."
The village heads in
the district had met and agreed that they should stop accepting
people from Harare wishing to settle in the area. "There is
a general feeling now that these people, who are used to making
a quick buck, could encourage the growth of criminal activities,
especially stock-theft," Matope said.
"We also have sacred
shrines, like some mountains and wetlands, where people are not
supposed to set foot, but some of these new settlers are growing
vegetables on the wetlands, something that locals would not do,"
he commented.
But Lovemore Mutawara,
who doubles as a welder and carpenter at a local business centre,
said while there were some bad apples among the new arrivals, he
had benefited from the influx of people from the city.
"My wife runs a
thriving garden and receives a lot of support from the new settlers,
who buy vegetables from her. As a welder and carpenter they have
hired me several times to do some jobs for them - some of them are
employed people and commute to Harare every day, and they have put
some money in circulation."
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