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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
ZIMBABWE:
Survival after Operation Murambatsvina
IRIN News
August 04, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=54997&SelectRegion=Southern_Africa
HARARE - A year
after Zimbabwe's controversial campaign to demolish illegal urban
settlements and informal markets, thousands of people remain in
limbo, fearful of renewed raids by the police, but with nowhere
else to go.
When President Robert Mugabe's government launched Operation
Murambatsvina 'drive out trash', last winter, it said the campaign
was designed to restore order and stamp out the parallel market,
insisting that people displaced by the municipal bulldozers should
return to their rural homes.
"Everybody comes from somewhere. There is nobody who comes from
nowhere, so people will have to return to their rural homes," said
police assistant commissioner Edmore Veterai, who led the demolitions
around the country.
But people like Martha Zulu, whose grandparents came from Zambia
several decades ago as migrant labourers to the then white-ruled
Rhodesia, have no rural roots in Zimbabwe.
She survives by doing people's laundry in exchange for food in Kuwadzana,
a township in the capital, Harare, where she has built a shack on
the ruins of the cooperative housing she used to live in. The shack
is only a metre high, so as not to draw the attention of the authorities.
Before, she had running water at the housing cooperative; now raw
sewerage flows past her shack.
Zulu, like tens of thousand of others, lives in Zimbabwe as part
of a colonial legacy. From 1953 to 1963, Southern Rhodesia (Zimbabwe),
Northern Rhodesia (Zambia) and Nyasaland (Malawi) were part of a
federation of states under British rule. Migrant labourers came
in their thousands to work on Rhodesia's mines and farms.
When Malawi and Zambia gained independence in 1963, the federation
collapsed. Many migrants remained in the then Rhodesia and stayed
on in newly independent Zimbabwe, but never applied for or attained
citizenship, even though they were born there.
Zulu worked as labourer with her two sons on a commercial farm in
Mashonaland West Province, but was forced off the farm in 2000 when
the government launched its fast-track land redistribution programme,
otherwise known as farm invasions.
"When the new farmer took over the farm in 2000, he said he would
not be able to employ us and advised us to look for new jobs."
Her two sons fled during the farm invasions, and she has not seen
them since. The white farmer, who was her employer for 20 years,
gave her some money, which she used to buy two rooms in the now
demolished housing cooperative.
Zulu has lost contact with her relatives in Zambia. "I don't even
know which part of Zambia my grandparents came from - I have never
been to Zambia because I now consider myself a Zimbabwean, but now
I have been reduced to a vagabond."
Before the 2002 presidential elections, the ZANU-PF government stipulated
that people with "alien" parentage had to renounce any other citizenship
in order to become Zimbabwean citizens. Many were unaware of the
regulations, chose to ignore them, or were unable to comply because
of the prohibitive costs.
Margaret Banda lives in Epworth, east of Harare. Her grandparents
were from Malawi. "Our family members have generally worked as domestic
workers or gardeners, and we were not aware of the effect of not
renouncing our Malawian citizenship. A relative once told us that
the process was cumbersome and expensive, and most of us chose to
ignore the requirements."
A spokesman for the Combined
Harare Residents Association, Precious Shumba, told IRIN that
his organisation had encountered many residents of foreign origin.
"The Harare municipality is demanding title deeds from council houses
but, although many people of foreign origin had some houses willed
to them by their parents or grandparents, they are having problems
claiming ownership because they don't have the local identity documents."
Gertrude Hambira, secretary-general of the General Agricultural
and Plantation Workers Union of Zimbabwe, said many of their members
were descendants of migrant labourers.
"At our peak we had 500,000 members, but out of that number only
0.2 percent of farm workers were given pieces of land by the government.
The majority of our members lost their jobs and, naturally, that
means they also lost their homes, and this means they are wandering
and searching for homes, as most of them no longer had any links
with their countries of origin."
Hopley Farm outside Harare is a transit centre for those left homeless
by Operation Murambatsvina. According to a field officer with the
municipality, "We have vetted all the inmates here and close to
80 percent are of foreign origins - most of the locals have been
sent to their rural homes."
A Zambian Embassy official in Harare said their office was offering
to repatriate Zambian descendents wanting to start a new life in
the land of their ancestors, but did not say how many people had
taken up the offer.
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