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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
defends lack of housing
BBC News
August 30, 2006
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/5298572.stm?ls
A Zimbabwe government minister says
there is no truth in a report
by Church leaders that heavily criticised the state's housing demolitions
last year.
Church leaders said in a report that
almost nothing had been done to house 700,000 people who lost their
homes and livelihoods in the demolitions.
Operation
Murambatsvina, which the government said was a drive to clean
up cities, was also condemned by the UN.
Minister Didymus Mutasa said the church
report was "absolutely not true".
Asked how many new houses had been
built, Mr Mutasa replied: "I can't tell you the number immediately,
I will have to check. But everyone in the country whether affected
by Murambatsvina or not is being considered for decent housing."
He also denied claims made in the report
by the church-based Solidarity
Peace Trust that most of those people expelled from the cities
had since returned.
"People cannot have been living in
thin air. They must be living somewhere," he said.
The report claimed that people in the
cities had been crowded into those houses that had not been demolished.
"In some houses, people now co-exist
in around one square metre per person of floor space," the report
states.
Catholic Archbishop Pius Ncube, chairman
of the Solidarity Peace Trust, told the BBC that the government
had failed to live up to its promises.
"They themselves said that they would
construct 300,000 houses," he said.
"They've constructed a few hundred
houses and none of them have been occupied."
The report said that out of more than
100,000 displaced people in the west of the country, not one person
has been officially housed by the government.
The informal economy, which was targeted
by Operation Murambatsvina, is still in disarray a year after the
operation, according to the report.
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