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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Mugabe
plans fresh home demolitions
ZimOnline
November 07, 2006
http://www.zimonline.co.za/Article.aspx?ArticleId=418
HARARE – The
Zimbabwe government is planning fresh home demolitions, just a little
over a year after a similar campaign to destroy shantytowns and
city backyard cottages left at least 700 000 people without shelter
or means of livelihood.
The government
in May last year and weeks after controversially winning a key general
election, ordered the police and army to demolish thousands of backyard
cottages, shantytowns and informal business kiosks, in a campaign
President Robert Mugabe said was necessary to smash crime and to
restore the beauty of Zimbabwe’s cities.
In addition
to those left homeless, another 2.4 million people were indirectly
affected by the military-style demolition exercise to bring the
total number of victims to about three million or a quarter of Zimbabwe’s
12 million people.
Authoritative
sources told ZimOnline that Local Government Minister Ignatius Chombo,
who oversaw last year’s widely-condemned demolition exercise, had
set up a task force comprising officials from his department and
the police to lay out the groundwork for a new offensive against
slum dwellers and informal traders.
"There
is some kind of a brigade that is being set up within the police
specifically for that mission (to carry out demolitions),"
said a senior official in the Ministry of Local Government, who
did not want to be named because he did not have clearance from
Chombo to speak to the Press.
"New illegal
structures have come up since Operation
Murambatsvina (the official codename for last year’s clean-up
campaign. We will target these structures that have sprouted up
and others that somehow survived the first Murambatsvina,"
said the official.
Chombo confirmed
the government was planning new home demolitions but said these
would be on a much smaller scale than Murambatsvina.
He said: "It
is not Murambatsvina. But the spirit of Murambatsvina should not
die. To ensure that we don’t reverse the gains of Murambatsvina
we will do regular follow-ups. We cannot just watch while chaos
prevails and people build wherever they want."
The government,
bowing to international pressure after the home demolitions, announced
in August last year that it was launching a new re-construction
programme to build houses for people whose homes it had destroyed.
But only a handful
of houses have been built because the government – which is also
battling to raise cash to import food, electricity and fuel among
other key national requirements – did not have resources.
And thousands
of homeless families have tracked back to the sites of their former
shantytowns to rebuild their shacks after the government failed
to provide the homes it promised under the new home building exercise
dubbed Operation Garikayi/Hlani kuhle or Operation Live Well.
Rodrick Chinyau,
who appeared to be the leader of about 30 families squatting in
Epworth near Harare, said: "We have nowhere to go. The government
destroyed our houses last year forcing us to come here. The number
of people here is increasing everyday and this will be the case
until we get decent accommodation."
Chinyau however
said officials from Chombo’s department had visited the settlement
and gave the families up to the end of this week to vacate or be
forcibly removed. - ZimOnline
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