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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Still
picking up the pieces after Operation Murambatsvina
IRIN News
April 12, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=71583
HARARE, 12 April
2007 (IRIN) - Life is still an uphill struggle for hundreds of thousands
of Zimbabweans forced to live in the open after the government-led
Operation
Murambatsvina (Drive out Trash) demolished their homes almost
two years ago.
The operation,
which demolished informal homes and markets, was aimed at clearing
slums and flushing out criminals, according to the government, but
instead left more than 700,000 people homeless or without a livelihood
in the winter of 2005.
Uprooted families
were told to return to their homes in rural villages, but the descendants
of immigrants who had nowhere to go were forced into tiny, government-sanctioned
living spaces on the outskirts of urban centres, with no source
of employment.
Some resisted,
choosing to relocate to townships near city centres in the hope
of earning a livelihood by vending. But spiralling inflation - now
more than 1,700 percent - the recent spate of violence and increased
police patrols on the streets have made it difficult to trade.
Gaudenzia Phiri,
38, and her family of three lived in Kambuzuma township in the capital,
Harare, until May 2005 when the bulldozers crushed their dreams.
They moved to another informal settlement in Dzivaresekwa township,
west of Harare. Now a widow, Phiri supports her two children by
selling vegetables and fruit on the streets of Harare.
She has to be
constantly vigilant; municipal policemen roam the streets and confiscate
the wares of illegal vendors. Sometimes she and her colleagues have
to hide themselves and their wares almost every hour. "This
is the kind of life that we live but we cannot be stopped because
we have families to look after," she said, emerging from her
hiding place.
"Dashing
into alleys with edible perishable goods obviously compromises the
health standards, but that is the only way we can survive."
Shortly afterwards, two women and four men approached the illegal
vendors, pretended to buy some of their products and then arrested
them.
Some of her
more agile colleagues managed to get away, but Phiri was not so
lucky. Their goods confiscated, the arrested vendors were loaded
into a truck and taken to the police station to pay a Zim$25,000
fine (US$1.00 at the parallel market exchange rate, where US$1 buys
Zim$25,000).
Harare municipality
spokesman Percy Toriro told IRIN that the police would continue
to uphold high standards of cleanliness. "We want to ensure
that we have a very clean environment that everybody can be proud
of. That means people should only conduct business from designated
points."
Dispossessed
informal traders complained that they had to wait in queues for
days at local authority offices to get a licence.
Bulawayo
About 430km
southwest of Harare, Godknows Mabusa, another vendor, has spent
most of the past two years playing cat-and-mouse with the municipal
police in Zimbabwe's second city, Bulawayo. "I survive by outrunning
the municipal officers because I have no vending license ... Survival
was much easier for me before the clean-up operation, but it will
never be the same again."
Another Bulawayo
resident, Mluleki Dumani, managed to acquire a vending licence to
sell vegetables in the city centre, but was unable to support his
family on his meagre takings in the face of the worsening economic
crisis.
He makes about
US$40 a month, but the monthly rent for a single room is about US$80.
Dumani said he was fortunate to have found accommodation with his
parents. "Many other victims of the clean-up have not been
so lucky."
Life has not
been easy for those who chose to return to their villages either:
failed crops and constant rejection by traditional leaders has doubled
the pain.
"I was
brought here protesting, wailing and kicking out in a bid to convince
the police officers that I have no one to come to, but they forced
me," said Lydia Mothibi, 37, a former tuck-shop operator who
moved to a rural settlement outside Bulawayo with her five children.
"When we
got here, we were dumped at the chief's homestead and stayed there
for three days. Later we were told that we could build temporary
shelters on this small plot, but to continue looking for permanent
settlements. We are yet to find that. We struggled to find a plot
to till, but our crops were a complete write-off, so we have nothing
to eat. We remain a hungry and unwanted people."
Her predicament
is shared by many others in the settlement. Many children have been
unable to attend school since the group was dumped there almost
two years ago and have been confined to their homes. The families
survive on the meagre yield of their plots, sometimes a watermelon
or a few ears of maize.
In some of the
settlements of its urban renewal housing project in Harare, the
government had started building and allocating permanent houses
to people displaced by Operation Murambatsvina. A year ago, many
of the hastily constructed houses lacked ablution facilities and
access to services like water and electricity. Since then, a lack
of funds has stalled the project.
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