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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
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Mugabe to The Hague over home demolitions, says group
Edith
Kaseke, ZimOnline
May 23, 2007
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the Operation Murambatsvina Index
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http://www.zimonline.co.za/Article.aspx?ArticleId=1419
Harare - President Robert Mugabe's government's
slum clearance drive in 2005 which left thousands homeless could
be referred to the International Criminal Court (ICC), an international
rights group has said, renewing pressure on Harare which critics
accuse of widespread human rights violations. The sight of police
accompanying bulldozers razing shacks and houses which the government
said were illegally built as residents watched helplessly, ignited
an international condemnation and led to the United Nations (UN)
sending a fact-finding mission to Zimbabwe. The UN said in a report
that "Operation Murambatsvina" was a "disastrous
venture" which had been "carried out in an indiscriminate
and unjustified manner, with indifference to human suffering"
and left more than 700 000 people without homes or livelihood or
both. Mugabe defended the bulldozing of slums as necessary to snuff
out thriving black market trade in scarce foreign exchange and other
commodities that were in short supply.
"The magnitude of the crimes committed during
Operation Murambatsvina demand an international response. We call
for this case to be dealt with as a matter of urgent priority by
the Security Council, in order to bring the perpetrators of these
crimes to book and to prevent any recurrence," the Centre on
Housing Rights and Evictions (COHRE) said. COHRE is an international
group that promotes and protects people's housing rights.
"The Zimbabwe government's mass eviction campaign was
a crime against humanity and could be referred to the International
Criminal Court by the United Nations Security Council," COHRE
added in a statement issued from The Hague, where the ICC sits.
The statement was due for official release to the public on Wednesday
morning. Local human rights groups say many victims of "Operation
Murambatsvina" are still without accommodation and in the capital
Harare some houses which were built for the victims are yet to be
occupied.
Zimbabwe is suffering a severe economic crisis,
which has been marked by the world's highest inflation rate
of above 3 700 percent, record unemployment nearing 85 percent and
shortages of foreign currency, food and fuel. This has escalated
political tension in the country as urban workers threaten to engage
in crippling strikes to press for better salaries and working conditions.
The opposition Movement for Democratic Change has said the slum
clearance exercise - conducted in its urban strongholds -
was targeted at its supporters, who have voted against Mugabe's
ruling Zanu PF party since 2000. "The independent legal opinion
on crimes against humanity concludes that there is sufficient evidence
that the crimes of forced displacement, Article 7(1)(d) of the Rome
Statute, was committed during Operation Murambatsvina," the
COHRE legal findings said.
"The victims were lawfully present in Zimbabwe
and the evictions were a widespread and systematic attack against
a civilian population as part of a State policy, and were not justified
on grounds permitted under international law," according to
COHRE. "The opinion also finds that the evictions constitute
an inhumane act under Article 7(1)(k) due to the immense physical
and mental suffering meted out to the victims. The Security Council
therefore has authority to refer the matter to the International
Criminal Court under the Rome Statute," it added. The ZLHR
executive director Arnold Tsunga said the world could not continue
watching powerlessly as Harare trampled on the rights of ordinary
Zimbabweans adding that "Operation Murambatsvina" should
be referred to the ICC. Zimbabwe Watch, a Dutch-based organisation,
also released a separate legal opinion indicating that the Zimbabwe
evictions could be prosecuted in various national jurisdictions,
most notably in South Africa, Netherlands , Germany and Spain.
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