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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Operation
Murambatsvina victims at the back of the queue for housing
IRIN News
July 18, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=73296
HARARE, - Scarce
building materials, earmarked to rehouse victims of Zimbabwe's Operation
Murambatsvina, have been diverted to other projects, including
work on a mansion for President Robert Mugabe in an exclusive suburb
of the capital, Harare.
In the winter
of 2005, informal homes and markets were demolished in the ZANU-PF
government's Operation Murambatsvina, aimed at clearing slums and
flushing out criminals, but which left more than 700,000 people
homeless or without a livelihood.
Uprooted families,
many of whom are now spending their third winter without adequate
housing, were told at the time to return to their rural villages,
but many who had nowhere to go, including the descendants of immigrants,
were forced into government-sanctioned resettlement camps on the
outskirts of urban centres, with no source of employment.
International
condemnation followed, and United Nations special envoy Anna
Tibaijuka pointed out that the operation breached both national
and international human rights law. The government then launched
Operation Garikai/Hlalani Kuhle (Operation Have a Good Life) and
committed itself to rebuilding homes and vending stalls.
A visit by an
IRIN correspondent to Hopley Farm, a government camp 25km southeast
of Harare, for internally displaced people who lost their homes
during Operation Murambatsvina, found all construction activities
had ground to a halt.
Local government
officials responsible for the construction of housing for 1,000
families as part of Operation Garikai told IRIN the programme had
been stopped after cement and money for workers' salaries had run
out.
The officials
showed IRIN a letter written to Ignatius Chombo, the minister of
local government, which read, "Please take note of the 11,150
bags [of cement], said to have gone to President Robert Mugabe's
residence in Borrowdale."
They informed
him that Operation Garikai construction activities had ceased because
"the cement was said to have been returned, when in actual
fact it was not. The cement was used in Borrowdale towards the construction
of the president's house."
Mugabe is renovating
the Borrowdale Brooke home of the world's former number one ranked
golfer, Nick Price; some sections of the property, such as the security
wall and workers' accommodation, are still being built.
The officials
said cement destined for housing at Hopley Farm was also being used
in other projects, such as the construction of the Manyuchi Dam
in Masvingo Province, in the southeast, repairs to Harare's maximum-security
Chikurubi prison, and also for renovations to some district hospitals.
In the letter
shown to IRIN, the officials pleaded with the minister: "The
families are still staying in the open. I again pray for your authorisation
for us to allocate them stands for building houses. Once again,
I draw your attention to the fact that there is no construction
going on."
Chombo dismissed
the reports as a ruse by government opponents. "Those are reports
fuelled by our detractors. That is untrue and very mischievous."
Winters
of discontent
Josephine Banda,
a grandmother caring for eight of her grandchildren, said the last
seven years had been "very traumatic". "First I was
chased away from the farm I had known as home after it was taken
over by a new farmer," she told IRIN.
"When I
had just settled down as a maid, Operation Murambatsvina was launched,
leaving me homeless and with orphans to look after. I am appealing
to authorities to sympathise with us, and to avail enough resources
so that we are housed in decent accommodation."
Dunstan Moyo,
70, a pensioner who has lived under plastic sheeting at the resettlement
camp since his home was destroyed in Operation Murambastvina, told
IRIN he was too old to be moved elsewhere and would prefer to have
a house built for him at the holding camp because, like many others,
he had lost touch with his relatives.
"I was
looking forward to spending my first winter in three years in a
warm house, but that has all been dashed after cement meant for
the construction of our houses disappeared under mysterious circumstances."
Only a small
number of houses have been built by Operation Garikai, but they
have also become mired in controversy. Harare governor David Karimanzira,
city mayor Sekesai Makwavarara, and Patrick Zhuwawo, a deputy minister
of science and technology and nephew of Mugabe, are awaiting to
appear in court on corruption charges for allegedly allocating houses
and stands to friends.
None of the
houses built so far include lavatories or potable water, and prospective
tenants have been told that the costs of installing these facilities
would have to be borne by them.
In Bulawayo,
Zimbabwe's second city, municipal authorities have evicted the beneficiaries
of Operation Garikai housing, on the basis that the dwellings could
only be deemed habiltable if the government provided water and sanitation.
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