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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Murambatsvina
victims still homeless
IRIN News
May 21, 2010
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=89218
In the winter
of 2005 the government uprooted some 700,000 Zimbabweans across
the country in Operation
Murambatsvina, officially described as a "slum clearance
programme", but promises to re-house those who lost their homes
and livelihoods five years ago have practically been abandoned,
human rights groups say.
Amnesty
International (AI), a global rights watchdog, and the Coalition
Against Forced Evictions, a local group representing the dispossessed
people, said the government's re-housing scheme, Operation Garikai/Hlalani
Kuhle (For a better life), has failed
to deliver.
"Those
affected by Operation Murambatsvina rapidly became invisible; forced
to relocate to rural areas, absorbed into existing overcrowded urban
housing, or pushed into government designated settlements,"
the groups said in a joint statement.
"It is
a scandal that five years on, victims are left to survive in plastic
shacks without basic essential services. The needs of these victims
are at risk of being forgotten because their voices are consistently
ignored," said Cousin Zilala, Zimbabwe director of AI.
"The few
houses that were built under the Garikai/Hlalani Kuhle scheme are
completely uninhabitable - they have no floors, windows, water or
toilets. Communities living in designated resettlement areas are
dependent on humanitarian assistance and self-help initiatives for
their survival," he commented.
In Operation
Murambatsvina (drive out the filth) the Zimbabwe African National
Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) government bulldozed houses, demolished
informal traders' stalls and confiscated their goods, leaving them
without a livelihood. United Nations Special Envoy Anna Tibaijuka
visited Zimbabwe in the wake of Murambatsvina said the operation
had breached both national and international human rights law.
Five weeks later
the government launched the re-housing scheme, but the few houses
that were built were reportedly given to civil servants, police
and soldiers, and there have been no other significant government
programmes to assist the hundreds of thousands of victims of Murambatsvina.
The groups condemned
Zimbabwe's unity government, formed in February 2009 by the long-ruling
ZANU-PF and two factions of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC),
for their inaction: "The unity government has done nothing
to improve the plight of survivors of the forced evictions and their
children who have been born in informal settlements."
Fidelis Mhashu,
Minister of National Housing and Social Amenities, acknowledged
that there was "a huge problem in terms of trying to provide
accommodation to the population of Zimbabwe; indeed, there is a
housing backlog that we ought to deal with," he noted.
"Currently,
there are no substantive figures of how many people are on the housing
waiting list. For Harare, [the capital] the estimates range from
500,000, while the national backlog is estimated at between 1.2
million and 1.5 million for urban areas," he told IRIN.
"The government
is working flat out to ensure that the backlog is reduced, and land
has been earmarked in urban areas for acquisition," he said,
but progress was being hampered "because those who own the
land have to be compensated [and] we don't have enough money."
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