|
Back to Index
WOZA
statement on World Refugee Day: Keeping the flame of hope alive
Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA)
June 20, 2006
WOZA is marking this
day because we are refugees in our own country. Our lives have been stolen
but the flame of hope still burns. We demand the right to earn a living.
A witness describes
what happens daily to those who refuse to become criminals and prostitutes
and continue to try to earn an honest living.
"I am at Bulawayo
Commuter Terminus, 9:30 am on 11 June 2006. A Bulawayo City Council
truck (446) parks - there are two occupants. Vendors start to run away,
many leave their goods on the pavement. A young girl grabs oranges;
a maize vendor manages to balance his tray carrying his fire used to
roast maize cobs. The driver of the truck gets out and starts to help
himself to 'loot'. After 10 minutes, another eight men (two police officers
in uniform) come to the T35 truck carrying vegetables, sweets, fruit
and green maize. They load it all in. By this time the driver is standing
next to me reading a newspaper, someone walks past and greets him so
I discover his name is Mr. Ncube, he has a scar on his face. After all
the loot is loaded, Ncube drives away. The vendors come back, the young
girl has five oranges and some apples, and the man saved his toothbrushes,
chewing gum and sweets and quickly lays them out to sell as if nothing
had happened. Amazingly even the young man has his fire alight and is
roasting maize for the next customer. What
were their options - stay with their goods, get arrested and be forced
to pay an admission of guilt fine of $250 thousand or run with what
they could carry and come back to start again once the police have gone?
Such is the life of a vendor in Zimbabwe."
What do we want from
our Government? We demand our right to earn a living with dignity! In
Zimbabwe we know that our government will not allow international humanitarian
organisations to help provide us with the basic needs of a refugee. They
try to control who benefits and unless you have a Zanu PF party card you
cannot benefit. So we know better than to ask for food. Even when some
of us were to receive tents, the president refused saying, "We are not
tent people".
We are not even asking
for charity - all we are asking for is our right to earn a living because
without that right and the right to keep what we earn, there is no right
to life. See the African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights, Article
22:
1. All peoples shall
have the right to their economic, social and cultural development with
due regard to their freedom and identity..
2. States shall have
the duty ... to ensure the exercise of the right to development See Convention
on the Elimination of all forms of discrimination against Women (CEDAW),
Article 14: "State parties shall take appropriate measures ..that they
participate in and benefit from rural development and ensure the right:
(e) to organise self-help groups and co-operatives in order to obtain
equal access to economic opportunities through employment or self employment."
Visit
the WOZA fact
sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|