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Zimbabwe:
Up to 20,000 at risk of forced eviction
Amnesty
International
September 30, 2010
The Zimbabwean
authorities must halt the pending evictions of up to 20,000 people
from an informal settlement on the outskirts of Harare for failure
to pay prohibitively high lease renewal fees charged by the authorities,
Amnesty International said today.
Most of the
residents of Hatcliffe Extension were allocated plots of land for
new homes after they were forcibly evicted by the authorities under
the country's 2005 mass forced evictions programme. Operation
Murambatsvina saw around 700,000 people lose their homes and/or
their livelihoods.
"Residents
of Hatcliffe Extension are among the poorest and most marginalized
in Zimbabwean society and many households have no means of paying
the lease renewal fee, especially as a lump sum," said Michelle
Kagari, Amnesty International's Deputy Director for Africa.
"Instead
of threatening vulnerable people with eviction, the government must
provide protection from the cycle of insecurity and further violations
by providing security of tenure and affordable payment plans for
leases."
Hatcliffe Extension
is one of a number of settlements set up under Operation Garikai
- the government programme that was initiated to resettle those
left homeless after Operation Murambatsvina.
In reality,
only a small number were resettled. The majority were forced into
overcrowded existing housing stock while others were forcibly relocated
to rural areas by the government.
"Operation
Garikai was wholly inadequate as a remedy for the serious violations
of the right to adequate housing perpetrated under Operation Murambatsvina,"
said Michelle Kagari.
Five years after
the mass forced evictions, residents at Operation Garikayi settlements
are surviving in deplorable conditions in plastic shacks without
access to basic essential services.
'Residents
at Hatcliffe have been utterly let down by the government. It is
therefore all the more shocking that instead of taking steps to
improve their current situation, the government is threatening action
that will certainly increase suffering and deprivation." said
Michelle Kagari.
In June, the
authorities posted notices at Hatcliffe Extension saying that all
leaseholders should pay for the renewal of their agreements by 30
September. Failure to pay would result in residents losing their
land which would then be allocated to others on the housing list.
There has been no consultation with the residents on the renewal
process and the fee set by the authorities.
Many of the
settlement's 3,000 households have no means of meeting the fee of
up to US$140 set by the government. Operation Murambatsvina, as
well as destroying homes, also destroyed the informal employment
sector, depriving thousands of reliable income. The unemployment
rate in Zimbabwe stands at around 90 per cent.
Since June,
the residents have made several unsuccessful attempts to engage
with the relevant authorities.
The problem
of excessive lease fees is not restricted to Hatcliffe Extension.
Residents of other informal settlements set up under Operation Garikai
are also under threat of eviction.
Earlier this
month, police burnt down shacks at an informal settlement in Harare's
Borrowdale suburb, making over 200 survivors of Operation Murambatsvina
homeless.
"The government
of Zimbabwe must review and revise Operation Garikayi, in genuine
consultation with survivors, to address the housing needs of all
survivors of Operation Murambatsvina," said Michelle Kagari.
Notes
to Editor
- Through
the Demand Dignity campaign, launched in May 2009, Amnesty International
is calling on governments globally to take all necessary measures,
including the adoption of laws and policies that comply with international
human rights law, to prohibit and prevent forced evictions.
- Amnesty
International's Demand Dignity campaign aims to end the human
rights violations that drive and deepen global poverty. The campaign
will mobilise people all over the world to demand that governments,
big corporations and others who have power listen to the voices
of those living in poverty and recognise and protect their rights.
For more information visit http://demanddignity.amnesty.org/campaigns-en/
For further
information or to arrange an interview, please contact katy.pownall@amnesty.org
or +44 (0)207 413 5729
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.
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