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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Still
no home, four years after Operation Murambatsvina
IRIN News
January 08, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=76142
Hundreds of Zimbabwean
families displaced by the government's Operation Murambatsvina (Drive
out Filth) in 2005 are still awaiting alternative accommodation.
They were told at the
time to return to their rural villages, but many, including the
descendants of immigrants, had nowhere to go and were forced into
government-sanctioned resettlement camps on the outskirts of urban
centres with no source of employment and still languish there.
The campaign, carried
out in the winter of 2005, was aimed at clearing slums and flushing
out criminals, but left more than 700,000 people not only homeless
but often also without a livelihood.
"We were assured
this was a transit camp," said Obert Pedzai, who was forced
to relocate to Sidojiwe Flats, built in the 1960s for single male
workers in the industrial area of Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second city.
"Government officials explained our stay would be temporary
while proper houses are built for us."
Pedzai's lodging in the
poor working-class suburb of Nketa was razed during the government-sponsored
demolition exercise. He sent his family home to rural Nyajena, about
450 kilometres away in Masvingo Province, in southeastern Zimbabwe,
hoping to bring them back when conditions improved. "It is
now almost four years and little has changed."
The family he shared
his room with in Sidojiwe Flats for three and a half years were
fortunate to have been included among the 12 beneficiaries of a
municipal housing scheme and they left two months ago.
From afar, Sidojiwe Flats
appear habitable, with tiny kitchen gardens spread around the main
structure. A closer look exposes the crumbling facilities of a dilapidated
building.
Most of the windows have
been covered with cardboard and plastic sheets to give some protection
from the weather to the more than 150 families crammed two to a
room in the three-storey block.
Barefoot children chase
each other along the grimy, narrow corridors past the doorless communal
bathrooms, where there is no running water or electricity. Residents
have to fetch water from a neighbouring apartment block.
Monica Mlauzi, 78, a
widow, has spent the past four years holed up in Sidojiwe. A piece
of cloth serves as a partition in the room she shares with another
family. "We are still here living in these horrible conditions
without hope of ever getting serious attention from the authorities.
We feel abandoned," she said, struggling to light a fire from
a clutch of twigs in a brazier perched on top of the derelict stove
in the communal kitchen.
"We are no longer
sure of the selection criteria [for the allocation of new houses],"
said Fidelis Nyamadzawo, a member of the displaced residents' committee.
The clearance operation
brought international condemnation; in response the government launched
Operation Garikai/Hlalani Kuhle (Operation Have a Good Life) and
committed itself to rebuilding homes and vending stalls.
But its scheme to put
up 200,000 houses has become mired in controversy and accusations
of graft in the allocation of the small number of units built so
far in various towns and cities. "It appears those that are
well-connected get first preference," Nyamadzawo alleged.
The elderly in Sidojiwe
find it difficult to cope with the harsh living conditions. "None
of us get any assistance from the Department of Social Welfare,"
said Barbra Ndhlovu, 75. "We live from hand to mouth and often
go without food, and without hope of the authorities coming to intervene."
Occasionally, charitable
church organisations lend a hand. Last November, a church organisation
assisted 60 families with five blankets each. "People have
become sceptical about registering for assistance because they have
often been let down by organisations that request their names but
never return to assist," said Nyamadzawo.
Expensive
assistance
A church organisation
recently offered to build houses for the residents on condition
that each beneficiary provide a toilet unit and plumbing material,
and labour during construction.
A toilet seat alone costs
Z$120 million (US$46), while the cistern costs Z$100 million (US$38)
- a figure well beyond the reach of most of the homeless families.
"Only four people took up the offer," said Nyamadzawo.
"Most of us, including elderly pensioners, can never dream
of coming up with such a huge amount."
Bulawayo Council officials
admit it is "unsanitary" to live in Sidojiwe, and explain
that it accommodated the families in the three apartment blocks
as a last resort, on "humanitarian grounds", when their
homes were flattened. Spokesman Pathisa Nyathi explained that the
council had been in the process of decommissioning the flats when
Operation Murambatsvina was launched.
He said the council had
hoped to allocate houses built under a `Millennium Housing Scheme'
to the families. The scheme was to have provided at least 1,000
houses and should have been implemented in 2001, but was affected
by the rocketing cost of building materials after the economic crisis
began in 2000.
Zimbabwe is in the midst
of an economic meltdown: it has the world's highest inflation rate,
officially cited at 8,000 percent but estimated at 25,000 percent
by independent economists.
According to Nyathi,
"There is no indication that these families will be leaving
soon because building costs are prohibitive."
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