THE MDC Renewal Team
says the current demolitions of homes in Chitungwiza and Epworth are clear acts
of cruelty by government.
In
a statement the team’s national secretary for social welfare Lucia Matibenga
said her team was shocked by the act which resembles another evil Murambatsvina.
“The
MDC Renewal Team expresses its dismay at the callous and heartless treatment of
citizens by the current government, which has gone on yet another campaign of
demolishing people’s homes leaving them without shelter. Hundreds of men, women
and children have been left homeless by the government’s demolition of people’s
homes in Chitungwiza and Epworth, which are reminiscent of the
Murambatsvina campaign of 2005 that saw
the destruction of tens of thousands of homes by the same ZANU (PF) government,
leaving over 700 000 people homeless and without access to livelihoods,” She
said.
Matibenga
said not only are the demolitions illegal but that the same government
allocated those stands to people ahead of the July 2013 elections as a campaign
tool but are now turning around accusing the occupants of being illegally
settled.
The
trade unionist said it is now clear that the multiple housing cooperatives
spearheaded by ZANU (PF) ahead of the elections were a vote-buying and rigging
gimmick that had nothing to do with fulfilling the government’s social
obligation of providing housing to the people.
The
renewal team says the demolitions are a blatant violation of Section 28 of the
country’s Constitution, which guarantees the right to shelter for all
Zimbabweans and are also ironic to the ZANU PF’s promise to 250 000 houses
under the Zimbabwe’s Agenda for Sustainable Socio-economic Transformation (ZimAsset).
Matibenga
says her team calls for the unconditional stoppage to the illegal demolitions,
provision of alternative shelter to people who are settled illegally before
demolition of their shelters, urgent mechanisms to regularize these
settlements, stop to government interference with the operations of local authorities.
The team has also called for an independent
inquiry and audit of illegal land deals in Zimbabwe’s local authorities and a review
of the legal framework that governs the operation of housing cooperatives in
Zimbabwe.