/ 27 May 2005

Zim deploys 3 000 riot police to destroy homes

The Zimbabwean government has deployed 3 000 paramilitary police as it begins an operation to demolish illegal settlements around Harare, state television reported on Thursday.

The television news showed a parade of hundreds of officers in full riot gear preparing to be deployed to demolish 25 illegal settlements in and around the capital.

Footage showed a bulldozer demolishing a house in one illegal housing settlement — Nyadzonia Housing Co-operative — whose owner ”chose to ignore the warnings”, the television said.

A police officer urged people living in illegal settlements to pack up and leave before police demolition squads arrived.

”We would encourage everybody to pack their own property, their clothing, their furniture before the police arrive,” he said.

It is the latest in a campaign dubbed Operation Restore Order, which was launched last week to crackdown on illegal activities in the southern African country. So far, 17 000 people have been arrested countrywide.

Those arrested have been fined or taken to court for offences that include illegally dealing in foreign currency, hoarding of basic commodities and selling scarce goods on the black market.

Opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) lawmaker Trudy Stevenson said three truckloads of riot police had arrived in part of her constituency in Harare North on Thursday evening and started to demolish houses in the informal settlement of Hatcliffe Extension.

”They [the police] are just razing everything,” she said.

”They’re telling people to move off.”

She said there were 10 000 to 12 000 people living in the informal settlement.

”That’s a lot of people without shelter,” she said.

It was not immediately clear how many people risked being made homeless by the imminent destruction of illegal housing.

Official statistics put Harare’s population at 1,8-million, but the Combined Harare Residents Association said the figure is much higher.

Those residents who lose houses and have nowhere to go will be taken to a holding farm outside Harare, the television said. – Sapa-DPA