Space Industry and Business News  
Mugabe's rival evokes memories of demolition blitz

by Staff Writers
Epworth, Zimbabwe (AFP) March 21, 2008
Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe's rival at the polls, Simba Makoni, evoked memories Friday of a widely condemned urban demolition blitz as he took his campaign to a well-known shantytown.

"Let us remember the suffering we endured in 2005 when they (Mugabe's government) felt the city was dirty and needed a clean-up," Makoni told a rally ahead of the March 29 elections.

"But when we all thought they would collect the garbage accumulating on the street corners, they held people at gun point, ordering them to demolish their own houses. Just imagine the severity of the cruelty.

"Zimbabwe does not deserve an oppressive government," he told supporters at the rally held under a tree on the side road of this semi-urban slum, some 15 kilometres (10 miles) southeast of the capital Harare.

Makoni, a former finance minister, is standing as an independent against veteran Mugabe, 84, who has ruled the former British colony since independence in 1980, and who is seeking a sixth mandate.

After the demolitions Harare promised to rehouse thousands of people, all who had been left homeless.

"And now where are the houses you were promised?" he asked.

Zimbabwean authorities launched Operation Murambatsvina (Drive Out Filth) in May 2005, calling it an attempt to rid the capital of crime and filth.

But a United Nations report afterwards said the mid-winter drive left 700,000 people -- the country's poorest -- homeless and destitute when shacks, houses, market stalls and shops were razed.

The operation, known locally as "the tsunami," also deprived at least a million people of their means of livelihood in an economically ravaged country grappling with six-digit inflation and over 80 percent unemployment.

Despite a much-vaunted follow-up operation called "Live Well", meant to rehouse those whose homes or shops were destroyed, tens of thousands are still living in makeshift homes at various locations across the country.

Only a small fraction of Zimbabweans have been given new houses.

"It was just as good as telling a person in tatters to take off his clothes promising to buy him new ones, but only in years to come. Where are the houses we were promised after Murambatsvina?" said Makoni.

Tendai Simbi, 35, an unemployed divorcee who survives on importing basic goods in short supply back home, lives with her parents in the shantytown after she lost her house during the 2005 clean up campaign.

A firewood vendor, Lydia Mbirimi, 53, is also squatting with her parents.

"Imagine that at my age, I am still a squatter," she told AFP.

New squatter settlements have sprouted in parts of the country worst affected by the demolitions campaign.

Makoni last month broke ranks with the ruling Zimbabwe African National Union - Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF), a party whose symbol of a fist, he says, has "turned into a sledgehammer that has destroyed the country".

The leader of the main opposition Movement for Democractic Change (MDC), Morgan Morgan Tsvangirai, is also a presidential candidate in the election.

He charged on Thursday that the poll could be rigged in favour of Mugabe because of a separate vote counting system after the polls.

He threatened to pull out of the elections if the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) if presidential ballots were going to be counted at a separate venue.

He also told a news conference that independent investigations had revealed that 90,000 names appearing on the roll for 28 rural constituencies could not be accounted for.

Related Links
Africa News - Resources, Health, Food



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Attacks on Darfur villages were deliberate military strategy: UN
Geneva (AFP) March 20, 2008
Attacks on four villages in West Darfur in January and February by the Sudanese armed forces amounted to a "deliberate" military strategy, the United Nations said Thursday.







  • Japan marks funeral for second-generation phones
  • Apple iPhone aiming to dethrone BlackBerry
  • Google stock price sinks on Internet ad-slump fears
  • HP And Qualcomm To Deliver Options For Worldwide Internet Access

  • Cape Canaveral Airmen Launch Delta II Rocket
  • ProStar GPS Guides Players At Arizona Golf Resort
  • Pratt And Whitney Rocketdyne Rocket Engine Powers Latest GPS Satellite Into Space
  • United Launch Alliance Launches Delta 2 For US Air Force GPS Replacement Satellite

  • Europe's EADS finds sweet home in Alabama despite uproar
  • A380 superjumbo makes European debut in London
  • Aviation industry must act fast on climate change: Airbus chief
  • Northrop, EADS to invest 600 mln dlrs in Alabama site

  • Northrop Grumman Ships First Beyond-Line-of-Sight IP Network To US Air Force E-8C Fleet
  • Northrop Grumman Delivers Payload Module For Second Advanced EHF Military Communications Satellite
  • Orbital Awarded Contract For System F6 Satellite Program By DARPA
  • Lockheed Martin Completes Rigorous Test Of First Advanced Military Communications Satellite

  • Russian-Launched US Satellite Unlikely To Reach Target Orbit
  • Artemis Provides Communications For Jules Verne ATV
  • New Discovery At Jupiter Could Help Protect Earth-Orbit Satellites
  • Quasicrystal Mystery Unraveled With Computer Simulation

  • NASA Names John Shannon New Space Shuttle Manager
  • Michael Larkin Appointed Executive Vice President Of Orbital's Satellite Business Unit
  • Boeing Integrated Defense Systems Looks To Future With Leadership Changes
  • Raytheon Space and Airborne Systems Names Carey VP For ISR Systems

  • Brazil, Germany To Develop Night-Vision Radar Satellite
  • NASA Goddard Delivers Aquarius Radiometer To JPL
  • New Portrait Of Earth Shows Land Cover As Never Before
  • Great Splitting Icebergs

  • XM Announces New 2009 Maxima To Offer XM NavTraffic
  • MapQuest And INRIX Collaborate To Deliver Traffic-Enabled Navigation Solutions
  • Ravenwood Golf Course Goes With ProLink For GPS Solutions
  • Starsem Readies Launch Of Second European Navigation Satellite

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement