Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05HARARE914
2005-07-05 14:03:00
CONFIDENTIAL//NOFORN
Embassy Harare
Cable title:  

RESTORE ORDER TSUNAMI ROLLS ON

Tags:  PGOV PREL PHUM PINR ASEC ZI 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 04 HARARE 000914 

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

AF FOR DAS T. WOODS
AF/S FOR B. NEULING
OVP FOR NULAND
NSC FOR DNSA ABRAMS, SENIOR AFRICA DIRECTOR C. COURVILLE

E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/31/2010
TAGS: PGOV PREL PHUM PINR ASEC ZI
SUBJECT: RESTORE ORDER TSUNAMI ROLLS ON

Classified By: Charge d' Affaires a.i. under Section 1.4 b/d

-------
Summary
-------

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 04 HARARE 000914

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

AF FOR DAS T. WOODS
AF/S FOR B. NEULING
OVP FOR NULAND
NSC FOR DNSA ABRAMS, SENIOR AFRICA DIRECTOR C. COURVILLE

E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/31/2010
TAGS: PGOV PREL PHUM PINR ASEC ZI
SUBJECT: RESTORE ORDER TSUNAMI ROLLS ON

Classified By: Charge d' Affaires a.i. under Section 1.4 b/d

--------------
Summary
--------------


1. (C) Now in its second month, Operation Restore Order is
affecting both urban and rural populations throughout the
country. In Harare, residents of high-density suburbs,
domestics and other staff in low-density suburbs, and tenants
in downtown office buildings have been turned out of their
buildings. In rural areas, police have principally been
targeting unauthorized residents on commercial farms, many of
whom settled at the GOZ's behest years ago. Residents of
transit camps are receiving minimal levels of health care
from the GOZ for now, with limited food and sanitation
assistance coming from international organizations.


2. (C) Most of the estimated 340,000-plus individuals
displaced by Restore Order remain homeless, are crowding into
temporary accommodations provided such as churches or
community centers, have moved in with relatives/friends, or
are moving to rural areas. Some are still sleeping in the
open and a number of deaths from exposure have been reported
as the weather has turned increasingly colder in Zimbabwe,s
winter season. End Summary.

--------------
Harare Neighborhood Sweeps Continue
--------------


3. (C) Embassy personnel witnessed the effects of Operation
Restore Order on visits to the high-density suburbs of Mbare,
Tafara, Kuwadazana, Mufakose, Highfield Extension, and
various neighborhoods of Chitungwiza. (N.B. septels will
document EmbOff observations in Masvingo and Mutare.) In
Tafara and Mabvuku, EmbOffs saw street vendors returning to
their informal vegetable trade despite heavy police
harassment. In the St. Mary,s neighborhood of Chitungwiza,
EmbOff spoke with one family who had been reduced to moving
from relative to relative each night just for a place to
sleep. EmbOffs also observed buses with large pieces of
furniture and other household effects strapped atop heading

out of Harare, signifying people,s move to rural Zimbabwe.
We continue to get reports that rural chiefs and headmen,
lacking capacity to absorb the urbanites or not wanting
suspected opposition supporters in their communities, often
turn them away, forcing them to return to Harare or squat
elsewhere in the countryside.


4. (C) Public access to the operation remains quite open, and
many international and local NGOs have provided accounts
(e-mailed to AF/S) of destruction and its aftermath. Reports
include the neighborhoods of Epworth, Newpark and Goodhope
Extension, Tafara, Mabvuku, Highfield, and Glen View. In
these neighborhoods alone, the affected number of people
could easily reach 100,000. Many of the destroyed buildings
were officially opened by GOZ representatives or even had
official assistance in their construction. For example, the
Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum has documented the
destruction of the Joshua Nkomo Housing Co-Operative, which
was built in part by the City of Harare.


5. (C) In neighborhoods yet to be affected, people were
busily tearing down their own homes and businesses in advance
of an expected police and/or military onslaught. According
to local residents, police informed them that they could
either tear down their own structures or else the police
would do so and then charge each resident in excess of Z$1
million (US$100 at the official auction rate) for the cost of
hauling off their rubble. Police have also destroyed
domestic quarters, cottages, and other small out buildings in
low-density suburbs.

--------------
Office Buildings Emptied: A Dressmaker's Tale
--------------

6. (C) On June 22, police emptied seven office buildings in
downtown Harare of their tenants. A tenant who owned a
dressmaking school on the fifth floor of one building told
Poloff that police told tenants they had until the afternoon
to remove all possessions from the premises or have them
confiscated. Poloff visited the building at mid-day and
found the street filled with furniture, files, office
equipment, sewing machines and the like, with occupants
ferrying remaining items out via a congested staircase. The
mood was a mix of exasperation and surprising good humor.
Police milled about at the building entrance, ignoring and
being ignored by the workers. Asked by Poloff why the
building was being emptied, the senior uniformed police
smiled and said "Ach; we know nothing."


7. (C) According to the dressmaking school owner, authorities
had given tenants no advance warning and she remained unsure
why the building was closing. She had heard alternately that
it had too many MDC tenants and that authorities were going
after the building's South Asian owners and their hard
currency. She had tried in vain to enlist the intervention
of friends in high places. After she had removed all her
equipment, she reached a senior police official contact who
told her that she would be permitted to remain and should not
remove her items. However, police on the premises were
insistent that no one and nothing could remain, even though
she showed them all relevant permits and tax/fee receipts.
She said she was outraged but would not pursue her rights
legally because she knew she would lose and she did not want
to provoke authorities. She would continue to press her high
level contacts, though.

--------------
Porta,s Population Pummeled
--------------


8. (C) On June 29, EmbOff visited Porta Farm located
approximately 30 km from Harare, where destruction was
underway. Those who had just lost their homes were sitting
around their piled up goods. One man remarked, &we are so
desperate, they said they cannot transport us from here to
our communal homes but can only move us with the barest of
our goods to Mbare or to Caledonia Farm.8 Another woman
said &we have obtained a court order to stop this demolition
but the police are just going ahead without even looking at
it.8 Another man, echoed by all those around, explained
&they said we must be out of here by 4 pm, failing which
they are coming to beat us badly and crush our property.
They said they do not want to see people here any more.8 A
few armed police details watched the demolition process and
protected the equipment and operators. On the way out of the
farm, a young man came up to EmbOff's car pleading for
blankets to protect his wife and two-day old child from the
night cold (about 40 degrees F).


9. (C) On June 30, EmbOff returned to Porta Farm to discover
that most of the settlements had been razed, with only a
primary school, secondary school, mosque, and church left
standing. Some of the farm,s former residents were moving
their belongings to surrounding farms while others were
carted away by authorities to Caledonia Camp and still others
were hitchhiking by the roadside. (Note: Many people of
Malawian or Mozambiquan origin had been moved to Porta Farm
in the early 1990s to "beautify" the capital ahead of a
Commonwealth Conference in Harare. End note). Even though
the schools were still standing, teachers and children alike
wondered aloud how the school could survive with most of the
students no longer having a place to live. Some of the
youths at the farm claimed they had attempted to put up a
fight against the demolitions but that heavily armed police
had overpowered them and arrested several.

--------------
Caledonia Camp Congested
--------------

10. (C) On June 28, EmbOff visited Caledonia Farm, one of at
least two transit camps just outside Harare for those
literally stranded by the roadside. While there, EmbOff saw
several trucks hauling away families with their belongings to
their rural homes. Health conditions were deteriorating with
about 2000 adults and children not changing clothes for days,
lacking clean bathing water, and sharing 5 male toilets and 2
female toilets. In addition, several elderly residents were
without family or friends to help.


11. (C) On June 29, Emboff again visited the transit camp,
and was warmly greeted by Officer-in-Charge Wilfred Moyo with
a request for assistance. Moyo emphasized the transitional
nature of the camp and asserted that many people had recently
moved on to permanent housing. He reported that the GOZ
provided no support for the camp,s 4500 residents, including
400 school-aged children no longer attending school. The
camp completely relied upon foreign assistance, with
Christian Care providing food, UNICEF/EU providing water, and
the ICRC providing toilets. The residents scrounged for
materials to build their own temporary structures.


12. (C) Each day, the Ministry of Health sends a team of
three nurses to Caledonia as a mobile clinic. However, Head
Nurse Maseke told PolOff that he was told his services would
only be needed for a few days and his team was scheduled to
return to its normal hospital duties very soon. He knew of
no plans to send a replacement team to the camp. Maseke
stated that more than two months in camp-like conditions
would prove detrimental to mental and physical health. He
especially worried about a &dependency syndrome8 setting in
as people entered a prolonged state of enforced idleness.
Maseke reported that his clinic had basic medicines for skin
rashes, stomach ailments, and other such problems but no
provisions for patients requiring ARV drugs and monitoring.
Such patients, Maseke stated, could receive care at Harare
hospitals but lacked transport.

--------------
GOZ: Winding Down and Rebuilding
--------------


13. (C) Even as Restore Order continued in both urban and
rural settings, the GOZ has been indicating publicly for more
than a week that the clean-up operation was winding down and
the GOZ would now focus on accommodating those displaced. It
has publicly pledged Z$1 trillion (US$100 million) to new
construction of residential and commercial stands, including
the construction of 250,000 new housing stands by August 30,

2005. In late June, the GOZ publicly published a list of
thousands of government employees, including senior police
officials with established residences, designated to receive
stands on the recently razed Whitecliff settlement. However,
many reportedly have been unable to register for their stands
at the chaotic city offices. We have observed some
construction of residential and commercial stands underway,
but not nearly fast enough to meet the GOZ pledge.


14. (C) As of June 29, The International Organization for
Migration (IOM) estimated that approximately 349,055
individuals from 69,811 households had been displaced as a
result of Operation Restore Order while other groups have
placed the number as high as 1 million. The IOM further
documented rapid movement of people from transit camps in
Mutare to the rural areas in an apparent attempt to
counteract adverse publicity and to downplay the operation's
scope and impact to the visiting UN team. IOM further
reported that police were moving door to door in Victoria
Falls, Harare, and Bulawayo inspecting the number of families
staying in each house and moving "extra" people into the
street and/or holding camps.

--------------
Comment
--------------

15. (C) The visit of a senior UN official (septel) has not
blunted the GOZ's enthusiasm for Restore Order; President
Mugabe and the official press have remained strident in their
defense of the operation as an exercise in urban
beautification, economic "rationalization", and law
enforcement. The displacements appear set to continue with
the focus likely to shift to rural areas, especially
evictions from the commercial farms of the ruling party
elite. GOZ construction of new housing and commercial stands
may proceed, likely with great official fanfare, but the GOZ
has no where near the resources needed to assist the victims
of the operation and reconstruction is likely to benefit the
well-connected much more than the truly needy while doing
little to stem seething public resentment of the regime.
SCHULTZ