Christians Urge UK to Receive Zimbabwe Asylum Seekers

Christian leaders in Britain are appealing to their own government to accept asylum-seeking Zimbabwean refugees, who were left homeless by their government's policy to "drive out trash."

President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe says the government's demolition of structures, which left an estimated 300,000 shanty town residents homeless, are part of "Operation Drive Out Trash" -- a campaign to destroy illegal structures as part of urban renewal, mostly in the capital, Harare.

The government has been accused of human rights violations over the razings.

"I think it's deeply immoral to send people back there," said Anglican Communion leader, the Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, in an interview with BBC news.

The British government has not wanted to issue immediate blanket asylum for all of the displaced, saying there could be abuses by those trying to exploit official controls on immigration. It says it will deal with each asylum case on an individual basis.

Home Secretary Charles Clarke has said no one genuinely believed to be in danger would be returned to Zimbabwe.

Roman Catholic leader Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor agreed with the Anglican archbishop on not sending back asylum seekers. He also used strong words to denounce Zimbabwe's leadership.

"The government of Zimbabwe appears to be conducting a sustained, systematic campaign of terror against its own citizens," he said.

He added, "the expulsion of thousands of poor people from their homes, leaving them to sleep in winter temperatures in the open air, is deeply abhorrent."

He added that there should be a moratorium on deportations as the international community attempts to understand the situation in Zimbabwe.






Francis Helguero
Christian Today Correspondent
News
All Nations Christian College to sell campus and move courses online
All Nations Christian College to sell campus and move courses online

The college campus has connections with the 19th century abolitionist movement.

What is the biblical basis of Ash Wednesday?
What is the biblical basis of Ash Wednesday?

18 February 2026 is Ash Wednesday, which traditionally starts the season of Lent. This is the story …

Lent for the weary: rethinking the season as rest, not religious hustle
Lent for the weary: rethinking the season as rest, not religious hustle

Has Lent just become another self-improvement project with a spiritual label?

Bible Society stands by 'Quiet Revival' research
Bible Society stands by 'Quiet Revival' research

Questions about the study have been raised.