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Child
migrants seek a better life in South Africa
IRIN
News
September
03, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=74083
MUSINA,
- He is only a teenager, but he is already a seasoned border jumper.
Dressed in a torn t-shirt and blue work trousers, Robert, 16, (not
his real name) told IRIN he had crossed the border from Zimbabwe
four times since he first decided to come to South Africa in January
this year.
He was arrested
and deported for the first time late last month, but returned to
the South African border town of Musina, in Limpopo Province, within
a day and said he would only stay in Zimbabwe "when I have
three things: money, food and schooling".
An orphan from
Zimbabwe's south eastern province Masvingo , Robert dropped out
of school when he was ten years old to become the sole breadwinner
for his grandmother and an elder sister. He returned home earlier
this year to take food and money to them.
About one in
five Zimbabweans between the ages of 15 and 49 are infected with
HIV/AIDS, according to UNAIDS, which has resulted in growing numbers
of child-headed households following the death of parents.
At night Robert
sleeps at Musina's taxi rank and during the day searches for casual
work washing taxis or unloading goods from trucks at trading stores;
on a good day he earns R25 (US$3.50). Other child migrants are said
to sleep in abandoned houses at Musina's now defunct copper mine.
During his most
recent border crossing the teenager met three other boys his age,
but "they went on to Johannesburg, because they have relatives
there they can stay with," Robert said.
Hungry and tired,
Robert arrived at the Children's Resource Centre, a day facility
in Musina's Extension Two township that cares for vulnerable children
from both South Africa and Zimbabwe, looking for a meal.
"They walk
or take the bus to the border after earning money from piece jobs
[in Zimbabwe], and the reason they come here [South Africa] is because
they are hungry," the centre's coordinator, Ennie Nelushi,
told IRIN.
Day
care centre for child migrants
She said more
than 500 unaccompanied children from Zimbabwe had visited the centre
since it opened three years ago. The facility provides food and
water, life-skills training, like HIV/AIDS education, as well as
rape and trauma counselling and sporting activities.
Nelushi said
the centre did not offer overnight accommodation or formal education,
and contact was often lost because "children get arrested and
deported, and the police don't inform us".
Staff from the
centre routinely look for child migrants in Musina as part of their
outreach programme, picking up children as young as ten from as
far away as the Zimbabwean capital, Harare, and the eastern city
of Mutare, who have run the gauntlet of trafficking gangs at the
border, known as "magumaguma" (scavengers).
The magumaguma
ferry undocumented migrants across the border for a fee, said to
be about R1,500 ($140), although the migrants risk robbery and rape
from those who they have paid them for the "service",
while other illegal migrants travelling across the border independently
are targetted by the gangs.
"Sometimes
children have arrived naked [at the centre] after being robbed by
gangs, who, if they [migrants] do not have money, take their clothes
and gang-rape the girls," Nelushi said.
Zimbabwe's official
inflation rate is more than 7,600 percent - the world highest -
and shortages of food and fuel are commonplace, while unemployment
is estimated at more than 80 percent.
The Food and
Agriculture Organisation and the UN World Food Programme (WFP) issued
a joint report on Zimbabwe's food security in June, predicting that
"people at risk [of severe food shortages] will peak at 4.1
million in the first three months of 2008 - more than a third of
Zimbabwe's estimated population of 11.8 million."
It is estimated
that since 2000 about a quarter of the population, or three million
people, have left the country for neighbouring states, such as South
Africa and Botswana, or further afield for Britain and the United
States.
Deportations
of unaccompanied children common
According to
South Africa's constitution and the Child Care Act of 1983, unaccompanied
minors must be housed in a place of safety while their personal
circumstances are investigated by a social worker, and a Children's
Court inquiry opened, conducted and finalised. They also cannot
be repatriated across international borders, unless relatives or
legal guardians have been traced to ensure the child is handed into
their custody on arrival.
Nick van der
Vyver, programme manager of the reception centre run by the International
Organisation for Migration (IOM) in the Zimbabwean border town of
Beitbridge, told IRIN that South Africa did not have enough places
of safety for children, but 40 beds were set aside for unaccompanied
children at the IOM's Child Care Centre, run by the Zimbabwean government's
social services department with the assistance of Save the Children
(Norway).
"We agreed
that we will take them here and look after them while the reunification
process is done," Van Der Vyver said. The process was often
difficult because "children are being told by the people taking
them over the border not to say anything, and certainly do not say
that you are a Zimbabwean, because as soon as you say that you can
be deported, so a lot of them just sit there and say nothing."
He said the
Child Care Centre had processed "plenty of them [children]",
although "16- and 17-year-olds might look like they are 18
and will claim they are when asked by the [Zimbabwean] police [at
the reception centre]. As they don't have any documents, it is difficult
for the police to verify their ages."
The youngest
unaccompanied child received at the IOM centre, which opened on
31 May 2006, was a four-month-old baby separated from its mother
when police rounded up undocumented migrants in South Africa and
the mother evaded arrest.
Another woman
who had been arrested "saw that no one was taking care of this
baby and realised you can't just leave a baby like that, and started
looking after it. She told the [South African] police it was not
her baby, but they did not believe her and deported her and the
baby," Van Der Vyver told IRIN.
The Child Care Centre tracked down the mother of the child and reunited
them.
Although economic
concerns forced many children to go to South Africa, he said there
were often more unaccompanied minors at the Beitbridge reception
centre during the school holidays because parents working in South
Africa paid people to smuggle their children across, and those intercepted
would end up at the facility.
Mandla Motshweni,
programme manager of the Pretoria-based Save the Children (UK),
an international child welfare organisation, said they were investigating
the plight of Zimbabwean child migrants, particularly in Limpopo
province, and were about to release a report on their findings.
He said one
of the recommendations would be the establishment of a place of
safety in Musina, and a government building had already been identified
for this purpose by the organisation and the relevant local authorities.
South Africa's
Home Affairs Department did not respond to questions posed by IRIN.
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