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BOTSWANA:
With xenephobia rising, electrified border fence hailed
IRIN
News
February 23, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=45744
CHANGATE -The
word "Zimbabwean" gets Motswana traditional leader Jackson Ofentse
hot under the collar.
"Please don't ever mention to me the criminals from across the border,"
he told IRIN. His village of Changate in northern Botswana is only
5 km from the frontier, and he has nothing good to say about his
neighbours.
"Our women can no longer gather firewood in the bush for fear of
being raped; our houses are not safe any more, and even our livestock
find their way across the border," he complained.
Ofentse is looking forward to the day when the Botswana government
flicks the switch on a four-metre high electrified border fence
that snakes across the scrubland, ostensibly to control the spread
of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) from Zimbabwe.
Two outbreaks of FMD in two years, which hit Botswana's lucrative
beef exports to the European Union, were sourced to Zimbabwe. Jobs
were lost and thousands of cattle slaughtered.
While the 500-km long fence officially aims to block the mixing
of herds on common pasture, Ofentse and many other Batswana hope
it will also keep out the thousands of Zimbabweans escaping poverty
at home, who sneak cross the border looking for work in more prosperous
Botswana.
An estimated 36,000 illegal migrants were deported last year alone
and, with xenophobia now firmly on the rise, Zimbabweans have become
the target of a growing vigilante movement.
The solar-powered fence, which will deliver a nasty but not fatal
220-volt shock, is due to become operational in June, and will be
patrolled 24 hours a day by the security forces. A survey by the
Southern African Migration Project found that a majority of Batswana
supported its construction.
The villagers of Changate, 140 km northeast of Botswana's second
city Francistown, may feel more secure behind the new barrier, but
they have lost the perks of proximity to Zimbabwe. Gone are the
cheap shopping trips across the border, and easy access to relatives
on the Zimbabwean side.
"We had relied on labour from Zimbabwe for a long time. It was also
nearer to travel to Plumtree in Zimbabwe to do your shopping than
travel to Francistown," explained local journalist Khumbulani Kholi.
Residents in the border villages used to buy cheap Zimbabwean livestock,
and enjoyed an easy supply of fruit and vegetables. "When I was
growing up, my brothers even went across the border to have a drink
in the Nswazi village [in Zimbabwe]," said Kholi.
Now, getting to Zimbabwe entails a two-hour walk to the nearest
border post at Maitengwe, and for those who don't have passports,
a 140-km journey to the immigration office in Tutume.
"We don't hate Zimbabweans here," said Kholi. "We are only tired
of elements that come to steal from us."
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