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No legal way out
IRIN News
December 07, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=56658
HARARE - Passports are no longer available
in Zimbabwe. The office of the Registrar-General has stopped producing
them because the cost of importing the special paper required has
become unaffordable.
The country's economic meltdown in
recent years has seen more than 3 million of its about 12 million
people seeking employment opportunities in South Africa, Botswana,
Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, the United States of
America and Canada.
The demand for passports - the latest
item to become unavailable - already has a four-year backlog, driven
by inflation rates hovering at around 1,200 percent a year - the
highest in the world - unemployment rates above 70 percent and everyday
shortages of food, fuel, clean water and electricity.
Although millions of Zimbabweans are
believed to have left the country illegally, mostly to neighbouring
southern African states, the unavailability of passports will mainly
affect students who have secured places at foreign universities,
people seeking formal employment outside Zimbabwe and cross-border
traders.
Earlier this week, Registrar-General
Tobaiwa Mudede sent a circular to all passport offices, ordering
them to suspend operations. "We were told to immediately stop giving
out passport forms, and to chase away all people who were hoping
to apply or collect passports," said one officer.
Officials at the Registrar-General's
Office in the capital, Harare, told IRIN that they were instructed
to issue only Emergency Travel Documents (ETDs), which are valid
for six months. "Any foreign-based Zimbabweans using ETDs can always
renew them at the nearest Zimbabwean Embassy if the documents expire,"
the official told IRIN.
Independent analysts estimate that
Zimbabwe's industrial sector has contracted by a third since 2000,
while the farming sector, previously one of the country's main foreign
currency earners, has shrunk by 65 percent during the same period,
forcing tens of thousands of unemployed women to start cross-border
trading businesses. The traders buy goods in neighbouring countries
and resell them in Zimbabwe, where they have either become too expensive
or are unavailable.
Mary Moyo, a cross-border trader, arrived
at the Harare passport office on Wednesday to renew her passport.
"I lost my job more than 10 years ago and I support my children
and my grandchildren through cross-border trading - this will make
me spend more time applying for ETDs," she told IRIN.
Another official at the registrar's
office said passports could be issued in special circumstances.
"We are only processing passport forms of special cases of people
who have come through from the Registrar-General himself."
On Tuesday, the Registrar-General told
the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Defence and Home Affairs
that his office did not have adequate funding. "In the 2006 budget,
we were given 64 percent of what we had requested. At the moment
we don't even have a cent in our account. In the 2007 budget, we
were given 28 percent of what we had requested. The net effect is
that we will not be able to pull through up to May 2007. We might
be forced to ground all our operations."
Marriage certificates could become
the next scarce commodity. According to local media reports, the
Bulawayo magistrate's courts have run out of marriage certificates
and are desperately seeking more.
Matabeleland regional magistrate John
Masimba told the local media, "We are making all efforts to ensure
that everything is in place, so that couples intending to tie the
knot are not inconvenienced. We have been phoning around the provinces
to see if they can come to our rescue with the documents."
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