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Zimbabweans
fleeing economic meltdown unwelcome
IRIN
News
March 13, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=70678
GABORONE - Zimbabweans
trooping across the border looking for jobs in Botswana face hardship,
but would rather stay than return to face the worsening economic
crunch at home.
That is a problem
for an increasing number of Motswana, who believe Zimbabweans have
worn out their welcome. Xenophobia is being stoked by the daily
arrival of economic migrants, and the popular belief that Zimbabweans
are responsible for increased crime in this diamond-rich middle-income
success story.
"Coming up with
the exact number of Zimbabweans now living here is impossible because
a sizeable amount of them are illegal immigrants who use undesignated
crossing points," an immigration official, who asked for anonymity,
told IRIN.
He alleged that
more than a thousand Zimbabweans trudged through the Ramokgwebana
border post daily. Many fibbed on their entry forms, getting a 90-day
entry visa by claiming they were visiting relatives or friends.
"It is common knowledge that the majority of the people would be
coming to look for jobs," said the official.
Precious Kunonga,
26, a single mother, has been in Botswana dodging the authorities
for almost a year, trying to make enough money to put her eight-year-old
son through school and look after her elderly parents.
At home she had
been impressed by the stories spun by friends in Botswana, who boasted
about how much easier it was to earn a living. When she turned up
at the main bus station in the capital, Gaborone, to try her luck,
no one was there to greet her. Three nights spent sleeping at the
terminus gave her a crash course in urban survival.
The first lesson
was how to make some money as an undocumented migrant. Early each
morning Kunonga goes to Broadhurst shopping mall, an unofficial
employment exchange in Gaborone, and waits with scores of other
Zimbabweans to be hired to wash clothes, clean houses and tend gardens
- the chores that locals prefer not to do.
"When I arrived
here, money was easier to get, but since more and more Zimbabweans
are coming here on a daily basis, competition is getting increasingly
stiff. Worse still, we are subjected to ridicule by the locals,
who always shout out that we should return to Zimbabwe and fix our
problems from there," said Kunonga.
Since 2000, when
Zimbabwe's economic problems took a turn for the worse, millions
have left the country - to mainly South Africa, Botswana and Britain.
The skilled and the unskilled are all looking for a way to get ahead,
but also to help family at home, who are struggling with an annual
inflation rate close to 1,700 and unemployment of 80 percent.
On a good day,
Kunonga can take home 60 pula (US$10) but she can also go for weeks
without work, "and that means then I hardly have anything to buy
food with".
To save as much
as she can, she shares a small room without electricity with four
other Zimbabwean women. Between them they pay US$8 per month; the
landlord has already told them he is going to double the rent at
beginning of April.
Living crammed
together has its own problems: the roommates quarrel over whose
turn it is to buy groceries, accuse each other of stealing or borrowing
without asking. Making things even nastier, one of the women has
turned to sex work and brings men home.
And then there
are the police: Kunonga has to keep her wits about her to avoid
being picked up and fined US$8 for loitering, or worse still, repatriated.
"If they discover that your papers are not in order, that is the
end for you because you instantly get deported," she said.
Despite all the
hardships, suffering and embarrassment, the lure that keeps Kunonga
in Botswana is that in a good month she can earn US$115. When that's
converted on the parallel market in Zimbabwe, it's more than the
salary of a senior magistrate.
Migrating from
Zimbabwe is not only the prerogative of the young. Catherine Zindoga,
52, is also hustling a living in Gaborone. "I was forced to come
to Botswana by the fact that I have to fend for four children, who
were left in my custody by my two daughters, both of whom died of
AIDS," she told IRIN.
Her visa has long
since expired, a situation she says her employer is taking advantage
of. "I have not been given time to rest in the last seven months
and I sometimes go for months without receiving my salary," said
Zindoga. She has not only worked long hours, but has sometimes been
taunted by her employer's children as being "mukwerekwere", a derisive
term for foreigner.
The South African
Migration Project of the University of the Witwatersrand quoted
Botswana officials as saying the government had rounded up and deported
6,000 Zimbabweans in the first week of October 2006.
Zimbabwean-run
businesses, such as bus and truck operators, funeral parlours, vehicle
repair shops and sawmills, have mushroomed in the northern city
of Francistown and the satellite towns of Tati and Tonota to the
south, all near Botswana's border with Zimbabwe.
But the popular
perception is that Zimbabweans are linked to criminality. In 2004
- during which around 72,112 Zimbabweans were deported - the Botswana
government issued a statement accusing "illegal Zimbabwean immigrants
[of involvement] in criminal activities, including very serious
crimes".
Kunonga and Zidonga,
however, see themselves as victims, forced to leave home to support
their families, living in a country where they are generally unwelcome,
and blame an economy that has deteriorated from being one of the
engines of the region to a liability to its neighbours.
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