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Passport
shortage breeds corruption
Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
By Tecla Dehwa (AR No. 114, 30-May-07)
May 30, 2007
http://iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=335957&apc_state=henh
Anyone visiting the passport
office in the capital Harare will have encountered the hordes of
people trying to get documents so that they can leave a country
where the economy is in freefall and the political impasse makes
the prospects of recovery remote.
They are also likely
to be familiar with the corruption engendered by a shortage of passports,
the low pay of public servants and the sheer desperation of their
customers.
I learned this the hard
way, when I was invited to attend a week-long seminar in South Africa
at the beginning of May.
My passport expired in
2005, and although I submitted an application for a new one in early
2006, I am still waiting.
The registration authorities
resumed issuing passports only recently after getting an injection
of funding from Zimbabwe's central bank. The registrar-general,
Tobaiwa Mudede, said recently that his office had a backlog of 300,000
applications.
The passport office at
Makombe Complex is packed with Zimbabweans all trying to get the
documents they need to leave the country. Professionals are abandoning
ship, heading for Britain, Canada, Australia and the United States,
while poorer people visit neighbouring states to trade.
With no passport in sight,
I joined the many people applying for an Emergency Travel Document
or ETD - a temporary permit valid for six months. I assumed the
procedure would be simple enough, as I had a formal letter of invitation.
I soon realised my mistake.
ETDs are intended for
emergencies only, but the Makombe Complex office issues at least
100 a day, often to people planning to cross into Mozambique, Zambia,
Botswana and South Africa to buy cheap goods for sale back home.
Friends abroad help by supplying fake letters of invitation and
false addresses.
The booming demand generated
by the cross-border trade - itself a product of Zimbabwe's dire
economic circumstances - has opened up a lucrative seam for corrupt
passport officials.
At the core of the business
is a syndicate of men and women who appear to control the number
of applications issued per day. By doing so, they create an artificial
shortage, making applicants willing to pay a premium to get the
right document.
The speed at which you
get your ETD then depends on your willingness to pay an extra "fee",
or on having the right connections.
The application form
is of course free of charge, but even that is hard to come by. When
I got to Makombe Complex, the forms had run out.
At this point, I was
approached by a young man who told me his name was Adam and said
he could help me get an ETD for 300,000 Zimbabwe dollars, ZWD. It
is hard to translate this sum - at the official rate it would work
out as 1,200 US dollars while at the parallel market rate it is
just about eight dollars - but bear in mind that it represents a
month's wages in Zimbabwe.
Adam told me to go to
a particular office and see a woman called Maggie. "You can
get your ETD in three hours," he promised, as we exchanged
details.
When I got to the right
office, I asked for Maggie. Somebody pointed her out to me among
a bevy of ladies chatting idly behind their desks. When I mentioned
Adam's name, she handed over a photocopy of the form with a nonchalance
that belied her knowledge of what was going on. "Fill in the
form and take it to Window 7," she said coldly.
At Window 7, located
outside the complex, people shove their way forward to submit completed
application forms or to collect their ETDs.
After 40 minutes of pushing,
I submitted my form, two passport-size photos and the letter of
invitation explaining the urgency of the application. The form was
stamped, and I was packed off to yet another office, where I paid
the official fee of 5,000 ZWD. Then I had to go back to Window 7,
where I was told to return the following day to collect the ETD.
My mobile phone rang
three hours later. It was Adam. He gave me the name of a building
in town, an office number and the name of a woman to whom I was
to give the 300,000 ZWD as payment for the express service.
I queried this, since
I had not actually received the ETD. "You got the form,"
came the answer. "You would never have got it otherwise. We
want to process your ETD."
I did not go and pay.
After two hours, Adam phoned again to find out whether I had settled
the bill. I said I was not going to pay 300,000 ZWD for an application
form. He said he was prepared to send someone over to collect the
money if I wanted. "It's up to you," he said and hung
up.
The following day, I
was at the ETD collection window early in the morning, along with
the usual crowds. The collection times are indicated as 9 am, 11
am and 2pm. I waited for my name to be called out but nothing happened
all day.
"Check tomorrow,"
said Maggie casually, when I enquired at her office. It was the
same story every day for a week.
Meanwhile, I was pestered
about the outstanding payment every two or three hours.
I saw many other people
collecting their ETDs although they had submitted their applications
after I did. From the conversations taking place, I could tell money
was changing hands somewhere.
I was running out of
time, as I would still need to get a South African visa processed
afterwards. It was becoming evident that it was up to me to achieve
progress.
On the Tuesday of the
second week, I telephoned a senior government official whom I know
and told him my story. "No problem," he said. "Let's
meet at the passport office tomorrow morning."
As soon as we entered
the office where Maggie worked, everybody greeted my friend warmly,
although no one seemed to recognise me at all. He explained that
I was a colleague of his and needed to travel abroad urgently.
Maggie asked for my application
form as if I was a complete stranger. When I reminded her that I
had submitted an application the previous week, she feigned surprise.
"Go to the collection
window while I check what happened," she said. She quickly
dialled the extension, and as we got to the collection point, the
ETD was being processed.
I took it, thanked my
influential friend, and left in disgust.
Tecla Dehwa
is the pseudonym of a reporter based in Harare.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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