|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
Price Controls and Shortages - Index of articles
Crossing
the border to bring the groceries home
IRIN News
July 31, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=73512
MUSINA, 31 July 2007
(IRIN) - Bulk traders have been flocking to South Africa for months
to buy groceries for resale in Zimbabwe, but now a rapidly growing
number of individual shoppers are arriving to stock up on essentials
in Musina, about 13km from the border, in South Africa's Limpopo
Province.
Zimbabwe's President
Robert Mugabe launched "Operation Reduce Prices" in late
June in an attempt to cap escalating prices as businesses tried
to cushion themselves against the world's highest inflation rate
by forcing retailers to slash their prices by 50 percent.
This has resulted in
empty shop shelves and widespread shortages of basic commodities,
and the International Monetary Fund has warned that Zimbabwe's year-on-year
inflation rate could reach over 100,000 percent by the end of 2007.
The biggest supermarket
in Musina, Spar, has seen an increase in turnover of between 50
percent and 70 percent in July, manager Pieter Koekemoer told IRIN.
Mo, 30, said he had come
to Musina to buy groceries for his family and friends in Zimbabwe.
He wrote their names on the plastic bags as he packed them into
his pick-up truck, saying that the cost of fuel, import duty and
a South African visitor's visa were a small price to pay.
Bulk
traders
Some bulk traders use
a medium-size delivery vehicle and often supply formal shops, but
now no longer want to supply them because price controls make it
unprofitable. With more individual shoppers also crossing the border
to buy food for themselves, bulk business is declining.
"The bulk trade
at my shop has gone down 40 percent in the past two weeks,"
said Jason Rana; 95 percent of his clientele are Zimbabwean traders
buying large quantities.
Bulk trade is expected
to slow even further after a new regulation comes into effect on
1 August. According to the Zimbabwean embassy in South Africa, there
will not be a complete ban on cross-border trade, but a permit for
importing bulk foodstuffs for resale will have to be obtained from
Zimbabwe's Ministry of Industry, and will not be as easy to get
as a visitor's permit.
Waiting
for jobs
Besides the shoppers
and traders, thousands of Zimbabweans who have crossed the border
illegally wait around Musina in the hope of finding a job to pay
their fare to bigger South African cities further south.
According to Bertus Schutte,
who manages the labour force on Maswiri Farm, about 20km north of
Musina, more and more Zimbabweans come looking for work every day.
He said they left as soon as they could, and about fifty labourers
went to cities like Johannesburg and Pretoria each week.
Peter, 20, and Kudzai,
18, from a village in Masvingo Province in southern Zimbabwe, crossed
into South Africa illegally near the Beitbridge border post two
weeks ago and have since been waiting for jobs at Maswiri.
They plan to seek work
in Johannesburg, where friends of theirs already have jobs in construction.
It is estimated that there are close to three million Zimbabweans
in South Africa, mostly illegally.
Neither Peter nor Kudzai
has a passport, and they do not see the point of going to one of
the refugee reception offices run by South Africa's Home Affairs
Department, which deals with immigration, to ask for asylum.
"They know they
will be sent back immediately, because the authorities see all of
them as economic refugees. So, coming in illegally or on a visitor's
permit and staying, is the only option," Jacob Matakanye of
the Musina Legal Advice Office, an organisation that helps immigrants
in the region, told IRIN.
No tsunami
There are no official
figures on the rate of influx of illegal Zimbabweans into South
Africa, but in the past few weeks local media and the South African
opposition party, Democratic Alliance, have been reporting a rising
tide of Zimbabwean immigrants.
The International Organization
for Migration (IOM), which runs a reception and support centre in
Beitbridge providing assistance to migrants returning from South
Africa, reported that 16,500 Zimbabweans were sent home in June,
and the figures for July were expected to be the same.
"There is no sudden
'tsunami' of people being deported," said Nick van der Vijver
of IOM. "These figures ... represent the number of Zimbabweans
deported, and say nothing about the number of people leaving Zimbabwe."
He said the story of
a wave of Zimbabweans coming [to South Africa] in the last few weeks
seemed an exaggeration, considering the number of deportees had
remained relatively stable.
Gabriel Shumba,
of the Zimbabwe
Exiles Forum (ZEF), estimated that 5,000 people legally crossed
the border every day, 3,000 of whom remained in South Africa. Illegally,
he guessed, about 7,000 were crossing the border daily.
Shumba expected these
numbers to increase as Zimbabwe's parliamentary and presidential
elections, scheduled for March 2008, drew nearer. "Violence
has always been stepped up before elections," he said. "Besides,
hunger will also drive many people to South Africa."
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.
TOP
|