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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Health Crisis - Focus on Cholera and Anthrax - Index of articles
No
refuge, access denied: Medical and humanitarian needs of Zimbabweans
in South Africa
Médecins
Sans Frontières (MSF)
June 01, 2009
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Summary
Each day, thousands of
Zimbabweans cross the border into South Africa, many risking their
lives to flee economic meltdown, political turmoil, and a critical
lack of access to health care in their country.
In the past several years,
the crisis in Zimbabwe has given rise to food insecurity, an unprecedented
cholera epidemic, political violence, rampant unemployment, an escalating
HIV crisis and the near-total collapse of the health system. This
breakdown in Zimbabwe has driven nearly one quarter of the entire
population into neighbouring countries, particularly South Africa.
And despite claims that
Zimbabwe is 'normalising' following the establishment of a Government
of National Unity, Zimbabweans continue to cross the border every
day, legally and illegally, in massive numbers as a matter of survival.
Upon arrival, many Zimbabweans
endure further suffering in South Africa, without access to proper
health care, shelter or safety. During their journey to and within
South Africa, they are subjected to violence, physical and verbal
abuse, police harassment, inhumane living conditions and xenophobic
attacks.
The South African Constitution
guarantees access to health care and other essential services to
all those who live in the country - including refugees, asylum-seekers,
and migrants - regardless of legal status. However, in practice,
the fear of arrest, deportation, and xenophobia, coupled with a
lack of accurate information about their rights, has kept many Zimbabweans
from accessing basic services necessary for survival. Today, Zimbabweans
are still often charged exorbitant fees to access public facilities
despite policies to the contrary, turned away from hospitals when
they need admission, discharged prematurely, or subjected to harsh
treatment by health staff in the public services.
In 2007, Médecins
Sans Frontières (MSF) opened two projects to respond to the
specific health needs of Zimbabweans seeking refuge in South Africa.
MSF mobile clinics, operating
in and around Musina town at the border with Zimbabwe, in addition
to a fixed MSF clinic at the Central Methodist Church in Johannesburg,
provide general primary health care, referrals to existing hospitals
or specialised medical facilities, and other humanitarian assistance,
including shelter, water and food.
MSF medical teams treat
4,000-5,000 Zimbabweans each month, mainly for respiratory tract
infections, including a substantial proportion of tuberculosis;
sexually transmitted infections; gastro-intestinal and diarrhoeal
conditions; and stress-related ailments. More than 30% of HIV tests
performed are positive. Yet, this is just the tip of the iceberg.
There are thousands more Zimbabweans who never come forward to access
MSF or other health services, choosing instead to protect themselves
by becoming invisible in South African society.
Because many patients
have endured multiple traumatic events and exhibit symptoms of posttraumatic
stress, MSF also provides psychological support in both Musina and
Johannesburg. In addition, MSF teams treat a rising number of survivors
of sexual violence and see a worrying increase in the number of
unaccompanied children travelling from Zimbabwe into South Africa.
The recent announcement
by the South African Department of Home Affairs that a new system
will be put in place to regularise the legal status of Zimbabweans
in South Africa, and to stop the systematic deportation of Zimbabweans,
is a welcome departure from the government's previous policy of
aggressive harassment, arrest, and deportation. Whether the fate
of vulnerable Zimbabweans in South Africa will improve depends upon
how and when these new policies will be put into practice.
This report
highlights the plight of Zimbabweans seeking refuge in South Africa,
the appalling conditions in which they live, and their ongoing lack
of access to adequate protection, shelter, and basic services, particularly
health care, in South Africa.
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