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Report
dismisses "human tsunami of migrants" claim
IRIN News
September 05, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=74143
It is being called the
largest displacement of people outside of a war zone since the fall
of the Berlin Wall in 1989, but a new report is dismissing claims
of a 'human tsunami' of undocumented Zimbabwean migrants arriving
in South Africa as an "exaggeration".
The report,
Fact
or Fiction? Examining cross-border migration into South Africa,
by the Forced Migration Studies Programme at Johannesburg's University
of the Witwatersrand and the Musina Legal Advice Office, a non-governmental
organisation (NGO) advocating the rights of migrants, which operates
on the Zimbabwean/South African border, said, "recent statements
by officials exaggerated the numbers of Zimbabweans moving across
the border into South Africa or already in the country."
Although the authors
did not speculate on how many Zimbabweans have entered, or are entering
the country, daily, it does acknowledge that "this is the first
time post-apartheid South Africa has faced people fleeing from political
crises and economic deprivation in one of its immediate neighbours",
and its response will test the country's ability to "effectively
protect the human dignity of migrants and South African citizens".
Media reports have suggested
that as many as three million Zimbabweans have crossed into South
Africa since the neighbouring economy began its steep decline in
2000.
Zimbabwe currently has
the world's highest inflation rate of more than 7,000 percent, with
unemployment of 80 percent, while UN agencies predict that more
than a third of the country's population, or 4.1 million people,
will experience severe food shortages in the first quarter of 2008.
The report said although
"cross-border migration has generally increased in recent months
... the magnitude of these increases remain unclear", and took
issue with media reports that made assertions without clarifying
sources and, "most worryingly, fail to interrogate estimates
against obvious baseline figures (e.g. is it plausible to suggest
that almost 10 percent of Zimbabwe's estimated population has crossed
illegally into South Africa within one year?)."
The
"human tsunami"
The South African Independent,
a Sunday newspaper, has quoted 'official' estimates that 20,000
to 30,000 undocumented Zimbabweans have been crossing into South
Africa every month, and the country's leading financial daily, Business
Day, has quoted police sources estimating that 6,000 to 10,000 undocumented
migrants have been arriving weekly from Zimbabwe.
The weekly newspaper,
The Mail & Guardian, has cited police sources at Musina, the
South African town nearest the main border post for entering Zimbabwe,
estimating that 3,000 undocumented migrants per day were crossing
from Zimbabwe to South Africa.
Sally Peberdy, programme
manager for the Southern African Migration Project (SAMP), an NGO
researching regional migration issues, said the often-quoted figure
of three million undocumented Zimbabweans in South Africa was overblown.
"We know what it is not, but what we don't know is what it
is."
The Fact or Fiction report
dismissed the media's "provocative image of a Zimbabwean 'Human
Tsanami'" after President Robert Mugabe imposed price controls
in an attempt to reign in hyperinflation as "demograhic guesswork".
The International Organisation
for Migration (IOM), an organisation committed to the principle
that humane and orderly migration benefits migrants and society,
opened a Reception and Support Centre on 31 May 2006 at Beitbridge,
the Zimbabwean town nearest the main border crossing to South Africa,
to receive migrants repatriated from South Africa.
Nick van der Vyver, the
programme officer at IOM, told IRIN that the centre processed 16,348
people in June this year, and 20,047 in May, but in July, when the
full impact of price controls was being experienced in Zimbabwe,
the number of deportees from South Africa passing through the centre
dropped to 15,330.
Although Van Der Vyver
conceded that the number of deportees accepted by the facility could
not determine the flow of undocumented Zimbabwean migrants to South
Africa, the assumption was that the greater the influx of migrants,
the greater the chance of arrest among the larger pool of undocumented
Zimbabwean migrants there.
In the first seven months
of 2007, the IOM processed 117,737 people being returned from South
Africa via Beitbridge, about 40,000 more than in the last six months
of 2006.
Secure
or porous borders?
The report cited "considerable
evidence" since December 2006 that police and army patrols
had increased along the South African/Zimbabwe border, and that
the security forces "have been arresting and deporting increased
numbers of suspected illegal foreigners."
However, in mid-August
an IRIN correspondent spent an afternoon inspecting 25km of the
border fence and witnessed no patrols by either police or army,
although there were numerous places where large swathes of the security
fence had been removed. A local farmer said the security fence was
being stolen for resale.
According to the report,
a "more accurate assessment of current border management difficulties
is that the South African government has never been able to control
the movement of people across any of its borders."
The government has shied
away from producing its own estimate of a Zimbabwean exodus, but
this is not a position it has always held on undocumented migrants.
In 2000, Mangosuthu Buthelezi,
the then Home Affairs Minister, said at a meeting with Germany's
interior minister, Otto Schily, in Berlin, that "official sources
suggest figures ranging from 4 [million] to 8 million [undocumented
migrants]... At grassroots level instances of xenophobia have been
registered, and the possibility that such negative feelings are
becoming endemic within our population."
The Human Sciences Research
Council, from where Buthelezi sourced the figures, subsequently
withdrew them, citing a flawed research methodolgy. In the late
1990s, SAMP and Statistics South Africa estimated that around 500,000
undocumented migrants were residing in South Africa.
During the time of both
British colonialism and apartheid, South Africa's mining-based economy
drew hundreds of thousands of migrants from throughout region, although
on a more 'formalised' basis than has been experienced since the
country's first democratic elections in 1994.
The continent's economic
powerhouse has become a magnet, and few would dispute that Gauteng,
South Africa's richest province, hosts nationals from all of Africa's
53 states - it is only the size of the community that varies.
Basothos, Mozambicans,
Malawians and Zimbabweans are probably the largest immigrant communities,
yet Somalis, although having a much smaller immigrant population
of about 20,000, have borne the brunt of a fierce xenophobia: according
to human rights organisations, at least 30 Somali nationals were
killed in 2006 alone.
South
Africa's abuse of international refugee laws
The report cited "the
denial of asylum in South Africa to victims of persecution, violence
and conflict" as an issue requiring redress by the South African
authorities.
The number of undocumented
Zimbabwean migrants has become a heated domestic political issue,
with the main opposition party, the Democratic Alliance (DA), calling
for the establishment of refugee camps for Zimbabwe's "economic
refugees", while government has "supported its denial
of the need for camps by suggesting that almost none of these migrants
are legitimate asylum seekers", the report said.
South Africa's Home Affairs
Department has used statistical evidence in their defence, saying
that only one Zimbabwean had claimed asylum at the Beitbridge border
post between 1 January and 30 June 2007.
However, in 2006, according
to Home Affairs, 18,973 applications for asylum were lodged by Zimbabweans
- 35.4 percent of the 53,363 asylum applications made in the calendar
year. There are no statistics available for asylum applications
in 2004 and 2005.
"Our research suggests
that the numbers of Zimbabweans formally applying for asylum may
be significantly distorted by local officials' poor understanding
of, and/or an unwillingness to administer the country's refugee
laws. Some offcials we spoke to believed all Zimbabweans were economic
migrants, or not 'real' refugees," the report commented.
Observations at the Beitbridge
office by the Musina Legal Advice Office, one of the report's authors,
found South African border officials denying Zimbabweans the same
opportunity as other nationals to claim asylum.
"If these observations
are correct, the South African government is responsible for contravening
the most fundamental principle of international refugee law: non
refoulment," the report said.
Non refoulment is the
principle that no person should be expelled from, or refused entry,
to a country, if such an act would expose them to specified forms
of threat or persecution.
According to the report,
"By supporting the notion that all Zimbabweans are economic
refugees, or illegal immigrants, Home Affairs officials in Pretoria
tacitly condone the illegal activities of their junior officials."
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