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Expats
keep families afloat
IRIN News
November 27, 2007 http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=75536
The scale of migration
to Britain by Zimbabweans escaping their country's economic and
political woes has reached the point where, with typically wry humour,
London is referred to as "Harare North".
An estimated three million
Zimbabweans, a quarter of the total population, have packed their
bags and left home. Most, typically the semi-skilled, have opted
for neighbouring countries, but many others have chosen Britain's
green, if damp, pastures.
The welcome mat is extended
for 'in demand' professionals - doctors, nurses, teachers and IT
specialists - with work relatively easy to come by. For others,
even those who held down good jobs at home, there is the minimum
wage niche reserved for migrants the world over - office cleaning,
working in burger chains and looking after the elderly.
John and his wife Chipo*
are among the lucky ones. She is a nurse who was recruited in 2000
and then moved to England, working at a hospital outside London.
John was an accountant in a bank in Zimbabwe: he found a job at
a slightly junior grade to the position he had held at home, but
quickly moved up the ladder and is now in a supervisory position.
"Initially the English
people were not too sure what to do with me, but I proved myself,"
he said. The couple are happy; they drive a car and have taken out
a mortgage on a three-bedroom house. They try to maintain a 'Zimbabwean'
home for their two children, but it seems a losing battle; hanging
out with local kids, the boys aged six and four struggle to speak
Shona.
When they came to the
Britain the idea was to work for a few years, make some money and
go back home. But John says returning is no longer on the agenda.
"Our oldest boy is now in school and we have a house, so it
looks like we are here to stay; besides, why would we want to raise
our children in a place where we cannot feed them?"
The economic crisis in
Zimbabwe, with inflation at 14,000 percent and shortages of even
basic commodities, means John and Chipo have become the mainstay
of their families at home. "We have to send them money regularly
because there is virtually no way for them to support themselves
at the moment," John said.
Elizabeth used to be
a secretary in Zimbabwe. Once she got to Britain it did not take
her long to realise it was going to be very difficult to get a similar
job, so she did what many Zimbabweans, both male and female, do:
care for the aged.
"It's a tough job
but it pays my bills, and besides putting my siblings back home
through school, I send my parents money every month," she told
IRIN. She prays for Zimbabwe's recovery. "I'd love to go back
- this is not my home and I put up with a lot of prejudice from
white people." She does not think she is targeted because she
is Zimbabwean, "I think it's something every black person experiences."
A leveller
The experience of migration
is one shared by both black and white Zimbabweans, and has in some
cases been a leveller. Zimbabwean whites, who for two decades after
independence were a privileged minority, can also feel the pinch
in exile, despite their British ancestry.
Jane's husband is a businessman
in the capital, Harare, but as the economy stumbled he found it
increasingly difficult to maintain the standard of living they were
used to and Jane, middle-aged, went to London.
It was not easy to find
work, and she eventually took a job looking after rich English people's
dogs while they were on holiday. "It provides free board and
the pay is not bad," she said. Luckily for her she loves dogs,
and earns enough to send money regularly to her husband.
Although she was born
in England she says she has little in common with local people,
whom she says she dislikes, mainly because they keep her at arm's
length. She also misses the good weather "back home",
and says she will be on the first plane back to Harare as soon as
the political situation in Zimbabwe changes. "I am sure once
the uncertainty goes we can rebuild what we had, but all we can
do now is wait."
A 2006 study found that
at least half of all households in Harare and Zimbabwe's second
city, Bulawayo, were regular recipients of goods and money from
relatives living outside the country. As Zimbabweans in Britain
increase their earning power, there has been a proliferation of
companies through which they can remit money, and even fuel and
groceries.
It is a simple process:
the money is deposited into the company's bank account in Britain,
and the funds are transferred directly to the beneficiary's bank
account in Zimbabwe. John, the accountant, said this was the best
way of remitting money as it attracted the government's highly overvalued
exchange rate.
One of the biggest
online remitting companies, Mukuru.com, allows people to pay for
privately imported fuel in Britain. Their relatives are alerted
to the transfer by SMS and collect their vouchers, which they then
redeem for fuel. UK-based Zimbabweans can also pay for groceries
imported from South Africa, and provide their relations with access
to treatment via medical insurance taken out in Britain.
*not their real
names
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