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"God
Only Loves Mugabe"
Elles
van Gelder, Inter Press Service (IPS) News
January 07, 2008
http://ipsnews.net/africa/nota.asp?idnews=40688
Sikhumbuzo* was only
18 when he left Zimbabwe for South Africa. He managed to find a
job, and sends home close on 150 dollars a month in cash and goods
-- although he can't say how many people he supports.
Sitting in a café
in the financial hub of Johannesburg, Sikhumbuzo (now 25) tells
of a mother and sister in Bulawayo, south-western Zimbabwe; aunts,
uncles and cousins also get part of what he sends.
Hundreds of thousands
of others find themselves in Sikhumbuzo's position, and the influx
of Zimbabweans to South Africa shows no signs of diminishing as
economic difficulties in their country deepen and the political
crisis there continues. Mismanagement of a state that was once a
regional breadbasket has brought about hyper-inflation, poverty
and widespread unemployment, obliging citizens to make their living
across the border -- the principal destination being South Africa.
The United Nations World Food Programme estimates that four million
Zimbabweans, about a third of the population, are in need of food
aid.
Ahead of elections scheduled
for March, government has been engaged in talks with the two factions
of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), the target
-- along with others -- of extensive human rights abuses over recent
years. But even as negotiations are underway, said Amnesty International
recently, violations continue.
Just over 40
percent of Zimbabwean migrants in South Africa take care of three
to four people, and 30 percent more than five people -- this according
to research conducted by the University of South Africa (UNISA)
under the auspices of the Zimbabwe Diaspora Forum, based in South
Africa; the Mass
Public Opinion Institute, a non-profit in Zimbabwe's capital,
Harare; and the Institute for Democracy in South Africa.
For the
study, a team interviewed 4,654 Zimbabweans in the Johannesburg
suburbs of Berea, Hillbrow and Yeoville. UNISA professor Daniel
Makina, who headed the team, thinks there are about 800,000 to a
million Zimbabweans in South Africa, far less than the more widely-cited
estimates of two to three million -- although he acknowledges that
these figures need further research.
His findings show that
most of the migrants left Zimbabwe after 2001. Their motivation,
at first, was related to intimidation and torture by government
forces. But for some time now, economic issues have topped the list
of reasons for leaving.
Those who manage to enter
South Africa find that life in this country can present a new set
of difficulties. With unemployment at about 40 percent, there is
competition for jobs -- and feelings of anger towards migrants,
seen as reducing employment prospects for locals. Work, when it
is available, is often badly paid: 60 percent of Zimbabwean migrants
earn less than 300 dollars a month, Makina's research shows.
The research also indicates
that the vast majority of migrants send home money or goods to an
average value of about 40 dollars, monthly. This may not sound like
much; but when the number of Zimbabweans in South Africa is considered,
a different picture emerges. If there are indeed some 800,000 Zimbabweans
in South Africa, of whom just half have work, then they could be
sending home upwards of 190 million dollars annually. Added to this
is the money sent by Zimbabweans living elsewhere in the region,
and further afield, notably Britain.
Florence, 48, is another
migrant who is keeping a family afloat -- nine people, to be precise.
She arrived in South Africa at a time when it was easy to get a
work permit, and has now been in the country for 11 years.
Florence cares for the
son of expatriates; none of her family members in Zimbabwe is employed.
They do own a piece of land near Plumtree in south-western Zimbabwe
where they grow vegetables -- but have struggled with farming in
past months because of poor rains.
Every month, Florence
sends home money and goods such as maize meal, paraffin, soap, sugar
and clothing. She also sends building materials, because she is
putting up a house for herself on the family property.
On this land, some 800
kilometres from Johannesburg, goats wander around amid Mopane scrub,
the bells around their necks tinkling; granite hills can be seen
on the horizon. Florence's son lives in a one-room home, which contains
a bed, an old bicycle and some cupboards; he says his mother takes
good care of the family.
The relatives had planned
to put on the roof of Florence's house last year, but needed additional
zinc sheets. Letting her know that two more had to be sent the next
month involved walking to a village about 15 kilometres away, to
make a call using the phone of a friend.
Makina says his research
indicates that two thirds of the Zimbabwean migrants living in South
Africa would return home if the political and economical situation
north of the border improved. Florence is a case in point. "My
mother is old and needs my love. I am only here because I have to
(be)."
Sikhumbuzo also wants
to go back, but doesn't hold out much hope of being able to do so
soon. "I will only return when...President Mugabe is gone,"
he says, in reference to head of state Robert Mugabe. "For
a long time, I prayed every day for change in Zimbabwe. I stopped.
I think God only loves Mugabe. For now, I will stay in South Africa."
* Certain names in this
article have been changed to ensure the safety of the people concerned.
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