|
Back to Index
Zimbabweans
flee with hope and US$50
IRIN News
February 20, 2008 http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=76837
Musina - "We
know why you're in South Africa - Life in Zimbabwe is murder these
days", a billboard greets Zimbabwean immigrants in South Africa's
border town of Musina; it also asks them to return to vote in next
month's election, but so far the people traffic has remained solidly
one-way.
January was a busy month
for Musina's authorities. After spending Christmas with their families,
Zimbabwean migrants returned to South Africa to earn the money that
will sustain their relatives back home. On some days the police
were deporting up to 500 people who had crossed the border illegally.
By February that figure
had dropped to 100 a day, but represented just a proportion of Zimbabweans
expelled from South Africa. The International Office for Migration
(IOM), which runs a reception centre for deportees at the Zimbabwean
border town of Beitbridge, helps around 10,000 people each month.
That does not include those who decline the assistance, preferring
to attempt another crossing immediately.
In recent weeks the summer
rains have swollen the Limpopo River, which demarcates the border,
making it too dangerous to cross. Instead, some people have resorted
to hopping over the fencing of the footbridge that spans the river,
scooting down a concrete slope while ignoring the warning shouts
of the border guards, and then disappearing into the bush to lie
low until the regular patrols have passed. The final stage, when
things are quiet, is to get through three rows of barbed wire fencing.
Peter Ncube*, a Zimbabwean,
works as a transporter, helping people across the border. When the
river is low he uses a makeshift boat, guided by two people wading
through the water. "The people are scared but there is no [other]
solution. Grandmothers, grandfathers, mothers, fathers and children,
they [want] to come to South Africa to look for a job ... so they
can support their families."
He has seen a steady
increase in the number of migrants crossing as Zimbabwe's economy
has soured, which is good business for him. Ncube has been living
in Musina for 10 years and has family on both sides of the border.
The money he earns - up to US$50 per border-crosser - goes to his
children who are still in Zimbabwe. "I help someone, he pays
me something - at least I can manage to support my family as well."
Most migrants want to
reach Johannesburg, South Africa's economic hub. From the border
they continue on foot, heading for designated pickup points where
minibus-taxis will take them on the next stage of the journey.
To avoid the border patrols,
they often end up on private land. Jan Knoetze owns a farm near
the border and frequently encounters "hungry, upset and rather
destitute" Zimbabweans on his property. "I have seen them
drink hot water from a pipe - they wouldn't even let the water cool
down, they drink the hot water as it is," he told IRIN.
Welcome
to SA
Unlike
some farmers, Knoetze sees little point in alerting the police,
as those who are deported often come straight back across the border.
Musina's police chief, Superintendent Maggy Mathebula, sees it differently:
"It is true that they keep on coming back. If we deport a truck
in the morning, in the afternoon half of the people who were deported
in the morning are re-arrested again. But it's our duty, we have
to do it, again and again."
Those picked up are held
at Musina's detention centre, where they have a chance to eat and
wash before being repatriated. Women were clutching the loaves of
bread they had been given by the centre when IRIN visited.
"This here is nice,
because now I'm taking some bread [home] to eat," commented
Esther Sibanda, who said she was voluntarily returning to Zimbabwe
to vote in the 29 March elections. When the deportees reach the
IOM's reception centre across the border, they are offered further
assistance in the form of food packs, health checks and transport
to their hometowns.
Miriam Gumbo, 22, waiting
in line with other women to board the deportation truck, all carrying
their belongings in plastic holdalls, their babies tied to their
backs, vowed to be back. She had come across the river with her
husband and their 10-month-old twins, but was arrested after crossing
the fence.
No fear
It
was not her first attempt: she came to South Africa in 2004 and
was deported in 2007, but Zimbabwe offered her no future. "There
is no food to eat and nowhere to sleep. It's so hard with these
young children." She and her husband had been trying to reach
Johannesburg to find work and were not deterred by the latest setback.
"I will try to come again. I am not afraid, because there is
[no life] in Zimbabwe."
In January the
International Monetary Fund estimated
Zimbabwe's inflation rate at 100,000 percent and still rising, and
only two out of 10 people are employed. Maternal mortality rates,
and infant and under-five deaths are all above threshold levels
that should trigger international concern. Although nutrition levels
are not the lowest in the region, only in Zimbabwe are the trends
in "stunting" and "underweight" deteriorating.
Many "undocumented
migrants" who manage to avoid arrest head for a concrete tunnel
under the highway to Johannesburg, just south of Musina. It is known
as a good place to hide and await the first light of day, when minibus-taxis
pull over, offering onward transport.
The entrance to the tunnel
is marked by a pair of old abandoned shoes and food packaging strewn
about. The walls are used as a giant message board: "Almighty
God, bless my journey to Joburg, in the name of Jesus. Amen",
dated 5 October 2007, or "Chikoko 'Big Fish' - leading a journey
into the unknown." The messages also impart information, including
a sketch of a Pioneer Transport bus, the preferred service for many
migrants.
When asked whether the
police were overwhelmed by the number of people crossing the border,
Mathebula replied, "They are keeping us busy. We're afraid
that if this ends we won't have work anymore."
In the meantime, Musina's
authorities are building a huge new police station, and a detention
centre that will hold 1,500 people, almost double the current number.
* Some names have been
changed
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
|