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Integration
and the migrant migraine
IRIN News
February 27, 2008 http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=77011
The goal of Southern
African regional integration is being set back by the outflow of
Zimbabwean migrants to neighboring countries, according to researchers.
An estimated three million
Zimbabweans have emigrated as a result of the county's economic
and political crisis, many of them heading to neighboring South
Africa and Botswana. Their arrival has triggered a rise in xenophobia
as locals complain about competition for jobs and rising crime rates.
Ayesha Kajee,
programme director of the International Human Rights Exchange at
the University of Witwatersrand, in Johannesburg, South Africa,
noted that "the influx of both political and economic migrants
has been unprecedented" and regional integration efforts "have
since been pushed to the sidelines".
An integral part of the
14-member Southern African Development Community's (SADC) goal of
regional integration is the principal of "free movement of
people". In 1995, the SADC secretariat prepared an initial
Draft Protocol on Free Movement of Persons that would underlie the
right to entry, residence and establishment, eventually leading
to the abolishment of controls. South Africa, Namibia and Botswana
rejected the proposal.
After much deliberation,
a watered-down version was accepted in 2005, in which "removal
of controls" was replaced by "progressive minimization
of control". "SADC has agreed vaguely at a policy level
on integration and the free movement of people, but implementation
on a domestic level into legal frameworks has been poor," said
Kajee.
"The movement of
Zimbabweans - not only into South Africa but into Botswana and elsewhere
- has effectively, if temporarily, removed the issue of free movement
from the table," Loren Landau, Director of the Forced Migration
Studies Programme at the University of the Witwatersrand, told IRIN.
For Zimbabweans looking
for a better life, its wealthy neighbor, South Africa, has acted
as a magnet, attracting skilled, unskilled and undocumented migrants.
Peter Ncube* smuggles people across the no-man's land between Zimbabwe's
southern town of Beitbridge and the South African border post of
Musina. He says the people who pay the US$50 for his services are
desperate.
"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 told IRIN.
"Migration of people
between Zimbabwe and South Africa has been a regional pattern throughout
history. As social and economic relationships change, people will
always migrate to pools of stability," noted Peter Vale, Nelson
Mandela Professor of Politics at South Africa's Rhodes University,
in Grahamstown, Eastern Province.
However, while the flow
is popularly seen in South Africa as strictly one way, in reality
it is seasonal and complex. Analysts have found that Zimbabweans
often enter South Africa to trade or pick up odd jobs, and then
return home.
The Lindela detention
and repatriation centre at Krugersdorp, about 120km from Johannesburg,
is evidence of the South African government's determination to crack
down on undocumented migrants. Those held here awaiting deportation
have been picked up in regular police raids targeting "illegal
aliens".
According to the International
Organisation of Migration, 165,000 Zimbabweans deported from South
Africa last year passed through their reception center in Beitbridge.
Superintendent Maggy
Mathebula, the police chief in Musina, does not accept that the
daily detention of Zimbabweans caught crossing illegally into the
country is pointless. "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."
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