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Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Rising
levels of resentment towards Zimbabweans in Zambia
IRIN
News
June
09, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=78648
Zimbabweans
seeking greener pastures in neighboring Zambia - and an escape
from the election violence wracking the country - are becoming
increasingly concerned at the rising levels of contempt directed
against them.
"We are being treated
with a lot of indignation. Everywhere we go, we are being treated
like lesser human beings; it's like as long as you are a Zimbabwean
woman in Zambia, then you are a prostitute [sex worker], which is
not the case," Patience Ndhlobvu, a Zimbabwean cross-border
trader in the Zambian capital Lusaka, told IRIN.
"I personally take
strong exception to that; this is not fair, it's not a situation
of our own making . . . Zambians have been very good to us, but
it's like things are changing [now]. Everyone is suddenly
saying bad things about us. Just the other day, someone called me
a prostitute as I was selling my products [sweets, chocolates and
biscuits] in town."
South Africa boast the
continent's largest economy and is a first choice destination for
Zimbabweans seeking to escape the more than 80 percent unemployment
rate and an inflation rate unofficially estimated at more than one
million percent.
However, recent attacks
by South Africans against foreign nationals, which has killed over
60 people and displaced tens of thousands, has seen an influx of
about 25,000 Zimbabweans from South Africa to Zambia according to
the Red Cross, more than double the number already thought to be
in the country.
Levy Mwanawasa, Zambia's
president and chairman of the regional body the Southern Africa
Development Community (SADC), reportedly said the country did not
have the capacity to host any more foreign nationals or refugees,
as it was developing its former refugee camps into specialist institutions
such as skills training centres.
Zambia was host to about
300,000 refugees fleeing the Great Lakes conflicts and the Angolan
civil war during the 1990s; numbers have since fallen to about 113,000
following the repatriations of Rwandese, Congolese and Angolan nationals.
Mike Mulongoti, Zambia's
information minister and chief government spokesperson, said there
was a concern Zimbabwe's presidential run-off elections on 27 June
could precipitate the migration of yet more Zimbabweans to neighboring
states.
Rising
tensions between neighbors
The
opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) won the 29 March
parliamentary poll and almost snatched a first-round victory in
the presidential ballot. But 60 people have since died in political
violence following the elections, according to the MDC.
"We are continuously
being inconvenienced as a people of Zambia," Mulongoti told
IRIN. "We can't continue to deny that there's something
wrong going on there [in Zimbabwe] because their people are now
coming onto our soil in thousands. They [Zimbabweans] are all over
the place."
Zambia's diplomatic
relations with Zimbabwe are strained - in part as a result of Mwanawasa
convening an extraordinary SADC summit ahead of the 29 March election.
Mugabe refused to attend the Lusaka meeting and his government launched
vitriolic attacks against Zambia, along with Botswana and Tanzania,
for doing the bidding of Britain, in "a campaign for speedy
regime change in Zimbabwe".
"As the government
of Zambia, we take strong exception to the Zimbabwean government's
recent unwarranted attacks on us in the media. How long are we going
to tolerate this? How long are we going to host these people? We
did it during the struggle for freedom," Mulongoti said.
Lee Habasonda, executive
director of the regional good governance and human rights watchdog,
the Southern African Centre for Constructive Resolution of Disputes
[SACCORD], told IRIN South Africa's xenophobic attacks, which appear
to target Zimbabweans more than others, could spread to other countries
if Zimbabwe's economic meltdown was not addressed.
Zimbabweans
resented in the region
"The
thing is, it's not just here in Zambia where Zimbabweans are
being resented, even in Botswana, even in Mozambique, and even in
Malawi the situation is the same. We have a lot of them coming to
do businesses in unacceptable fields such as in the sex trade,"
Habasonda said.
In April 2008, Zambian
immigration officials deported about 60 Zimbabwean suspected sex
workers from Livingstone, the country's tourism capital.
The Immigration Department
is attempting to curb the influx of Zimbabwean immigrants through
Zambia's Southern Province border posts of Chirundu, Kazungula and
Kariba, "but it's difficult to completely clamp down
on these illegal immigrants because they don't require any
visas to enter Zambia. Some of them come with a day's permit
as visitors but never go back," an immigration official, who
declined to be identified, told IRIN.
"On average, we
are having over 200 Zimbabweans crossing into Zambia every day,"
he said.
Zimbabwe's run-off presidential
election could be the trigger for far larger numbers. "We are
all keenly watching the situation in Zimbabwe. Whatever happens
in Zimbabwe has a bearing on Zambia," Neo Simutanyi, a senior
political science lecturer at the University of Zambia, told IRIN.
"Clearly, the people
of Zimbabwe want change, but chances of a free and fair election
run-off are very slim. What we foresee taking place in Zimbabwe
is a possible military coup or armed rebellion if the ruling ZANU-PF
goes through, which will be very bad for Zambia and the region as
a whole."
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