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Forced
closure of Refugee Reception Office further endangers health of
vulnerable Zimbabweans
Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)
March 04, 2009
Read this statement
on the MSF website
Médecins
Sans Frontières (MSF) today denounced the decision by South
African authorities to close the 'showgrounds', a large open field
in Musina town near the Zimbabwe border where 3,000 to 4,000 Zimbabweans
queue to apply for asylum and seek refuge each night.
The closure of the showgrounds
demonstrates a flagrant disregard for the humanitarian and protection
needs of Zimbabweans seeking refuge in South Africa and will have
extremely negative consequences, as no allowances have been made
to ensure their access to shelter, food or medical assistance.
Every day, Zimbabweans
cross the Limpopo River into South Africa, risking their lives to
flee political instability, economic meltdown, food insecurity and
health system collapse in their country.
Since July 2008, tens
of thousands of Zimbabweans have applied for asylum at the South
African Department of Home Affairs (DHA) "Refugee Reception
Office" at the showgrounds: but only a fraction have been granted
asylum and there have been regular bottlenecks, creating a large
concentration of people living in inhumane conditions.
Each month, MSF provides
approximately 2,000 medical consultations for Zimbabweans at its
mobile clinic at the showground.
Despite the ongoing flow
of Zimbabweans to the showground, on Monday, March 2, the DHA announced
that it would close its office by Friday, March 6. The Department
then ordered everyone to leave the area. Although the showgrounds
does not meet minimum standards for humanitarian assistance it is
the only place in Musina where undocumented Zimbabweans, awaiting
their papers, are safe from arrest or deportation.
This sudden, forced closure
of the showgrounds comes just two weeks after MSF released a report
on the ongoing humanitarian and medical crisis in Zimbabwe and called
on South African authorities to halt deportations and provide adequate
humanitarian assistance for Zimbabweans fleeing across the border.
"This ill-conceived
decision by South African authorities will place Zimbabweans seeking
refuge in South Africa at incredible risk - especially considering
that many have serious illnesses, including HIV and tuberculosis,
which cannot be properly attended to by the collapsed Zimbabwe health
system," said Rachel Cohen, MSF's Head of Mission in South
Africa.
"Patients at our
mobile clinic at the showground informed us that many people fled
Musina yesterday morning, fearing they would be arrested or deported
if they stayed. Our medical teams know from experience that the
threat of deportation serves only to force Zimbabweans into hiding,
as they are too afraid to come forward to receive the assistance
they so desperately need."
On the morning of Tuesday,
March 3, South African authorities started dividing Zimbabweans
seeking refuge at the showground into different groups, according
to their legal status, gender and age. Women with children, pregnant
women and unaccompanied minors were removed from a special location
that had been established for them at the showground.
"People without
asylum-seeking papers were separated into groups, their names were
recorded and families were split up in this process," said
Sara Hjalmarsson, MSF Field Coordinator in Musina. "Today,
the DHA ordered all temporary shelters to be taken down and burnt
before they would begin processing applications for approximately
1,700 people. Tonight no one will have anywhere to sleep. In addition
to this, there is no information on how newly arrived Zimbabweans
will be able to apply for asylum. These already vulnerable people
are even more traumatised by the uncertainty they now face."
Those who had already
received asylum-seeking papers, but were remaining in the showgrounds
because they had nowhere else to go, were told to "move on."
It is likely that many of them will travel to the Central Methodist
Church, in Johannesburg, where there are now 5,000 Zimbabweans seeking
shelter and protection, and where MSF provides medical care for
more than 2,000 Zimbabweans each month.
"We are shocked
with this sudden decision, particularly as we have been a part of
numerous discussions with South African authorities, UN agencies
and NGOs in Musina to find an acceptable solution for the large
numbers of Zimbabweans in Musina" said Cohen. "Once again,
MSF calls upon the government of South Africa to stop deportations
and provide immediate, adequate humanitarian assistance -
including some form of legal status - for Zimbabweans seeking
refuge in the country."
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