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Regularising
Zimbabwean migration to South Africa
Forced
Migration Studies Programme, Wits University
May
2009
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Regularising
Zimbabwean Migration to South Africa
On 3 April 2009,
the Department of Home Affairs announced its intention to grant
Zimbabweans in South Africa a twelve-month 'special dispensation
permit' on the basis of the 2002 Immigration Act, section 31 (2)(b).
This permit grants the right to legally live and work in the country.
As complementary measures, a moratorium on deportations and a 90-day
free visa for Zimbabweans entering South Africa have been implemented
from May 2009.
This policy
brief outlines the key reasons why this new package of policies,
especially the special dispensation permit, is in South Africa's
best interest. It responds to perceptions that, in the context of
a recession and a newly elected administration, regularising Zimbabean
migration may not be a priority or that it may have negative impacts
for South Africans. In fact, the regularisation of Zimbabwean migration
is consistent with and complementary to many of the key goals of
the new administration.
Key
Messages
- The new set
of policies regularising movement between South Africa and Zimbabwe
represents a positive shift towards a rational, coherent and regionally
beneficial migration management approach. Previous aproaches to
managing Zimbabwean migration (including the asylum system and
widespread arrest and detention) did not address the nature or
scale of movement and so resulted in high levels of illegal migration,
rights abuses, and negative impacts for South Africa.
- The introduction
of special temporary permits to manage complex mixed migrations
is increasingly common internationally. South Africa is likely
to receive significant international recognition and support for
adopting this policy, given widespread interest in supporting
regional stability and Zimbabwean reconstruction.
- Regularising
movement between South Africa and Zimbabwe will help the new government
achieve its development goals by facilitating efforts to combat
corruption, protect labour standards, up-skill the economy and
fight crime. While the free visa and special dispensation permit
are clearly insufficient to achieve these broader policy aims
on its own, these challenges will be much more difficult to tackle
without the effective implementation of the permit.
- The new policies
are unlikely to increase overall volumes of migration from Zimbabwe
to South Africa. In fact, they are likely to enable Zimbabweans
in South Africa to return more rapidly.
- Out of a
range of legal policy options for regularising movement between
Zimbabwe and South Africa, the proposed special dispensation permit
is the most appropriate to the context (Zimbabweans' need to work
and to move freely between countries) and most easily implemented.
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