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Desperate lives, twilight worlds: How a million Zimbabweans live without official sanction or sanctuary in South Africa
Solidarity Peace Trust
March 31, 2010

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The largest mass movement of the people into South Africa in its history is continuing into its seventh year, yet the Government appears to have a policy that consists mainly of window dressing and broken promises. The Zimbabwean migration is around three times greater than that of Mozambique during their civil war, yet astonishingly there is no coherent indication from the government on how it intends to deal with this, either now or in the future. The crisis in Zimbabwe; as economic recovery in Zimbabwe is not likely to occur soon, its biggest export will remain its people. Bearing this in mind, there is an urgent need for the Southern African government to develop a more sensible policy towards the hundreds of thousands of undocumented Zimbabweans within its borders. There needs to be a move away from border control to border management, and the promise (apparently forgotten) to give special dispensation to Zimbabweans under Immigration Act needs to be renewed and acted upon.

The desperate plight of thousands, caught in a twilight world of poverty and unbelonging, involves Zimbabwean migrants of all walks of life and of all ages. Two case studies in this report highlight two small groups, one reviews 82 unoccupied minors, and one views 456 Zimbabweans displaced in November 2009 in De Doorns in the Western cape. This latter group, part of around 2 400 in De Doorns, had their shacks destroyed during clearly orchestrated and premeditated xenophobic attacks: four months later they remain, more or less forgotten, on a playing field.

The horrific xenophobic attacks of 2008 have caused much soul searching in South Africa and have further highlighted the dangers faced by migrants as they flee their African nations in search of safety from prosecution, humanitarian support and a source of livelihood. However xenophobia predated the 2008 attacks, with cases of official record dating back to the very birth of the new South Africa in 1994. And tragically, xenophobic incidents and their consequences continue into present. It seems little has been learnt in South Africa since May 2008 in terms of how to prevent xenophobic violence and in hoe to respond once it happens. Once more, in De Doorns there has been impunity for perpetrators and not much support for victims. Clear indications of a looming xenophobic attack were ignored.

An assessment of the situation of and policy towards Zimbabweans in South Africa seems timely for the following reasons:

  • Calls are currently prevalent for another election in Zimbabwe in 2011, and in this eventuality, there is high likelihood of political violence and further movements of Zimbabweans into neighbouring states.
  • The imminence of the World Football Cup, and concerns about a new upsurge in xenophobia in the aftermath of this, provide further impetus to this report.
  • South Africa local government elections, due 2011, could precipitate another round of xenophobia, as local political interests have been shown to be used to fuel xenophobia in informal settlements.

While South African government has a very clear constitutional duty to respond to the crisis and provide protection to all who live within the borders of their nation, there is also a need for the Zimbabwean government to deal more cohesively with the fact that so many of its citizens are in exile, ranging from highly talented and competent, to the sadly vulnerable, ill and week. The patchy attempts by the Zimbabwe coalition government to engage with and develop a policy for the Diaspora leave much to be desired. While this may be partly a matter of money and partly a matter of being over stretched at home, there needs to be a comprehensive move to make it worth while for people to return, and also a clear attempt to engage those in the diaspora in processes such as national healing and devising a new constitution. People will not come home as long as there are no jobs for them, as long as they do not feel safe from political violence. There are no easy solutions for these problems, but apart from a conference in the Cape in December 2009 that engaged a very elite group of the diaspora only, and a few inappropriate calls from senior MDC officials simply appealing to the diaspora to come back, there is little systematic attempt to deal with the diaspora. The Constitution Parliamentary Committee (COPAC) announced recently that there should be no diaspora outreach during the constitutional process, owing to no funds being available, but in our experience there is a very keen interest to be involved, among Zimbabweans in South Africa at least. Civics in either South Africa or Zimbabwe could play a role in ensuring that at least some of the diaspora are kept involved and are encouraged to make submissions in writing, to reduce the sense of alienation felt by so many.

The reasons for Zimbabweans leaving in their thousands will be taken as understood in this report, Zimbabwe has suffered a highly publicized and dramatic plunge in the last decade with: wide spread political violence; repression; mass displacements of urban dwellers and farm workers as a result of deliberate urban demolitions and farm inversions; collapse of food production resulting, at times, in half of the population needing WFP food to survive; closure of schools and hospitals in 2008; the biggest cholera outbreak epidemic in Africa in 15 years affecting 100 000 people; hyperinflation estimated at 87 septillion percent at its peak. While the situation is now more stable, formal employment remains almost impossible to find, and living wages among the employed are also rare. For now, hundreds of thousands of Zimbabweans will continue to make the long journey southward in the increasingly vain hope of a better life. The job market in South Africa is showing signs of being oversubscribed; with 40% unemployed locally, and the boost to the labour market given by construction linked to the WFC about to come to an end. This situation is likely to worsen.

Since 2004, some progress has been made both in terms of the South African authorities' official recognition of the mass migration of Zimbabweans into South Africa, and in the growth of non-governmental responses to the crisis. However, in both cases, responses remain too insignificant to deal with the scale of the migration. Official documentation channels remain ad hoc and inappropriate to deal with the scale of arrivals.

Need for services by Zimbabwean migrants continues to outstrip the capacity of either government or NGOs to respond, and the abuse or denial of fundamental rights is prevalent as a result. Zimbabwean migrants, and migrants generally, fall outside of core South African government policies in terms of service delivery, but then so do millions of South Africa's poorest citizens, and the lack of access to support that migrants experience is no different to the marginalisation of many South Africa's own destitutes.

Across South Africa, some Zimbabweans and other migrants continue to report lack of access to health and education, and lack of understanding among prospective employers of their rights to work. It has become easier for Zimbabweans with passports to enter South Africa, with the introduction in may 2009 of a 90 day visa issue free at entry. This was not a special dispensation, and simply belatedly brought Zimbabwe in line with other neighboring countries who have had free visa entry to South Africa for some time. However, most Zimbabweans do not have passports and continue to face violence and extortion during illegal border crossings, and all the difficulties of being undocumented once in the country. In spite of the moratorium on deportations, a few Zimbabweans are still being deported.

The phenomenon of unaccompanied minors from Zimbabwe has gained wide press attention in the last six months, as increasing numbers of youngsters make remarkable and treacherous journeys in search of better life. This report provides a profile of some of the children who were staying in Johannesburg in 2009, and their harrowing experiences both en route and in South Africa.

The current report examines events around the Central Mothodist Mission (CMM) in Johannesburg, which has attacted huge media attention in the last two years. Paul Verryn, the resident priest at the CMM, has courted controversy with his truly open door policy, in which no one is turned away. The CMM has taken in an estimated 20000 individuals over the last seven years, mostly Zimbabweans, and seldom has fewer than 1500 migrants under its roof, and times as many as 4000. The CMM has been subjected to raids, insults and accusations. The EMM is the highly visible tip of a huge iceburg of Zimbabweans in central Johannesburg, and we visited some other sites its vicinity to compare how Zimbabweans live around the corner. The CMM is disliked by many officials as it is situated right next door to the High Court building and the unpleasantness, the untidiness of South Africa's (lack of) dispoara policy is rubbed in the faces of High Court judges and other officials every day. By providing basic shelter, food to the most vulnerable, and schooling to the children, Verryn has succeeded in doing for migrants on a small scale what the government has failed to do on any scale at all. Conditions in the church are tough, and criminal acts occur there from time to time, inevitable with an open door policy. But closing down the church as a place of accommodation will not mean that the thousands passing through there melt into thin air, they will continue to exist in increasingly desperate and increasingly invisible spaces.

Migrants are messy; their awkward twilight world stands in the way of the Johannesburg city plan to regenerate the inner city, a plan which precede the World Football Cup, and will continue afterwards. Clampdowns, which have intensified in the city of the CMM, will therefore not end with July 2010, but will continue, with evictions, harassment and arrests, into the indefinite future. State dealings with the CMM and with Zimbabwean migrants generally, are inconsistent. On the other hand the state has shown willingness to be humane, by planning to open a halfway house for migrants in the city, which a year after initially being promised has not yet quite materialized, and on the other hand, Zimbabweans are regularly arrested for "loitering", even while standing in a clinic queue awaiting medical treatment. Even when this halfway house opens, which it should shortly, it is a mere window dressing in terms of addressing the scale of the problem; it will house up to 500 people at a time, for up to six months.

The international debate on how to deal with different categories of migrants continues, and proposals to recognize mixed reasons for migrating and to provide more formal recognition for so called "economic" or "humanitarian" migrants is being discussed at the United Nations level, but these debates remain embryonic. Some commentators have argued that Zimbabweans should be refereed to as "forced humanitarian migrants", to distinguish them from voluntary economic migrants, and have argued that they should have rights similar to those of political refugees. It will be years yet before there are changes to international refugee instruments/ or national statutes and policies that will translate into greater safety and access to services for hundreds of thousands of undocumented migrants in South Africa and elsewhere across the world. These are mostly desperately poor people, who are forced to be on the move for a variety of reasons, including political persecution and humanitarian disasters. They face great risks and exploitation. It is also true that migrants are often recognised as being more inclined to work hard, and are often better skilled, whether through education or experience, than the poorest people in their home host nations. South Africa owes its current wealth partly to migrant labour over many decades.

Most Zimbabweans in South Africa lead desperate lives. Even though documentation is now easier, it is ad hoc and inappropriate and a partial, temporary solution. Where to live in a perpetual challenge, as is misery of having to move from one place to another, in fear of eviction, chasing seasonal employment, in the face of xenophobia, which is often life and livelihood threatening.

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