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Zimbabwean
refugees in South Africa
Union
for Sustainable Democracy
June
07, 2010
While the daily
life of people in Zimbabwe offers very telling insights into the
extent of Mugabe's decades of tyranny and neglect, by far
the most telling cases are in South Africa.
This week a
Union for Sustainable Democracy team visited some of the refugees
in that country as part of ongoing efforts to assist displaced Zimbabweans.
Our findings were that innocent people are being made to endure
a horrible lifestyle that can only be compared with the aftermath
of an armed conflict.
While living
in South Africa has many attractions, life for Zimbabwean refugees
in that country is as inhuman as it can ever get: living conditions
are generally appalling; people live in squalor, sometimes sharing
a single toilet with over a hundred others; women are giving birth
and having to raise their babies in filthy, overcrowded conditions;
many are resorting to prostitution; and xenophobia is rendering
an already bad situation worse -just recently, a clean-up exercise
ahead of the World Cup, targeting street vendors (mainly Zimbabwean
refugees) was undertaken with devastating consequences.
Mugabe's
misguided policies and entrenched indifference spanning more than
a quarter of a century have stripped these people of everything
they own, including their dignity and the very humanity of their
children.
A great number
of these Zimbabweans are highly qualified. We spoke to teachers,
nurses and engineers. However, because of the scarcity of formal
employment in South Africa, made worse by the Black Economic Empowerment
Act's prohibition of preferring aliens to locals when hiring
for jobs, many have resorted to routinely queuing along busy roads
in the morning for much more occasional, informal and usually demeaning
work.
It is common
to go for an entire week without scoring a chance and when they
eventually do, the money is enough to survive for only a few days.
Some have resorted to labouring on farms but, with farm owners contemptuous
of labourers in general, and alien labourers in particular, sweat
from a full day's work doesn't count for much, we were
told.
Meanwhile, women
walk from location to location selling self-crafted, Zimbabwean
style garments. They are so desperate that they are willing to sell
on credit even though payment is hardly ever received.
These people
all cherish the dream of going back home. They all long for the
day when they can once more live in peace, safety and prosperity
in their own country. Their hearts are in Zimbabwe. Their dreams
are there. But, despite all of the hazards and demeaning trials
and tribulations of refugee life, none of them even remotely considers
returning home in the near future.
Why would they
go back to terror, torture and oppression on top of poverty and
unemployment?
In these circumstances,
we call on President Jacob Zuma to take a stronger hand with the
members of the unity government to ensure that they transcend party
politics and work for the common good of the country as quickly
and as productively as possible. Political bickering and grandstanding
serve no purpose at all other than to further hurt an already fractured
and devastated country.
Zimbabwe is
starved of the human resources represented by the nurses, teachers
and engineers whom we met. The successful repatriation of Zimbabwean
refugees is essential for rebuilding our country and will relieve
an unnecessary stress on the economy of South Africa.
Go to
http://www.usd.org.zw to see photographs of Zimbabwean refugees
taken by our photographer.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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