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Deportation
of Zimbabweans to begin again
IRIN
News
September
03, 2010
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=90391
South Africa
will resume the deportation of undocumented Zimbabweans on 1 January
2011, ending its 17-month moratorium, the Cabinet announced on 1
September.
"After the 31st
of December [2010] all undocumented Zimbabweans will be treated
like all others and their deportation will resume," said a
statement issued after the Cabinet met.
In April 2009 the government
placed a moratorium on deportations, introduced a 90-day visa on
demand for passport holders, and was on the cusp of issuing Zimbabweans
with a special permit allowing them to work and reside in South
Africa for between 6 months and 3 years.
The Forced Migration
Studies Programme (FMSP) at the University of the Witwatersrand
in Johannesburg (FMSP) estimates that between 1 million and 1.5
million Zimbabweans are living in South Africa.
Loren Landau, director
of FMSP, told IRIN that deportation "does not stop people wanting
to come across [the border from neighbouring Zimbabwe]. Look at
the US-Mexico border, where billions of dollars have been spent;
it has not stopped people crossing."
NGOs advocating the reform
of regional migration were scheduled to meet with government next
week, but since the announcement they have raised concerns to IRIN
that the policy was retrogressive, increased the risks of xenophobic
attacks, and would not halt the flow of undocumented Zimbabwean
migrants - about 200,000 Zimbabweans were deported in the year leading
up to the April 2009 moratorium.
Duncan Breen, of the
Consortium for Refugees and Migrants in South Africa (CORMSA), said
ahead of the meeting with government that the authorities had "concerns
with border migration and border management ... and border integrity".
Braam Hanekom, of People
Against Suffering, Suppression, Oppression and Poverty (PASSOP),
told IRIN that Cabinet's statement was "a big step backwards",
the vulnerability of undocumented migrants would increase, and the
"country has a history of [undocumented] migrants being raped
and abused, but too afraid to report it to the police for fear of
being deported."
PASSOP said in a statement:
"We believe that the large number of deportations and the proceeding
'witch hunt' of foreign nationals by the National Immigration Branch
and South African Police were a major factor in creating the conditions
that lead to the culture of xenophobia that haunts us today."
South Africa experienced
wide-scale xenophobia in May 2008, when at least 60 people were
killed and more than 100,000 displaced, and an undercurrent of xenophobic
violence sometimes still surfaces as threats or attacks on foreigners.
Special
permits
The Cabinet announcement
appears to have scuppered the initiative to issue Zimbabweans with
special permits, which NGOs considered "in the best interests"
of South Africa as well as the Zimbabwean migrants.
Tara Polzer, a senior
FMSP researcher, noted in a migration policy brief in May 2009 that
"the new set of policies [the special permit, the 90-day visa,
a moratorium on deportations] regularizing movement between South
Africa and Zimbabwe represented a positive shift towards a rational,
coherent and regionally beneficial migration management approach."
Former President Thabo
Mbeki's administration withdrew troops from the border in 2003 and
their duties were taken over by the police, just as the effects
of the Zimbabwe's political and economic crises began to gather
momentum, spilling economic migrants in search of employment into
the neighbouring states, with most seeking employment in South Africa.
In May 2010 South Africa
re-deployed troops to the border.
Stability
in Zimbabwe
"Zimbabwean nationals
who are working, conducting business, or studying in South Africa
will be issued with a working permit, business permit, or study
permit ... provided they have valid Zimbabwean documents,"
the Cabinet statement said.
Most Zimbabwean migrants
were unskilled and "Fewer than five percent of Zimbabweans
will qualify for the new regulations, and most of them that do,
already have," Landau noted.
"People are coming
back and forth and remitting money. If that option in not available
[because of tighter restrictions] then they will just bring the
whole family [to South Africa]," he said.
Government spokesperson
Themba Maseko told local media that Cabinet's decision was based
on the belief that "some form of stability has returned to
Zimbabwe, and therefore all Zimbabweans will now be treated like
any other foreign nationals."
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