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No
deportations until March
IRIN
News
January
07, 2011
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=91572
Undocumented Zimbabwean migrants were given until
31 December 2010 to regularize their stay in South Africa, but this
has been extended to 31 March, and problems with issuing passports
by the Zimbabwean authorities could delay the process even further.
"There will be no deportations until the end
of March," said Ricky Naidoo, spokesman for the South African
Department of Home Affairs.
In September 2010 South Africa announced a moratorium
on deporting Zimbabweans and said it would allow migrants until
31 December to regularize their stay by applying for work, business
or study permits.
The lull in deportations will give the department
time to process more than 275,000 applications for permits received
from Zimbabwean migrants. "We are trying our best to complete
the adjudication process in the next few weeks," Naidoo said.
The South African government relaxed its requirements
as the 31 December deadline approached and now awaits a variety
of outstanding documents, including passports, to process the applications.
Zimbabwean migrant
rights organizations in South Africa, such as the Zimbabwe
Exiles Forum (ZEF), and People Against Suffering, Suppression,
Oppression and Poverty (PASSOP), expressed their appreciation.
"They [the South African government] even accepted
applications with just birth certificates and, in some instances,
not even that," said Braam Hanekom of PASSOP.
The two NGOs are helping migrants who have applied
for permits to obtain the required documents. The biggest problem
was getting a Zimbabwean passport.
Earlier this week, the Zimbabwean registrar general's
office indefinitely suspended the production of passports, temporary
travelling documents, and other documents such as national identity
cards and birth certificates, after saying an electrical fault had
affected its database in the capital, Harare.
ZEF's Gabriel Shumba estimated that at least 100,000
applications for South African permits had been submitted without
passports.
Naidoo said South Africa had offered to help the
Zimbabwean government issue the passports, but refused to comment
on whether the offer had been accepted. So far, 42,779 applications
had been finalized and approved, 10,166 were awaiting review, and
222,817 were awaiting adjudication.
The Zimbabwean daily newspaper, The Herald, which
supports the ruling-ZANU-PF party, on 7 January quoted Registrar-General
Tobaiwa Mudede as saying that they would start issuing passports
again on 10 January.
"But will that help? They have a tremendous
backlog," Shumba noted. Thousands of Zimbabweans who went home
to obtain identity documents have been left stranded.
Kaajal Ramjathan-Keogh, head of the refugee and
migrant programme at Lawyers for Human Rights (LHR), a South African
organization, told IRIN that the Zimbabwean authorities had been
issuing 500 passports a day before they suspended production.
The
price of not applying
Hundreds of thousands of Zimbabwean migrants could
face deportation from South Africa, "as only about a sixth
of the estimated Zimbabwean irregular migrant population applied
for legal status," the International Organization for Migration
(IOM) said in a statement.
"There are an estimated 1.5 million Zimbabweans
living in South Africa, many of whom migrated as a result of the
social and economic unrest in Zimbabwe in recent years."
The organization has reception centres for refugees
at the Beitbridge border crossing from Zimbabwe to South Africa
and in Plumtree, the main border crossing between Zimbabwe and Botswana,
and is on standby to provide free transportation to deportees. With
support from local and international bodies, IOM has prepositioned
non-food items including tents and blankets.
ZEF's Shumba said inadequate publicity about the
regularization process and lack of information on the requirements
had deterred many Zimbabweans from applying.
Employers had also often been reluctant to provide
letters of employment for fear of persecution. "The home affairs
[department] assured these employers that there will be no action
taken against them a bit too late," Shumba said.
"Most Zimbabwean migrants work part-time, it
was difficult for them to establish full-time employment,"
Hanekom noted.
Nevertheless,
Zimbabweans migrants could still apply for asylum, he said. "The
application will provide them a temporary asylum seeker's
status until their interview to establish whether they qualify -
this can take up to two years."
He noted that asylum applications by Zimbabweans had a dismal record,
"95 percent of them get rejected, but it can still get you
some time."
In the past 10 years, as hyperinflation, and social
and economic problems have rocked Zimbabwe, more and more Zimbabweans
have sought refuge in neighbouring South Africa, the most economically
advanced country in the region.
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