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Deportation
threat for undocumented Zimbabweans
IRIN
News
July
06, 2011
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=93164
With just weeks to go
before a 27-month moratorium on deporting Zimbabweans living illegally
in South Africa expires, the authorities are scrambling to complete
a documentation process that will still leave hundreds of thousands
of Zimbabweans lacking the necessary permits to avoid arrest.
The number of Zimbabweans
who have fled the political and economic crisis in their country
and moved to South Africa is unknown but estimates from the International
Organization for Migration (IOM) range from 1 to 1.5 million. Before
the government introduced the moratorium in April 2009, the authorities
were deporting Zimbabweans who had entered the country illegally
at a rate of about 200,000 a year.
The special dispensation
initially allowed Zimbabweans to enter and remain in the country
without documents, but in September 2010, the government announced
an initiative to regularize as many Zimbabweans as possible before
the end of the year. They were invited to apply for four-year work,
study and business permits and to surrender any fraudulent documents
to the authorities without fear of prosecution.
However, the short timeframe
to complete the Zimbabwe Documentation Process (ZDP), and poor communication
surrounding the requirements, led to many Zimbabweans being excluded,
according to the African Centre for Migration and Society at the
University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg which monitored the
process.
By the end of 2010, the
Department of Home Affairs had received about 275,000 applications,
but many still lacked necessary paperwork such as passports. Home
Affairs eventually settled on a deadline of 31 July 2011 to allow
Zimbabwean authorities time to issue documents.
At a media briefing on
30 June, ZDP head Jacob Mamabolo said Home Affairs had adjudicated
263,000 of the applications and issued 133,000 permits. He added
that text messages were being sent to applicants asking them to
submit fingerprints and outstanding documents.
"We are doing everything
in our power to ensure the process is completed within our set deadlines,"
he told journalists.
However, Braam Hanekom
of People Against Suffering, Suppression, Oppression and Poverty
(PASSOP) noted that many applicants had not responded to the text
messages because they had still not received passports from the
Zimbabwean consulate.
"We're
worried about what will happen to those people who applied before
the deadline and haven't received passports yet," he
said.
Gabriel Shumba
of the Zimbabwe
Exiles Forum commented that Home Affairs had handled the processing
of applications with efficiency and professionalism. "The concern
only emanates from the fact that Zimbabwe was unable to produce
the needed passports on time."
With 142,000 permits
still to be issued before 31 July, civil society groups have sought
assurances that no deportations will take place before the ZDP is
completed.
"The Ministry [of
Home Affairs] has reassured us that although the moratorium is ending,
there is no intention of a mass deportation," said Hanekom.
"We feel reassured . . . but there does remain a concern
that such a large number of people will be eligible for deportation."
Police
witch hunt?
Shumba has received a
similar assurance from Home Affairs, but said members of the police
force appeared to be taking a different position. "The attitude
of the police is very worrying - they're now on a witch hunt of
Zimbabweans."
He said he had received
reports from Zimbabweans all over the country who had been arrested
"for no apparent reason" and asked for bribes.
In the border town of
Musina, the most popular point for Zimbabweans to enter South Africa
and the front line of the government's earlier efforts to contain
illegal immigration, Jacob Matakanye of the Musina Legal Advice
Centre said local police and Home Affairs officials had been arresting
undocumented Zimbabweans until his office, along with the provincial
police department, intervened two weeks ago.
After 31 July, he said,
"we're expecting the worst... they're going to arrest a lot
of people and deport them, but they'll come back in numbers."
With few resources, Matakanye's
organization and other NGOs in Musina are doing their best to prepare
for a return to the situation prior to the moratorium when local
show grounds adjacent to the Home Affairs office became the only
place in town where Zimbabwean migrants were relatively safe from
arrest. The result was 5,000 people staying in one small area without
adequate sanitation facilities or drinking water.
IOM has been
developing contingency plans to provide humanitarian assistance
to an influx of vulnerable Zimbabwean deportees through its reception
centres in Beitbridge, just across the border from Musina and Plumtree,
on the border with Botswana. Assistance will consist of food, health
screenings, psycho-social counselling and the offer of onward transport
to returnees' home towns.
Yukiko Kumashiro, a programme
support officer with IOM in Zimbabwe, said the South African government
had informed her organization that, except for those who could prove
they had applied for documentation, the suspension of deportations
would end on 1 August.
"The worst case
scenario we're catering for is 24,000 returnees a month,"
she told IRIN.
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