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Still
no clarity on Zimbabwean deportations
IRIN
News
August
02, 2011
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=93398
South Africa's
Department of Home Affairs announced yesterday that it had met its
1 August deadline for processing 275,000 applications from undocumented
Zimbabweans, but that applicants would have a further one month
grace period in which to pick up their permits, only about half
of which have so far been issued.
However, officials were
reluctant to comment on the question of whether the grace period
would extend to Zimbabweans who remain undocumented but have been
exempted from deportation by a special dispensation that started
in April 2009 and was expected to end with the conclusion of the
Zimbabwe Documentation Process (ZDP). Based on estimates by the
International Organization for Migration (IOM) that between 1 and
1.5 million Zimbabweans migrants are living in South Africa, the
majority were not covered by the ZDP.
Speculation about if
and when deportations of undocumented Zimbabweans will resume has
been rife in the local media, but Home Affairs officials have avoided
describing the grace period as an extension of the moratorium, and
in a 1 August statement Home Affairs Minister Nkosazana Dlamini
Zuma said that the government had no plans to engage in "mass
deportation" of Zimbabweans.
"However, those
who have failed to take advantage of this process will in due course,
face the full consequence of South Africa's immigration laws."
Just how soon undocumented
Zimbabweans might face the full might of the law remained unclear.
"Our understanding
was that the moratorium on deportations was lifted last night and
that only the Zimbabweans who applied have been given this extension,"
said Braam Hanekom of Cape Town-based NGO People Against Suffering,
Suppression, Oppression and Poverty (PASSOP).
However, ZDP head Jacob
Mamabolo told a media briefing in Pretoria that "upon completion
of the grace period, anyone found not to have documentation will
be deported."
Confusion
Hanekom said that inconsistencies
in communications by Home Affairs on the matter had created widespread
confusion.
"If we as an organization
don't know [what is going on] and other organizations are
equally confused, we can safely assume that the entire Zimbabwean
community is confused," he told IRIN.
Lucky Katenhe, a Zimbabwean
member of staff at PASSOP, said he had applied for a permit through
the ZDP but was becoming concerned as he had yet to receive it.
Even more worried were friends of his who did not apply. "Some
didn't even know about it and some were not sure if it was
a genuine process; they were worried it was ploy to arrest them,"
he said. "Now they are quite worried about being deported because
the situation back home is quite bad."
In recent months, reports
of political violence and intimidation in Zimbabwe have been on
the increase and 39 percent of Zimbabweans told a recent Gallup
poll that in the past year they did not always have enough money
to buy food.
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