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Deportations
rob vulnerable of remittances
IRIN
News
February
10, 2012
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=94830
Thousands of Zimbabwean
households are feeling the effects of lost remittances from family
members forcibly returned from neighbouring South Africa since that
country resumed deportations of undocumented Zimbabwean migrants
in October 2011.
Makaita Gwati,
60, from rural Chirumhanzu, about 90km from the provincial capital
of Masvingo in southeastern Zimbabwe, relied on the income her son
and daughter sent from South Africa to support the rest of the family,
until both were deported in November last year.
"I counted on them
for money to buy food and other essential items, but now that they
are here and they can't find jobs, I don't know how
we will survive," Gwati told IRIN.
In the last two years,
Chirumhanzi has experienced poor rainfall and Gwati has harvested
little from her plot of land, forcing her to buy food to feed her
family. The remittances from South Africa had also helped support
her five grandchildren and pay for medical costs.
"I am worried that
given my poor state of health, there is no more money to send me
to hospital. As I speak, the [grand] children's school fees
have not been paid and we have been forced to have one meal a day,"
she said.
Zimbabwe suffered a decade-long
economic crisis characterized by a near collapse of industry, hyperinflation,
critical shortages of commodities, poor social services and the
migration of millions of Zimbabweans to neighbouring countries and
other parts of the world.
The formation of a coalition
government and the adoption of multiple currencies to replace the
weak Zimbabwean dollar in early 2009 set the economy on a recovery
path, but levels of unemployment are still high and large numbers
of Zimbabweans continue to try their luck in South Africa.
In April 2009, the South
African government announced a moratorium on deportations of undocumented
Zimbabwean migrants and the following year gave them the opportunity
to regularize their stay by applying for work and study permits
through the Zimbabwe Documentation Project (ZDP). The International
Organization for Migration (IOM) estimates that 1-1.5 million Zimbabwean
migrants are living in South Africa, but only 275,000 had applied
to be regularized through the ZDP by the 31 December 2010 deadline.
IOM,
WFP assistance
Since the deportations
resumed in October 2011, IOM has helped nearly 10,000 deportees
passing through the reception and support centre it mans at the
Beitbridge border post with food, medical care and free transport
home.
According to Felon Murapa,
a communications officer with IOM, the organization is prepared
to provide similar assistance to as many as 4,000 returnees a month.
The bigger problem for
both the government and the donor community will be finding ways
to provide longer-term assistance to poor households that depended
on remittances from breadwinners who had sought economic refuge
in South Africa.
UN World Food Programme
(WFP) country director Felix Bamezon described remittances as "an
important source of income for vulnerable people, particularly those
affected by seasonal food shortages . . . Most returnees are coming
to food insecure hosts or homes and this will certainly put a strain
on the already burdened homes," he said.
A 2010 Reserve Bank of
Zimbabwe report indicated that Zimbabweans in the diaspora remitted
more than US$263 million through formal means alone; most migrants
in nearby countries, however, opt to send money through informal
channels such as friends and relatives.
Starting in February,
WFP will collaborate with IOM to provide food commodities to deportees
coming through the Beitbridge reception centre.
WFP will also include
deportees and their dependants in its ongoing programme targeting
vulnerable households with food during periods of severe hunger.
Pregnant and breastfeeding
returnees may also benefit from WFP's health and nutrition programme,
but the increased numbers of people needing help are likely to strain
the organization's limited resources.
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