|
Back to Index
How
Zimbabwe's refugees help Robert Mugabe
David Blair, The Telegraph
April 07, 2008
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/04/07/wzim207.xml
As he lays out a selection
of giraffes and elephants made of wire and beads, Obert Gomba seems
indistinguishable from any other street vendor in South Africa.
Yet Mr Gomba and millions
of others like him provide the single most important explanation
for how President Robert Mugabe has managed to hold power despite
the catastrophe overwhelming Zimbabwe's economy.
Mr Gomba is a Zimbabwean
migrant who fled his collapsing homeland for neighbouring South
Africa five years ago. Of Zimbabwe's 12 million people, at least
three million now live abroad, according to an official estimate
from Mr Mugabe's regime.
At a stroke, this mass
exodus on a scale usually created only by civil war has deprived
Morgan Tsvangirai, the opposition leader, of hundreds of thousands
of votes. Without this outflow of people, Mr Tsvangirai would almost
certainly have won a clear outright victory in the first round of
the presidential election, instead of the 49.1 per cent of the vote
his party estimates he received. "It's obvious who I would
have voted for," said Mr Gomba. "I would have backed Tsvangirai.
If Mugabe goes then we can get back home. Life is better back home."
Mr Gomba now earns a
meagre living as a street vendor in Johannesburg. Perhaps two million
Zimbabweans are thought to have settled in South Africa, stirring
great resentment among the host population.
"Some South Africans
are OK, but others say 'you Zimbabweans, we don't want you here,
you are taking our jobs'," said Mr Gomba. "There are some
places where it's not safe for us to stay."
After South Africa, Britain
is the most popular refuge for Zimbabwean migrants fleeing their
worthless currency and inflation exceeding 100,000 per cent. At
least 500,000 now live in Britain, according to a recent estimate
from Paul Boateng, the British High Commissioner in South Africa.
By sending money and
food to their relatives, this immense diaspora keeps Zimbabwe's
economy alive.
Every month, Mr Gomba
sends about £50 and a few bags of groceries to his wife, Charity,
and their two sons in the Zimbabwean town of Chitungwiza.
Bus drivers plying the
route between Johannesburg and Harare have now become trusted couriers.
In return for 20 per cent commission, they take envelopes full of
cash and bags stuffed with food from Mr Gomba and his fellow migrants
and hand them to their families in Zimbabwe.
"Without this, my
wife would not survive," said Mr Gomba. "Things are very
tough for her."
Migrants living in Britain
pay for groceries, generators and furniture over the internet using
websites like Zimbuyer.com. Their relatives then collect these items
in Zimbabwe.
Despite the destruction
wrought by his regime, Mr Mugabe can rest assured that Zimbabwe's
economy will be saved from total collapse by this support from the
diaspora.
Hostile voters have left
the country, while money and goods pour back in. Mr Gomba acknowledged
that all this helped Mr Mugabe. "It's true," he said.
"But what can we do?"
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|