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Mixed
blessings for Zimbabweans who brave South Africa
Stanley
Karombo, Inter Press Service (IPS)
November 23, 2005
http://www.ipsnews.org/africa/nota.asp?idnews=31155
In the dingy
halls of the hotel, one of the staff is talking on the phone. "Tau
has been killed," he says. "I cannot tell you who did it, but Memo
discovered the corpse." The deceased woman was a prostitute who
can be spotted in the room she used, barely covered by a quilt,
a telephone cord wound around her neck. She appears to have been
stabbed several times, as fresh blood is staining her blouse. From
what your correspondent can tell, there are signs of a struggle.
Soon five women
dressed in tight, faded jeans saunter into the hotel and ask what
has happened. "Who has killed her?" enquires one, matter-of-factly.
"We want to know whether she is a member of our group or not." When
it emerges that this is not the case, the women seem relieved and
speak in Ndebele, one of the languages used in Zimbabwe: "Girls,
she is not one of us. She is not from Bulawayo." Bulawayo is Zimbabwe's
second-largest city.
The episode
is a reminder not only of the dangers which lurk in this area of
Johannesburg - the high-density, somewhat infamous suburb of Hillbrow
- but also of the extent to which Zimbabweans have made neighbouring
South Africa their home, for the most part illegally. An estimated
2.5 million have crossed the border, sometimes bringing ethnic tensions
along with their luggage.
A Zimbabwean
prostitute interviewed by IPS said certain Ndebele migrants accused
their Shona counterparts of ruining Zimbabwe by perpetually voting
for President Robert Mugabe and his ruling Zimbabwe African National
Union-Patriotic Front. A Ndebele man who lives in Hillbrow had similar
observations: "I hate Shonas. We cannot work together... Not at
all!" he exclaimed. Certain Ndebele remember all too well the "Gukurahundi".
This Shona term means "the early rain which washes away the chaff
before the spring rains"; but it is also a euphemism for the actions
of the president's fifth brigade and other forces in the Ndebele
provinces of Matabeleland and the Midlands in the 1980s. During
that period, the brigade engaged in the indiscriminate killing of
thousands.
The massacres
caused some to leave Zimbabwe for South Africa. Since then, many
more have followed - prompted by political persecution and economic
decline. However, just 8,000 applications for political asylum have
been filed by Zimbabweans to date, according to the Department of
Home Affairs - while only about 90 people have actually received
political asylum in South Africa. Home Affairs official, Richard
Sikakane, told IPS that the application process had been slowed
by a 130,000-strong backlog of cases. An amendment to the Refugees
Act is said to be in the pipeline to speed up asylum applications.
Often, Zimbabweans
have found their new home scarcely more hospitable than the old.
Home Affairs Minister, Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula, admits that refugees
and asylum seekers are frequently mistreated by the police. In the
country as a whole, high levels of unemployment have also led to
increasing xenophobia. Some migrants claim they are paying bribes
to officers to avoid being taken to the Lindela Repatriation Centre.
According to immigration official, Mantshele Tau, about 300,000
Zimbabweans have been deported in recent years.
And so, says
Julie Ncube as she sits cross-legged, lighting a cigarette - one
of many: "We're on the horns of a dilemma - to go and face starvation
in Zimbabwe or face abuse by the police." She told IPS that many
of her friends staying in Johannesburg had become "unofficial wives"
for policemen here (police
spokesperson, Ronnie Naidoo, could not confirm the allegation).
"In the end, it's either you pay them or submit to sex or both.
Life in Jozi (a nickname for Johannesburg) is hell on earth; it
is not that rosy as we were meant to believe."
Nonetheless,
says Ncube, people who remain in Zimbabwe have high expectations
of those who leave, many to support their families. "It would help,
my fellow countrymen, if people back home appreciated the difficulties
we have to endure here," she adds. "For anyone to send home 500
rand a month, for instance, is a very big achievement."
In other instances,
the South African experience has been more positive. Jeremiah Gwaze
is better off than many of his peers. Unlike those who continue
to battle for existence on the streets of Jozi, Gwaze - a graduate
of Harare Polytechnic in Zimbabwe - works for an electrical company
in the northern Gauteng province. The tall, vivacious man sits in
the well-decorated living room of his Yeoville apartment, smiling
has he recalls the harrowing years of starting a new life in Johannesburg.
"I had no money when arrived here. I used to sleep on the streets,
and most of the Sundays I sat outsides churches begging," he told
IPS.
Zimbabwe is
currently in its sixth year of a bitter economic recession that
has seen fuel, food, electricity, essential medicines and other
basic commodities become in short supply because there is little
foreign currency to pay suppliers from abroad. Critics blame the
economic meltdown on mismanagement and repressive rule by veteran
President Robert Mugabe. However, the aging head of state ascribes
Zimbabwe's woes to sabotage by Britain and its Western allies; this,
he says, was in return for his campaign started in 2000 to seize
land from whites for distribution to black Zimbabweans who were
deprived of land during colonialism and its aftermath.
* Certain
names have been changed to protect the privacy of those concerned.
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