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SOUTH
AFRICA-ZIMBABWE: Deportees with no way home
IRIN News
March 23, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=52387
BEITBRIDGE,
- Scores of Zimbabwean deportees have been stranded in the town
of Beitbridge, across the border from neighbouring South Africa,
with no funds to make their way home.
"The Beitbridge border post is crowded with deportees. Even though
numbers vary from time to time, there are about 2,000 people being
deported from South Africa on a weekly basis, giving a total of
8,000 per month," said Mohammed Abdiker, the chief of the Geneva-based
International Organisation for Migration (IOM) in Zimbabwe.
Thousands cross the border to South Africa every month, driven by
the need to escape the economic crisis in Zimbabwe, where inflation
has risen to 782 percent and unemployment is over 70 percent.
Despite the fact that "undocumented migrants", most of them aged
below 30, have usually had to settle for poor wages across the border,
with the threat of deportation always imminent, they either plan
to re-enter South Africa or have settled for a life in the border
town.
Shepherd Boriondo, 26, left for South Africa in early June last
year, after his second-hand clothes business in the capital, Harare,
was destroyed by the government's Operation Murambatsvina, which
was undertaken to get rid of informal settlements and traders deemed
'illegal'.
Boriondo ended up as a farm labourer for a South African employer,
who, he claimed, paid him a pittance. When he was rounded up with
other undocumented migrants on the farm over a month ago, it was
rumoured that their employer had tipped off the police to avoid
paying them their wages.
"The police and immigration officials have stopped bothering me
because they know my situation and they cannot help me in any way.
But it is not my intention to remain here, and I feel I should return
home," said Boriondo, who earned his keep by cleaning a shop in
the border town.
Others say Beitbridge has become their new home. "What should I
return home for? Even though I am suffering here, I feel it is better
to remain in Beitbridge," said Teckla, 19, who had worked as a housemaid
in the South African capital, Pretoria.
"I think I can raise enough money to live comfortably in the near
future and, who knows, even start my own business here," she said
optimistically.
Teckla has taken to prostitution and her clientele comprises cross-border
truck drivers. She said she had twice contracted a sexually transmitted
disease because the drivers insisted on unprotected sex, but added,
"Who cares? We are all going to die after all."
Some of the deportees, like George Munemo, 21, who had braved the
crocodile-infested Limpopo River that marks the border between South
Africa and Zimbabwe on three previous occasions, said they intended
to cross to South Africa again, "when the time is ripe".
A reception and support centre at the Beitbridge border is expected
to open shortly to provide humanitarian assistance to Zimbabwean
migrants deported from South Africa.
Abdiker said the centre, set up by IOM in collaboration with the
Zimbabwean and South African governments, should have become operational
in February but a lack of electricity had delayed the opening to
early May.
"The centre will help the deportees with food rations, transportation,
basic healthcare and information on human trafficking and migration,
on a voluntary basis. There will also be a child reception centre
to cater for children without parents," he said. It will also help
deportees reintegrate by providing them with grants, loans and inputs
to take up subsistence farming.
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