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South
Africa tries to close the back door
IRIN News
January 11, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57030
BEITBRIDGE - Zimbabweans
returning illegally to South Africa in search of work after visiting
family and friends for the Christmas holidays are having a harder
time than usual getting back into the country, whereas previously
a backhander to immigration officials might have sufficed.
It is estimated that
as many as three million Zimbabweans live legally and illegally
in South Africa to escape their country's economic meltdown, which
has seen inflation levels reach 1,280 percent and unemployment levels
touch 80 percent. The massive influx of Zimbabweans has stoked xenophobia
among South Africans, who blame Zimbabweans for crime, and "stealing
jobs" from locals, although there is no official data to support
these claims.
Khulekani Ndlovu, 24,
breadwinner of a family of seven, who has worked in South Africa
for the past six years, said Beitbridge, the main border crossing
between South Africa and Zimbabwe, had always been "a nightmare"
because immigration officers on both the Zimbabwean and the South
African side accused him of faking his South African identity card
and passport, but a bribe always secured his passage.
This time Ndlovu has
joined dozens of other Zimbabweans stranded in Beitbridge after
their travel documents were seized by South African authorities
when they attempted to cross back into South Africa.
"Immigration authorities
would not take any bribe this time around. I tried them with R500
(US$70) but they threatened to throw me in jail for attempted bribery.
They seized my passport and now I cannot enter South Africa legally.
"Yet I have a job
... which has paid me enough to provide for my family for the six
years that I have worked in Jozi [Johannesburg]. I should have started
work on the third of this month [January] but here I am, still stranded
in Beitbridge. I now fear I may lose my job," said Ndlovu,
who works in a restaurant in the inner-city suburb of Braamfontein.
Like many others denied
re-entry into South Africa, the region's economic powerhouse, Ndlovu
is determined to return. The only alternative is to cross the Limpopo
River, a natural border between the two countries, but recent rains
have made the water level dangerously high.
Another Zimbabwean looking
for a way to get back into South Africa is Langa Dube. "As
soon as the river subsides we will cross over, because staying in
Zimbabwe is obviously not an option," he said. "Things
are not that rosy in South Africa but at least we manage to keep
our families going with our little earnings. Zimbabwe has no jobs;
the economy is poorly performing; goods are either not there in
shops or expensive and life in general is just difficult."
Bongani Maphosa told
IRIN the prevailing economic conditions back home would keep driving
people out of Zimbabwe, especially the youth. "With or without
passports, these people will always find a way here [South Africa]."
He migrated to South Africa two decades ago and is now a permanent
resident.
"Zimbabwe is like
a fire at the moment, and simple logic has it that when you are
in such a situation and you have the vigour, you just jump out,
and that is exactly what many Zimbabweans are doing. Not that they
love crossing flooded rivers and getting harassed by South African
police officers every day, but it's the poor economy and unemployment
back home that's pushing them," he commented.
"Otherwise, given
a chance, some of them would love to stay and work in their country.
But their families depend largely on them for remittances, which
somehow enable them to cope in the face of food shortages and high
prices," said Maphosa.
To avoid arrest and deportation,
illegal immigrants to South Africa have bribed home affairs officials
in order to obtain false identity documents allowing them to pose
as South African nationals. President Thabo Mbeki has admitted that
there was "widespread corruption" in the home affairs
department, and said a new management system with additional staff
would be put in place to try to normalise the department's operations.
South African Immigration
officials told the local media that since late December 2006 they
had seized more than 200 South African passports held by Zimbabweans.
According to
the International Organisation
for Migration (IOM), South Africa deported 80,000 illegal Zimbabwean
immigrants between May and December of 2006, 950 of who were unaccompanied
minors. The statistics were recorded at the Beitbridge IOM Reception
and Support Centre, established last year to assist deportees.
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