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New
rights for Cape refugees?
Tanya Farber, Mail & Guardian (SA)
July 12, 2007
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=313401&area=/insight/insight__africa/
In a first for Africa,
the Cape Town metropolitan council is drawing up a policy to tackle
the xenophobic upsurge that has seen dozens of Somali traders driven
from the city's townships.
But critics complain
about the slow pace of implementation and say it has been watered
down.
The council outlined
the proposed policy on refugees and asylum seekers shortly ahead
of World Refugee Day last month. Before it becomes official, it
must pass through internal council processes and be submitted for
public comment.
The policy focuses on
refugee rights, including equal access to city services and fair
and accessible policing and the integration of new arrivals into
South African society. One proposal, for example, is that refugees
who do not speak a local language should receive help in filling
in official documents.
Kemal Omar, Cape Town's
manager of intergovernmental relations, argues that the development
of policy can play a key role "in building socially cohesive
communities".
But for Fatima Khan,
coordinator of the refugee rights project at the University of Cape
Town's law clinic, the policy remains a disappointment.
"When we agreed
to draft it for the city last year, we were very optimistic and
excited to be a part of what would have been a first for any African
city," she says. "But at this moment I am particularly
disappointed. The policy has still not been ratified, and last year
a very watered-down version was rephrased as a declaration.
"A year later I
am completely unimpressed by the city and its efforts to make Cape
Town a better place for refugees or asylum seekers."
Darshan Vigneswaran,
a postdoctoral fellow in the Forced Migration Studies Programme
at Wits University countered that the policy inadequacies are at
national level, and Cape Town's proposed policy is in some
ways "a compensation for that".
"It is great to
see local government taking it seriously," he adds, "and
I think there are different types of simple interventions that could
improve the plight of victims of xenophobia."
The impact of such interventions
is hard to measure, and it remains unclear whether resentment of
foreigners can be addressed through government policy.
Kwesi Kwaa Prah, director
of the Cape Town-based Centre for Advanced Studies of African Society,
points out that xenophobia need not automatically take a vicious
form. "It can just be a feeling of social distance. But then
it can become virulent, vicious and violent."
Cape Town has been particularly
hard hit by xenophobic violence, with Somalians attacked in parts
of the city, and, more recently, reports of murders of Burundians
in Nyanga township.
Prah believes that in
South Africa the level of xenophobia is a direct result of apartheid.
"Across the world, those who have experienced oppression tend
to hate themselves or those who are standing in similar shoes,"
he says. "It is to do with the collective psychology of the
oppression of African peoples."
But, he insisted, the
authorities must play a more active role. "They must crack
down harder on crime resulting from xenophobia. We need to hear
a little more from higher up."
In addition to xenophobia,
many refugees in South Africa are also hamstrung by local officials,
who often do not recognise the "red ID books" issued
to those with formal refugee status.
Many Somali traders who
spoke to the Mail & Guardian said they are turned away from
banks when they tried to open accounts using the red books. This
makes them easy targets for crime because other traders know they
carry cash.
Omar said that because
most institutions do not understand or recognise the red books,
"they're actually meaningless".
'When
Mandela dies, they'll kill us'
Foreign Africans
in Cape Town spoke to the Tanya Farber about their experiences of
xenophobia:
Patrick Kabeya (43, Congolese):
"Not all South Africans react badly to us, but some do. We
foreigners stick together. We don't see a difference in each
other."
Prince Eze (39, Nigerian):
"The men say we're stealing their women, but the women
tell us they prefer us because their men treat them badly."
Ali Didier (35, Congolese):
"As soon as Mandela dies, they'll kill all the foreigners."
Bizamana Jackson (28,
Burundian): " In Sea Point, we don't have problems.
Plenty of South African customers even come here for haircuts. But
in the locations, it's bad."
Fernando Hono
(Angolan): "Affirmative action works against us. Vacancies
are kept for South African citizens despite the skills we bring.
We're put in the same category as whites."
Home
affairs: land of limbo
Of the 53 000
applications for asylum registered last year at the department of
home affairs' five refugee reception offices, more than 18
000 were Zimbabweans, the Wits University-linked consortium for
refugees and migrants in South Africa has revealed.
Its research shows that
the number of asylum seekers and refugees has increased substantially
in South Africa over the past five years, but remains small in comparison
with countries such as Tanzania, Uganda and Kenya.
Between 2000 and 2006,
South Africa granted refugee status to about 30 200 applicants,
of a total of close to 200 000.
Most of the remainder
are still waiting for their cases to be adjudicated, creating a
group of people living in limbo. Home affairs has publicly pledged
to reduce the backlog, but little progress has been made. Of the
53 361 new applications received by the department last year, less
than 10% were effectively processed during the year. Of these, only
796 were initially accepted for refugee status.
The United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees highlights the fact that two- thirds of
the refugees in South Africa have completed secondary school or
a higher level of education and, within this group, almost a third
have some tertiary education.
More than two-thirds
of refugees had experience in skilled and semi-skilled work before
arriving in South Africa. -- Tanya Farber
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