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Zimbabwean
refugees suffer in Botswana and South Africa
Sokwanele
July 20,
2007
http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/RWB.NSF/db900SID/TBRL-75AKZV?OpenDocument&rc=1&cc=zwe
Chipo Ngwira,
31, left Harare three weeks ago to look for a job in Gaborone, Botswana.
She has not tasted a decent meal for 14 days as Batswanas constantly
remind her that they have no jobs for foreigners, commonly known
in the diamond-rich nation as 'makwerekwere'.
The 100 Pula she had
raised over six months in Zimbabwe's economically crippled capital,
Harare, has been exhausted. The only thing now is for her to join
other Zimbabwean women at Gaborone West's Mogoditshane suburb where
prostitution is the order of the day.
Finding a job in Gaborone's
White City area, largely frequented by Zimbabweans looking for formal
employment such as gardening and housekeeping is just a pipe dream.
To Chipo, the idea of
leaving her two starving children with their grandmother was the
most painful decision she has ever made in her life.
"I just dumped them
at my grandmother's place in Highfield density suburb in Harare
and told the granny that I am leaving for a better life either in
Botswana or South Africa," says the distraught single parent.
"I shed my tears
before embarking on the 760 kilometre journey to Gaborone. Right
now, I don't know whether my children have had a decent meal during
the past three weeks because my grandmother is poor and she receives
$100,000 per month from the Department of Social Welfare. This is
hardly enough to buy two loaves of bread."
Chipo is not the only
Zimbabwean facing such difficulties as thousands of economic refugees
are flocking to Botswana and South Africa to search for basic food
commodities and greener pastures as the country is facing its worst
economic crisis in its history.
"This is the worst
time of our lives and there is no way one can live in Zimbabwe and
make ends meet unless one is a thief, money dealer, businessperson,
worker of a non-governmental organisation or top civil servant.
People have struggled to make ends meet since President Robert Mugabe
and his cronies raided the farms in the year 2000," says Njabulo
Ndlovu, an economic refugee currently looking for a job at White
City suburb
Independent sources estimate that between 500 and 600 refugees cross
into Botswana and South Africa every day to look for jobs. Farmers
close to the border between Zimbabwe and South Africa say that the
figures are much higher, a fact that they say senior officials in
the military and police will only privately admit to. According
to the farmers' estimates, about 4,000 Zimbabweans are crossing
into South Africa every night. That represents at least 100,000
people a month, far more than official estimates of 20,000 per month.
Just this week the South
African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) reported that 6,000 Zimbabwean
refugees were deported every week from Musina near the Beit Bridge
border post. ZimbabweJournalists.com reported that Andrew Gethi,
the chief operating officer of the International Organisation for
Migration, which opened an office to assist deported Zimbabwean
refugees on the northern side of the border, says the organisation
is handling on average 17,000 deportees every month - it estimates
that more than 86,000 illegal immigrants were forcibly repatriated
between January and May this year alone. (It is important to note
that the figure of 17,000 per month excludes those refugees who
have managed to evade the South African authorities).
The scale of
the problem is likely to worsen as the Zimbabwean economy deteriorates
further and as Zanu PF policies become increasingly repressive and
brutal. For most refugees, the dangerous crossing into neighbouring
countries and the uncertain future they face there presents them
with far better options of survival than staying at home.
Zimbabwe's economy
is deteriorating at an alarming rate. South Africa's Econometrix
Ecobulletin of 10 July reported that in June, Zimbabwe's inflation
was around 3 700% and the preceding month around 2,200%. At the
time of publishing, the bulletin said the official rate had reached
over 4,500%. This clearly indicated that the country had reached
the realms of hyperinflation as a 4 500% inflation rate entailed
roughly a doubling of prices every month or an escalation of 2.33%
per day. Furthermore, if daily prices accelerated to 2.8% per day,
on an annualised basis this would be equivalent to 20,000% inflation.
The Econometrix Ecobulletin
noted: "No country has ever endured true hyperinflation without
there being a change in leadership or type of government within
a fairly short space of time. Zimbabwe is unlikely to be any different."
The very recent 'price
war' policies embarked upon by the Zanu PF government under Mugabe's
leadership has led to an immediate upsurge in the scale of the refugee
problem.
The editor of South Africa's
Business Day newspaper commented this week that the undeniable human
flood of Zimbabwean refugees to South Africa over the recent years
has suddenly become a torrent. He further commented: "There
is a real threat of a socially and economically disastrous tsunami
sweeping [South Africa] in the coming weeks unless there is international
intervention".
Opposition parties in
South Africa have called upon the United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR) to set up refugee camps along the borders with
Zimbabwe, a call that has been rejected by Jack Redden, the UNHCR's
regional information officer. Redden said that the UNHCR could only
be involved in the case a "total collapse" of the Zimbabwean
state, at a point when Zimbabweans became 'asylum seekers' rather
than 'economic refugees'.
Rapidly escalating
state-sponsored violence and the fall out from Operation
Murambatsvina has blurred the distinction between political
and economic refugees. During the disastrous government initiated
operation to demolish the houses and shacks of largely poor people
in the major cities and towns, more than 700,000 people were rendered
homeless or jobless, and at least 2.4 million poor people were affected.
Anna Kajumulo Tibaijuka, the special envoy of Kofi Annan, the UN
secretary-general, said the programme breached both national and
international human rights law provisions guiding evictions, thereby
precipitating a humanitarian crisis. The UNHCR distinction between
political and economic refugees is a moot point to most Zimbabweans;
they are leaving Zimbabwe because they have no options and they
need to survive.
Among the refugees fleeing Zimbabwe, those who have already sought
political asylum in Botswana during the past six months are awaiting
the processing of their application papers at Dukwe Camp, a security-tight
compound once occupied by Zimbabweans fleeing atrocities perpetrated
by former Rhodesian leader Ian Smith's repressive regime and the
Mugabe government's Gukurahundi - involving mass civilian murders
- in the 1980s. It is estimated that more than 20,000 people died
during the Gukurahundi massacres.
David Sediadie, an official
spokesman of President Festus Mogae's Office, says indications are
that the political asylum seekers arrived in the country six months
ago while the new string of refugees are linked to the current price
control measures enforced by Mugabe's desperate regime.
Although the
Zimbabwean government is tight-lipped over refugees fleeing the
country into neighbouring countries, the situation appears to be
worse in Johannesburg, one of Africa's largest cities. This
has forced Bishop Paul Verryn's Central Methodist Church to take
care of 900 stranded refugees, some of them with little children,
who crossed the borders illegally to look for a better living. "Conditions
for refugees in a church building not meant for housing are a nightmare,
but it's far sight better than living rough on the inner-city streets
where life is very tough and the refugees are regularly harassed,"
said the Bishop.
"While peace is
not in place, it's vital that people seeking asylum and refuge find
a more humane welcome in the countries to which they flee. In South
Africa, we have the opportunity for the Zimbabwean refugees to be
granted full refugee status, almost in response to the way we were
hosted and cared for during the difficult years by the Zimbabwean
government of that time."
He continued: "The
presence of Zimbabweans in this country presents us with a choice
about our view of humanity. Firstly, refugees are by no means a
nuisance or a curse in a country.
They are a glorious
opportunity for us to show our true humanity. Secondly, Zimbabweans
come with gifts. Our wisdom is to expose and celebrate their presence
among us."
An estimated
three million Zimbabweans, mostly illegal immigrants, live in South
Africa. The majority end up living in crime-infested areas such
as Hillbrow, Berea and some parts of Johannesburg's South-Western
Townships (Soweto), leading to the troubling perception among some
South Africans that Zimbabweans are deeply involved in crime - a
perception that many commentators see as a worrying increase in
xenophobia.
"Once these economic
and political refugees arrive here, look for jobs and fail to get
formal employment, some are forced into crime," says a top
South African policeman.
Despite concerns like
these expressed in media reports, Chris Maroleng from the South
African Institute of International Affairs says the statistics do
not indicate a disproportionate number of Zimbabweans involved in
crime.
"Individuals who
were engaged in normal activities back home are less likely to get
involved in criminal activities in other countries," he says.
"They are just keen to make a living and send food and money
home."
Maroleng does point out,
however, that there have been cases of former Zimbabwean army personnel
being involved in specialised crimes, such as cash in transit heists
and bank robberies.
The difficulties and
uncertain future facing Zimbabwean refugees in neighbouring countries,
combined with the negative and sometimes hostile reception they
receive from locals there, highlights the scale of the desperate
conditions in Zimbabwe. The choice to leave, to cross illegally
into another country either by swimming across a crocodile infested
river or risking arrest by border patrols, reflects the tenacity
and courage of Zimbabweans too, determined to find a way to survive
despite all efforts to beat them into submission.
Zimbabwean refugees want
to go home to live with their families in peace and security and
are increasingly turning to talk of the need for action and the
need for political change in Zimbabwe. Regional leaders would do
well to listen to them, and support their call for non-violent peaceful
change.
The Zimbabwean refugees
in South Africa and Botswana believe that there is only one answer
to their suffering - the demise of Zanu PF and Robert Mugabe's rule,
a dictatorial evil leader who has been at the helm of the country
for all of the 27 years since independence from British rule.
"Our lives
are resting on one selfish man named Robert Gabriel Mugabe. I don't
see the reason why over 12 million people can be terrorised by one
man without fighting back. This is the time for us to retaliate
against this monster. Enough is enough!" says Phathisani Mkandla,
an economic refugee roaming the streets of Johannesburg during the
past two weeks looking for formal employment.
"If all
people agree to stage a strike against Mugabe, we will push him
out of power within hours and our country may pull out of this mess,"
says Mkandla's friend Power Nketha with razor sharp cheekbones,
a sign of extreme hunger.
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