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Zim
refugee camp a hive of 'rape, theft'
Wendy Jasson da Costa, Pretoria News
August 03, 2007
http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?from=rss_South%20Africa&set_id=1&click_id=13&art_id=vn20070802030225448C870248
Gauteng's biggest
refugee centre in Marabastad
has turned into a slumland where women are raped every night and
where refugees - mainly from Zimbabwe - squat for months hoping
to get legal documents.
The national assembly's
Home Affairs committee paid an impromptu visit to the Home Affairs
centre on Wednesday and its chairperson, Patrick Chauke, labelled
the situation "inhumane" and a "massive crisis".
The smartly dressed MPs
were met by hundreds of hungry, haggard looking refugees pushing
and shoving to get into the building.
The centre's director, Mfundo Ngozwana, said at least 1 000 people
streamed to their office each day but with a staff of only 15 and
unreliable equipment, only 50 to 75 people could be processed.
He said many of them
slept outside the building and had been there for months.
"It's created a
slum where people are sleeping outside and there are even smash
and grabs," he said.
Some refugees told Chauke
they had been there since January 2006 and even those who got their
papers had no place to go.
As the MPs made their
way into the building, they were visibly disgusted by the stench
of unwashed human bodies, overflowing bins, dirt strewn across the
stairs, broken equipment with springs sticking out and important
documents piled willy-nilly on the floor.
It was obvious that the
floors had not seen a broom for months and in one office the table
was covered in what seemed like used condoms but on closer inspection
turned out to be latex gloves.
Ngozwana said they had
no cleaners and had repeatedly told Home Affairs head office about
their problems but nothing had been done about it.
He said 20 interns had
just been deployed to work there but there were no offices and no
computers for them.
According to Chauke,
the health department had labelled the centre a "health hazard"
and not conducive to providing a service to the public.
"The place does
not conform with any standard.
"The place is filthy
. . . we don't even have ablution facilities (and) people are
relieving themselves in the field.
"There's no proper
water or shelter that people will fit in while they wait to be served,"
Chauke said.
He said that apart from
Rossetenville in Johannesburg this was the only centre that dealt
with refugees and the adverse working conditions had demoralised
staff.
Also alarming was that
syndicates from Pakistan were operating in the area and taking money
from people with the promise they would be first in the queue, said
Chauke.
On the pavement outside
the steel fence surrounding the centre, hundreds of women sleep
on cardboard boxes lined up next to each other every night.
They said about 500 people
usually slept there and sometimes the number swelled to 1 000.
On Wednesday many of
them said they had not eaten for at least a day and, if they were
lucky, donors would sometimes arrive with food.
The majority of them
were Zimbabweans hoping to get their official refugee documents
so they could find work and send food to their families back home.
One of them, a young
Zimbabwean mother, Cynthia, had been sleeping on the pavement with
her baby since last week.
She said at night the
men would often take their food and phones and, if they resisted,
they were beaten or raped.
Chauke said the committee
would meet with the national department of home affairs on Friday
to discuss the matter.
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