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A
floodgate for illegal immigrants
Yolandi Groenewald and Nosimilo Ndlovu, Mail &
Guardian (SA)
August 10, 2007
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=316293&area=/insight/insight__national/
Zimbabweans
who want to sneak into South Africa illegally have to be resourceful,
brave and cunning.
First, their
journey takes them to the South African border. One option for crossing
is to use syndicates operating from Beit Bridge, which use South
African-registered vehicles to transport people from Bulawayo to
Johannesburg for a fee ranging between R800 and R1 000, the Mail
& Guardian learned on a trip to Limpopo this week.
"Some bribe
the police to come in or show them any documentation and they let
them through," says a fruit seller at the border.
A taxi operator,
who drives taxis between the Zimbabwean and South African border,
says he works from 6am in the morning till 8pm. He drives about
18 loads of people a day across the border and back, but takes them
only as far as the Beit Bridge taxi rank.
"Many Zimbabweans
take buses straight from Zimbabwe to Johannesburg and other areas
as it is easier that way. They stand less of a chance of getting
into trouble with the law as they are vulnerable coming from Zimbabwe,"
he says.
He estimates
that 20 buses carrying no fewer than 70 people each enter South
Africa from Zimbabwe every day.
But the majority
of cash-strapped Zimbabweans are seeping in through the perforated
border fence. Driving along the border, there are cut fences and
crossing points everywhere.
Once the border
has been crossed, it is not as easy as hopping on to a taxi to Johannesburg
-- which seems to be the imagined utopia that many immigrants aim
for. Most taxis are afraid of the roadblocks dotting the highway
along the first 40km south of the border, says Samuel Netsune, a
Musina farmer on whose land many of the Zimbabweans sleep at night.
Many of them hike the 40km to get past the first tollgate on the
N1, then catch a taxi or a truck.
"Trucks
are better. They are much cheaper than taxis and don't get stopped
that often," says Thomas Chingwere, a Zimbabwean waiting for
a lift in front of the tollgate at the Bokmakierie garage. Popular
routes to the tollgate include the railway line and the Eskom line,"
says Netsune. His neighbours also tell stories of finding discarded
photocopied maps of farm roads on their patrols.
"The last
roadblock is normally at Bokmakierie," says Gert Klopper, whose
farm borders Netsune's. "After that, it is home free."
Klopper participates
in the farm patrols that round up illegal immigrants. Another patroller,
Benji Sutherland, talks about finding illegal immigrants who had
not eaten for 14 days. "They don't even have the energy to
run away, even if they wanted to."
Sutherland says
the farm patrols are far more effective than police operations.
The farm patrols, structured along the same lines as the now defunct
commando system, patrol farms with flashing green lights, looking
for Zimbabwean immigrants, whom they perceive as a huge security
risk.
A local paper
in Louis Trichardt estimates that, on an average, more than 2 000
refugees a week are entering through the border. After the publicity
of the last few weeks, Limpopo police are more reluctant to give
new statistics about Zimbabweans crossing the border but, says police
spokesperson Ronel Otto, in the first two weeks of July more than
6 000 illegal immigrants were arrested.
The South African
Police Service says that, between January 5 and January 12, 753
illegal immigrants were arrested. But, this was during the wet season,
when the river was flowing and crossing is more difficult.
Despite a warning
from the provincial commissioner, Calvin Sengani, that the farmers
are acting outside the law, Gideon Meiring, the chair of the Soutpansberg
District Farmers' Union, says the farmers will continue their patrols.
"We are
protecting our property," he says. "And the flood of immigrants
has dire implications for South Africa. This is the community policing
that [Safety and Security Minister] Charles Nqakula has spoken about."
Other landowners
in the Musina area believe the publicity given to farm patrols has
prompted increased police action against illegal immigrants.
"It is
definitely better now than a few weeks ago," says a guest-farm
owner. "But, ultimately, increased patrolling will not be the
solution. The true solution can only come from within Zimbabwe."
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