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Stop
Zimbabwean deportations say refugee organisations
IRIN News
November 08, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=75215
A prominent international
refugee organisation is calling for an end to the deportations of
undocumented Zimbabweans by neighbouring countries.
After a month-long
fact-finding mission to the region, Refugees International (RI),
a US-based non-governmental refugee advocacy group, published a
bulletin, Zimbabwe
Exodus, on its observations.
"Large numbers of
deportees regularly re-cross the borders illegally immediately after
deportation, where they are subject to dangerous environmental conditions
and often fall prey to criminal gangs. Deportations are very costly
for the host governments and do not achieve the goal of deterring
undocumented migration," the bulletin said.
Estimates of the scale
of migration from Zimbabwe range from 1 million to over 3 million
people, while international donor agencies say more than a third
of the population, or 4.1 million people, require emergency food
assistance. Zimbabwe has the highest inflation rate in the world,
nearly 8,000 percent, unemployment levels of 80 percent and acute
shortages of basic foodstuffs, fuel and electricity.
In the first seven months
of 2007, the Reception and Support Centre of the International Organisation
for Migration (IOM) processed 117,737 people repatriated from South
Africa at its Beitbridge centre on the Zimbabwean border - about
40,000 more than in the last 6 months of 2006. The IOM has estimated
that about 35 percent of those arriving at the centre immediately
make their way back to South Africa.
According to unofficial
estimates, about 40,000 Zimbabweans were repatriated from Botswana
to Zimbabwe in 2006. RI said in its bulletin that "what is
abundantly clear is that Zimbabwe currently suffers from a near
complete lack of basic goods - food, petrol, soap, paraffin - and
that Zimbabweans outside their country are actively engaged in providing
those goods to family members back home."
Attempts by governments
of neighbouring countries to find a solution to Zimbabwe's ongoing
problems must "de-link" these political interventions
from other considerations, so that they can "address the domestic
consequences of Zimbabwean migration, including strains on social
services, xenophobia, and the growth of an undocumented underclass
that is in need of humanitarian assistance."
The initiative by the
Southern African Development Community - of which the Zimbabwean
migrant target countries of Botswana, South Africa and Zambia are
all members - to broker a solution to Zimbabwe's political problems
had deflected attention from the large-scale migration from Zimbabwe,
"as it draws attention to the humanitarian crisis inside Zimbabwe",
RI said.
Zimbabweans
typecast as economic refugees
Zimbabweans were being
typecast by the United Nations and neighbouring states as economic
migrants, while the nature of the migration was complex, and "The
attempt to categorise the outflow [of people] ultimately obstructs
the humanitarian response by focussing on why people do (or do not)
qualify for aid," RI commented.
"Clearly not all
Zimbabweans have a fear of prosecution ... however, economic and
political grounds for leaving are not mutually exclusive. The circumstances
of the crisis call for new legal approaches, in line with progressive
interpretation of refugee and international human rights covenants."
The main host countries
of Zimbabwean migrants, South Africa and Botswana, "should
acknowledge the nature of the Zimbabwean migration, and provide
adequate protection and assistance to those in need," the bulletin
said.
South Africa's Department
of Home Affairs, which the RI said showed "a lack of political
will" to resolve issues pertaining to Zimbabwean migrants,
has consistently said it was bound by international treaties, and
Zimbabweans could not be classed as refugees in terms of the international
accords South Africa was party to.
The UN refugee agency
(UNHCR) defines a "refugee" as a person who has fled his/her
country of nationality or habitual residence, and who is unable
or unwilling to return to that country because of a "well-founded"
fear of persecution based on race, religion, nationality, political
opinion or membership of a particular social group. This definition
excludes those who have left their homes only to seek a more prosperous
life.
Treatment
of foreign nationals
The home affairs parliamentary
portfolio committee in South Africa recently condemned the "animal"-like
treatment of foreign nationals by the authorities and the South
African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) has launched an investigation
into the death of a Zimbabwean refugee.
Fellow refugees named
the deceased as Adonis Musati, who had reportedly queued for two
weeks outside Cape Town's home affairs offices and died of starvation
because he refused to leave the queue for fear of losing his place
in it.
Zonke Majodina, deputy
chairperson of the SAHRC, told IRIN the deportation of Zimbabweans
had become "a revolving-door phenomenon that costs the country
[South Africa] millions and does not solve anything."
She said the SAHRC had
been monitoring the treatment of foreign nationals and the conditions
were "not up to scratch", as the home affairs department
lacked adequately trained staff, and their processes were "cumbersome,
bureaucratic and overly complicated".
RI said a UN agency,
such as the UNHCR, should take a leadership role in the crisis and
re-evaluate their planning, which was currently based on the scenario
of "hundreds of thousands of people crossing the border in
a few weeks", rather than basing its "contingency planning
on the continued, steady flow of Zimbabweans out of their home country
- exactly what is happening at present".
UNHCR spokesman Jack
Reddon told IRIN the recommendation by RI that a UN agency should
play a leading role in the migration of Zimbabweans did not take
account of existing protocols, in which the agency's role was one
of assisting and advising host governments on the issues of refugees
and migration. "The lead in handling a flow of people into
this country is taken by the South African government - they are
in charge," he said.
Child
migrants
A report released on
Thursday by Save the Children (UK), Children on the move: Protecting
unaccompanied children in South Africa and the region, noted that
"The response in the region appears inadequate at present.
Not only do countries such as South Africa need to work harder to
ensure that these children are protected but, at the regional level,
policies need to be reviewed and revised."
A child migrant is defined
as a person under the age of 18, who has either crossed an international
border alone or has subsequently found him- or herself living in
a foreign country without an adult caregiver.
Child trafficking is
the recruitment and transportation of a child by means of threats
or use of force or other forms of coercion. "In the region
there is still a tendency to see child migration and child trafficking
as one and the same," the report said.
Save the Children
said there were no reliable estimates of the number of child migrants
in the region, who were mainly from Lesotho, Mozambique, Botswana,
Zimbabwe, Rwanda, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Most of them were drawn
to South Africa because "These children have a powerful sense
of futility about the lack of opportunities available to them at
home, combined with a strong sense of possibility in relation to
those available in South Africa. The fact that South Africa does
not actually provide even basic services to many [child migrants]
on the border seems not to deter these children."
The report recognised
that the death of parents from HIV/AIDS could also contribute to
child migration, and that girl children were especially vulnerable
to the disease. "Many girls described crossing to South Africa
by having sex with the border guards ... alternatively, some of
the girls in the study described travelling across the border with
truckers in exchange for sex."
The need for children
to cross borders "only emphasises the work that remains to
be done in the region on fundamental challenges such as HIV and
AIDS and poverty."
South Africa's home affairs
department could not be reached for comment.
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