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Zimbabwean
refugees are beaten by police in night raid on church mission
Jonathan
Clayton, Times (UK)
February 01, 2008
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article3285476.ece
Phyllis Chipangura knew
from bitter experience what to do when she heard police battering
down the bedroom door at the church mission near midnight. She quickly
grabbed her pillow and stuffed it up her shirt. "Even in Zimbabwe,
the police hesitate before they hit pregnant women," she said.
Her ruse worked. As dozens of South African police piled into the
tiny room she was sharing with about 30 other Zimbabwean refugees
and eight children on Wednesday night, they went first for the men.
"They beat them and hit them and pushed them half-naked out
of the room. They then turned to the women. First, they harassed,
stole and even propositioned them and then ordered them out too.
They told the pregnant women to remain behind. I am very happy,"
she beamed.
Ms Chipangura,
26, fled to South Africa from Zimbabwe a month ago and has had no
opportunity to obtain the official asylum papers required by an
estimated three million Zimbabwean refugees now seeking sanctuary
in their neighbouring country. "To get papers you have to go
to Pretoria and queue for days. I can't afford the travel and it
is dangerous out there," she said, gesturing at the street
outside. Ms Chipangura was doubly lucky. She had decided to spend
the night with her married sister, Saruna, in a room at the Central
Methodist Mission in central Johannesburg reserved for married couples.
"If I had been downstairs in the single quarters they would
have rounded me up," she said.
Police raided
the church refuge shortly after 11pm in an apparent attempt to clamp
down on illegal immigrants blamed for a sudden crime surge. At least
1,500 people were detained and bussed off to police stations in
an action reminiscent of the apartheid era that has outraged rights
activists. The police said that they were looking for drugs and
for firearms used in recent armed robberies. Thousands of Zimbabweans
flee to South Africa each week but the flow has hit new peaks as
inflation and food shortages in Zimbabwe break new records. Bishop
Paul Verryn, a well-known anti-apartheid activist, accused the police
of brutality and violating the sanctity of the church, which for
four years has offered sanctuary to homeless Zimbabweans. "It
is despicable what has happened here. The police used tactics which
were totally inappropriate," he told The Times.
Inside, in a Dickensian
half-light, every single corner of every room in his mission is
crammed with bodies huddled together for warmth and using each other's
limbs for pillows. At least 500 others sleep on the road outside
the mission hall each night. Many do not have the correct papers
to stay and are often too frightened to venture far from the hostel
for fear of being harassed by police or attacked by thugs who hang
around outside looking for easy targets. Bishop Verryn said that
the police burst into his office, grabbed him by the belt and pulled
him down the stairs to where many of the refugees were gathered.
"They said they were looking for illegal immigrants, drugs
and weapons. If they had asked me first, I would have co-operated
with them but they did not," he added.
The Zimbabweans said
that several hundred police stormed into the hostel, knocking down
doors and grabbing what they could of people's possessions. "They
were beating everyone and stealing what they could. I thought we
were safe here but then I saw them manhandling the Bishop. This
place is our last hope; we have nothing if we are driven from here
as well," said Nosta Neshumba, a 21-year-old woman who has
lived in the refuge for just over a year. It was not clear why the
police decided to raid the centre. A spokesman said only that hundreds
of illegals had been detained but declined to give details or reply
to allegations of police brutality. He said those without the right
papers would be deported. Many of the deportees slip back over the
border within hours of being repatriated. "We all know why
they decided to attack. They do this to Zimbabweans from time to
time. They just want to take from us and we are easy pickings,"
said Justin Mabuku, 39, a Zimbabwean school teacher who managed
to obtain an official residency permit.
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