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Refugees
return to raided church amid legal wrangles
Zahira
Kharsany and Sapa, Mail & Guardian (SA)
February 06, 2008
http://www.mg.co.za/articlepage.aspx?area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__national/&articleid=331656
Many Zimbabwean refugees
seek shelter at the Central Methodist church in Johannesburg's
CBD, sleeping on stairs and in passageways in the only place they
can find free accommodation.
Up to 1 500
refugees living on the church premises were arrested in a late-night
raid last week to round up illegal immigrants. Bishop Paul Verryn
confirmed on Tuesday this week that, as far as he knew, all but
15 refugees had been released and cleared of all charges.
Verryn said that all
the refugees has returned to the church and "maybe even more
have come in".
The church was raided
by members of the South African Police Service (SAPS) from Johannesburg,
metro police officers, provincial reservists and immigration officers.
However, SAPS spokesperson
Captain Bheki Mavundla could on Tuesday not confirm Verryn's numbers.
He said the raid was part of "sustainable crime-combat operations"
that were "legally authorised to eradicate criminal elements
from the district and building".
Some of those who were
arrested had their papers in order, while those who didn't have
were still trying to acquire them, according to Verryn.
Janet Love, national
director of the Legal Resources Centre, did confirm that there were
14 detained refugees who were still trying to obtain bail at the
Johannesburg Magistrate's Court. Love said that of all those who
had been arrested, "none have been charged so far, but 14
are outstanding for bail".
"The police could
not provide satisfactory evidence in the court, so the magistrate
has remanded the 10 cases till [February 12]. This is so that the
police can provide evidence for the bail application."
The Independent Complaints
Directorate (ICD) is at present investigating the conduct of police
officers who took part in the raid.
Advocate Siphokazi Moleshe,
who head the ICD in Gauteng, told the Mail & Guardian Online:
"I decided in the interest of the public to carry out the
investigation into what the police allegedly did there during the
raid, whether they conducted themselves in an appropriate manner
or not. It is our own initiative and no one has formally laid a
complaint."
Verryn and several refugees
have complained that they were abused and pushed around during last
week's raid. The bishop, speaking to the M&G Online last week,
said he was verbally abused and shoved by police officers when he
asked them why they were breaking down doors and assaulting refugees.
"I saw them assault
people as they took them away in their vans," the bishop said
at the time. "One of them kicked a bottle at me and pushed
me. I am able to identify those who pushed me. One of them said
I am a disgrace to the church for allowing these people to come
in."
He questioned why police
had to break down doors when he had the keys. "We can have
the doors fixed," he said, adding, though, that the church
had not been desecrated. "The most serious violation is of
the people -- that is the desecration I find worrying."
Many of the refugees
were asleep when the raid got under way. Elizabeth, a Zimbabwean
refugee staying at the church, said: "I was hit and kicked
around, but I was not arrested. It was very traumatic and I am still
recovering from it."
Police are expected to
continue such raids regularly, Mavundla said. "The raids will
continue over time, until the area is safe again."
Verryn insisted that
the church would continue to be a refuge not only for Zimbabweans,
but also for any South Africans without shelter.
Meanwhile, Gauteng community
safety minister Firoz Cachalia will meet police officers who were
involved in the raid, his office said on Wednesday. This is part
of an agreement reached at a meeting on Tuesday between Cachalia,
Verryn, the Legal Resource Centre, the station commissioner of the
Johannesburg Central police station and the provincial police commissioner.
At the meeting it was
agreed that the Johannesburg station commissioner would meet the
leaders of the Central Methodist church to work out specific details
about how to improve communication and relations between the police,
the congregants of the church and the broader community in the area.
The provincial commissioner
has also undertaken to investigate thoroughly all of the allegations
against the police officers who took part in the raid, and take
action where necessary.
Following the meeting,
Cachalia expressed his "deep concern" at serious allegations
against members of the police.
"In order to be
effective in fighting crime, all our police officers have to uphold
the Constitution and behave in a professional manner at all times.
We all agree that the police have an important role to play in fighting
crime, protecting people and enforcing the laws of our country,
which includes the immigration laws," he said.
Additional reporting
by Percy Zvomuya
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