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Lack
of understanding cited in discussion on refugees
Mail &
Guardian (SA)
February 07, 2008
http://www.mg.co.za/articlepage.aspx?area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__national/&articleid=331721
Human rights issues concerning
refugees, immigrants and exiles needed urgent discussion and action
at all three levels of government, experts said on Thursday during
a panel discussion at the University of the Witwatersrand.
The discussion dealt
with the Central Methodist Church raid in Johannesburg as well as
the country's immigration policy.
The panel -- made up
of participants from Lawyers for Human Rights, the City of Johannesburg,
the Zimbabwe Exiles' Forum and the Human Rights Commission -- highlighted
the lack of understanding that civil servants, police and South
African citizens have of the humanitarian issues involved in dealing
with immigrants, refugees and exiles.
Bishop Paul
Verryn of the Central Methodist Church said police displayed xenophobia
and a lack of understanding of the issues faced by immigrants when
they raided his
church on January 31.
David Cote, a lawyer
for human rights, said the failure of the raid was due to the lack
of tools available to police to access documents or records and
a lack of understanding in dealing with foreign nationals.
Thuli Mlangeni, a Johannesburg
city councillor, said the City of Johannesburg did not condone or
overlook the issues raised by the raid.
She said there had been
a number of reports on xenophobic incidents.
Workshops were being
set up to teach frontline offices and civil servants about foreigners'
rights and how to deal with foreign nationals.
"Most policies involving
foreigners are created at a national level but implemented at a
local level. This necessitates communication throughout all three
tiers of government," she said.
Mlangeni said the Department
of Home Affairs needed to provide clarity on where it would open
its migrant reception offices so that the provincial and local government
could provide clear answers to foreigners who approached them seeking
asylum or refuge.
Darshan Vigneswaran, organiser of the discussion, said if an illegal
immigrant approached a police officer and sought asylum, the law
stipulated that the officer must facilitate his or her application
for asylum or refuge.
Mhlangeni said
that the City of Johannesburg needed the partnership and expertise
of all interested NGOs in addressing the humanitarian issues of
immigration, refuge and exile of foreign nationals in South Africa.
-- Sapa
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