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Lobbies
condemn SA police raid on Zimbabwean refugees
Davison
Makanga, Inter Press Service News
February 18, 2008
http://www.nationmedia.com/eastafrican/current/News/newsfc1802084.htm
A police
raid on a Methodist church which provides shelter to hundreds
of refugees in the South African financial centre of Johannesburg
is continuing to draw angry responses.
Displaying banners
and wearing T-shirts with the slogan 'Refugee Rights Are Human
Rights,' Zimbabwean migrants took to the streets of the coastal
city of Cape Town on February 9 to demonstrate against the raid,
conducted conducted earlier.
Officials have
been accused of engaging in physical and verbal abuse during the
late night raid, during which more than a thousand people —
many of them Zimbabweans — were arrested on suspicion of being
in South Africa illegally or of involvement in criminal activity.
"We condemn
police brutality at the Methodist church; they should respect refugee
rights in this country. In fact, the raid is reminiscent of the
apartheid era," said Braam Hanekom, co-ordinator of People
Against Suffering, Suppression, Oppression and Poverty, an immigrant
and refugee rights group in South Africa which helped organise the
protest.
The Treatment
Action Campaign, which lobbies for HIV-positive people to have access
to anti-retroviral drugs, also assisted with holding the demonstration.
"Our interest
in this protest is that many of the people arrested last week were
denied access to medication while in custody, and as a movement
we condemn that in the strongest terms," said Regis Mtutu,
projects officer for the Cape Town-based organisation.
Methodist representatives
have denied that the church was sheltering criminals.
"We
are just helping desperate people here. As you might know, most
of them are running away from serious situations, like Zimbabwe.
The fact that the court did not find any case against these people
clearly shows that the police overstepped its mandate by harassing
them," said Thembi Sibanda, a senior official in the Methodist
Church.
According to
a recent survey, up to one million Zimbabweans are residing in South
Africa; most have fled the political and economic crisis in their
country. The study was conducted by the Zimbabwe Diaspora Forum,
based in Johannesburg, the Mass
Public Opinion Institute — a non-profit organisation in
the Zimbabwean capital of Harare — and the Institute for Democracy
in South Africa.
Along with migrants
from other states, Zimbabwean refugees may experience discrimination
at the hands of South Africans, in part because of fears that they
take jobs in a country already beset by high unemployment.
"I don't
have problems with these makwerekweres, but they cause crime and
take all our jobs here," said Kuselo Tini, a minibus taxi
driver in Cape Town. Makwerekwere is a derogatory term for foreigners.
Killion Moyo,
a Zimbabwean residing in Cape Town, said, "We now live in
fear. They always threaten us with death, especially in high density
areas like Khayelitsha."
However, the
Zimbabwe Exiles
Forum claims the accusations of South Africans are unfounded.
"It's
not factual that foreigners take all the jobs here. The truth is,
South Africa is experiencing a skills shortage; and on the other
end, foreigners (take) menial jobs that are shunned by South Africans,"
said Gabriel Shumba, executive director of the forum — a non-profit
lobby headquartered in South Africa's capital Pretoria.
Zimbabwe is
scheduled to hold general elections on March 29, a poll in which
83-year-old President Robert Mugabe — head of state since
independence in 1980 — will seek a sixth term. The vote will
take place amid ongoing rights abuses in South Africa's northern
neighbour, and economic decline that has brought about hyper-inflation,
unemployment reported to be at about 80 per cent, and shortages
of basic goods.
According to
the UN World Food Programme, an estimated 4.1 million Zimbabweans
currently require food aid.
In his annual
state of the nation address on February 8, South African President
Thabo Mbeki said the ruling Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic
Front and the country's main opposition party, the Movement
for Democratic Change, had addressed
major differences concerning next month's ballot —
this in talks
that he has been mediating at the request of the Southern African
Development Community.
"These
include issues relating to the constitution,
security, media and electoral laws, and other matters that have
been in contention for many years," he noted.
"The relevant
laws in this regard have already been approved by parliament, including
the necessary constitutional amendments."
However, the
MDC has reportedly been far less optimistic about the results of
the negotiations, and expressed anger at Harare's decision
to hold the elections on March 29. The party wants a new constitution
passed before the polls.
"We have
said it again and again: the elections will be flawed without a
people-driven new constitution," noted spokesman Nelson Chamisa.
The Zimbabwe
Election Support Network has also expressed concern at the move
to hold the ballot next month, saying hurried preparations will
undermine the credibility of the vote.
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