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Zimbabwe refugees find sanctuary and contempt in South Africa
Michael
Deibert, Inter Press Service
May 05, 2008
http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=42225
JOHANNESBURG
(IPS) - As the autumn sun sets over South Africa's most populous
city, the halls of downtown Johannesburg's Central Methodist Mission
fill with weary figures, many far from home, seeking solace within
its walls.
On every spare
inch of space on the floors and narrow staircase of the mission
-- and on the pavement outside -- the destitute curl up to find
shelter as best they can from the chill wind that moves between
the tall buildings in this city. Mixed in among them every night
are hundreds of refugees from South Africa's northern neighbor,
Zimbabwe, who have fled their country's slow-motion economic and
political implosion.
"We sleep
outside in the streets. Sometimes we spend days without eating anything;
we spend weeks without working," says Owen Muchanyo, a 23-year-old
secondary school teacher of mathematics and science from Chitungwiza,
a town south of Zimbabwe's capital, Harare.
He has been
in South Africa for three months. "It's better to sleep on
the streets, where my life is somewhat safe, than to sleep in a
house when my life is in danger."
A good number
of those who now find themselves in Johannesburg have the skills
needed to help pull their country out of the morass in which it
finds itself.
"There
are professional people here who might help to move their own country
forward, but we are coming here to suffer because of one person
in Zimbabwe and that is Robert Mugabe," says Raymond Chingoma,
a 32-year-old political analyst from Harare who arrived in Johannesburg
in September 2007, in reference to Zimbabwe's long time president.
Zimbabwe has
been in a state of limbo for more than a month awaiting results
from the country's presidential poll, which pitted Mugabe against
former trade union leader Morgan Tsvangirai. General elections took
place Mar. 29.
Election officials
finally declared on Friday that neither of the two men had won more
than 50 percent of the ballot, meaning that a run-off will have
to be held within the next three weeks.
Amidst delays
in announcing the outcome of the presidential vote, the two factions
of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) -- the larger of which
is led by Tsvangirai -- joined forces to deprive Mugabe's Zimbabwe
African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) of the parliamentary
majority it has held for the past 28 years.
Mugabe, who
was said by observers to have rigged a 2002 presidential ballot
which some believe Tsvangirai won, now stands accused of using his
government and party to carry out brutal attacks against those who
may oppose him, a tactic that critics say they have long become
accustomed to.
"I was
supporting the opposition party and with election time coming I
had to leave because I was afraid of ZANU-PF violence against the
opposition supporters," Muchanyo continues. "My family
was beaten because most of them are MDC supporters. The ZANU-PF
youth came and raided our home, took everyone out to their base,
and there beat everyone."
Chitungwiza,
the town that Muchanyo hails from, has become a stronghold of the
MDC and was one of the areas that suffered most during Operation
Murambatsvina in 2005, "murambatsvina" being variously
translated as "restore order" and "drive out trash".
A police action
ostensibly aimed at reigning in illegal housing settlements, the
operation was said by a July 2005 United Nations report to have
left at least 700,000 people homeless.
For its part,
the Zimbabwean human rights group Sokwanele characterized the raids
as "a Zimbabwean Kristallnacht", in reference to the destruction
of Jewish properties in 1939 by Nazi mobs in Germany, while the
Boston-based Affordable Housing Institute referred to Operation
Murambatsvina as "slow genocide by bulldozer".
Muchanyo's experience
is not an isolated incident. In March 2007, Tsvangirai's swollen
visage was splashed across newspapers worldwide after he and several
supporters were arrested and tortured by riot police.
"Some of
the things that I hear in this office, night after night, in that
chair where you're sitting, make me think that we've got big trouble
coming," says Bishop Paul Verryn, who directs the Central Methodist
Mission and holds church services and other outreach programmes
for the Zimbabweans.
"I asked
why they have left their country and they start with the litany:
'I was beaten, I was tortured, I was hit on the soles of my feet,
I've got scars on my back, I can't sleep at night because of nightmares'."
The views of
people inside the mission contrast sharply with those of South African
President Thabo Mbeki who, on a visit to Harare in April, insisted
there was "no crisis" in Zimbabwe.
Similarly, Zimbabweans
arriving in South Africa are often given a reception that is less
than welcoming.
On the evening
of Jan. 30 around 23.00 local time, the mission was raided by dozens
of officers from the South African Police Service (SAPS) who were
allegedly looking for weapons, ammunition and drugs -- local merchants
having complained that the Byzantine passageways of the multi-storied
structure had become a hideout for criminals.
According to
some who were there that night, the police beat several people severely,
destroyed property and looted residents' belongings; some 300 people
were summarily hauled off to jail.
Elizabeth Cheza,
a 29-year-old who worked as a data entry clerk and MDC volunteer
before leaving Zimbabwe in 2005, was awakened by a police officer
pointing a gun in her face and shouting at her in Zulu to get up.
Telling the story in the small room in the mission that she shares
with a female friend and the woman's 11-month-old daughter, Cheza
matter-of factly describes her experience that night.
"It was
quite hot, so when I was sleeping I was just wrapping myself with
a cloth," she says. "When I stood up, he (the police officer)
slapped me like I was taking too much of his time. I went to hold
my face, and that cloth I was holding just fell, and I was stark
naked there in front of the man."
Verryn, a veteran
of South Africa's anti-apartheid movement, says he was also roughed
up during the raid and saw people bleeding after being beaten by
police. He views the incident as a blow against the kind of society
that post-apartheid South Africa is trying to build.
"We have
had the police in here on occasions when they really have been spectacular
in the way in which they've handled tricky situations, in the way
in which they've resolved conflicts: they've been immediate and
they've been focused," says Verryn. "But there's another
side of the police, and it's fascist, it's unbending, it's cynical,
it will not listen and it's dictatorial. It's everything you would
not want."
The police,
for their part, say that they acted on the basis of good information
and that legal recourse is available to those who believe they were
mistreated.
"We had
information that that was a hotspot where people would commit robberies
and run into the building," says Govindsamy Mariemuthoo, head
of communications for the SAPS in Gauteng Province, of which Johannesburg
is a part. "Any person who felt that his rights were infringed
(during the raid) could report that to the central station, where
the matter would be investigated."
The Legal Resources
Centre, a public interest law clinic based in Johannesburg, took
on the case of the jailed detainees, and eventually succeeded in
having them released after weeks of wrangling with a recalcitrant
magistrate.
In a decision
ordering the detainees freed that clearly referred to the apartheid
era, South Africa's High Court characterized the police action and
subsequent imprisonment of the refugees as reminiscent "of
some of the grotesque obscenities with which members of our legal
profession were familiar 20 years ago" and criticized the police
and the magistrate for "brutal and indifferent and indeed cruel
treatment of human beings."
The court's
message is one that the Zimbabwean refugees at the Central Methodist
Mission wish more in their adopted country would heed.
"They take
us not as their neighbors, but as animals," says Chingoma,
as he prepares to scan the mission's corridors for a place to sleep
for the night. "They don't treat us well. When you go and say
you are looking for a job, they treat you as if you are not an African,
and you deserve to suffer. But we don't deserve that."
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