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Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Zambia:
Bracing for a Zimbabwean exodus
IRIN
News
June 16, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=78766
Serious concern
is mounting in Zambia that a wave of Zimbabwean immigrants could
cross the border escaping worsening political violence in the aftermath
of the country's presidential run-off election at the end of June.
"There has been
a lot of pre-election systematic movement of Zimbabweans into Zambia,
but we may have something like one-third of Zimbabwean immigrants
crossing into Zambia to seek asylum," said Joseph Chilengi,
executive director of the Africa Internally Displaced Persons'
Voice, (Africa IDP Voice) a lobby group championing the rights of
displaced persons. "Zambia seems to be the only country in
the region that appears to be offering a conducive environment for
asylum at the moment".
Fears of a dramatic influx
have been heightened by Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe's
remark at a funeral over the weekend that the main opposition party,
the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), would never lead Zimbabwe
and that he was prepared to "go to war" for his country.
"Anyone who seeks to undermine our land reform programme,
itself the bedrock of our politics from time immemorial, seeks and
gets war," Mugabe said.
The dire warnings repeated
by Mugabe since last week, have been echoed by other members of
the ruling ZANU-PF party, including Jabulani Sibanda, the leader
of the pro-Mugabe Zimbabwe Liberation War Veterans Association.
"When people go
to vote on June 27, their vote should not be secret, it should be
public because the election is now about whether we retain our independence
or surrender it to the British," Sibanda told IRIN. "Zimbabwe
has people who are prepared to lose their lives to defend their
sovereignty and democracy."
South Africa
boasts the continent's largest economy and has been the first
choice destination for Zimbabweans fleeing from a more than 80 percent
unemployment rate and an inflation figure unofficially estimated
at more than one million percent. However, recent xenophobic attacks
in South Africa, which left
over 60 people dead and tens of thousands displaced, has seen
an exodus of about 25,000 Zimbabweans from South Africa to Zambia,
according to the Red Cross, more than double the number already
thought to be in Zambia.
Asylum
Last week, the Zambian government granted political asylum to a
dozen MDC supporters, who fled the deteriorating political conditions
ahead of the 27 June runoff election.
The 12 Zimbabweans were
given full refugee status after undergoing a screening process,
and according to Susan Sikaneta, permanent secretary in the Zambian
Ministry of the Interior, they would be taken to the country's
largest refugee settlement camp, Meheba, in northwestern Zambia,
run by the United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR.
"The Zambian government,
like any other, is obliged under international agreements and conventions
to provide asylum to people fleeing from their countries . . .
these people said they were targets of victimisation because they
belong to the MDC. One of them claimed that his father was killed
and as a result, he also feared that he could be the next person
to die," Sikaneta said.
Zimbabwe's first round
presidential election on 29 March was won by the MDC's Morgan
Tsvangarai, but he fell short of the required 50 percent plus one
vote for an outright victory, forcing a re-run with Mugabe, who
has ruled Zimbabwe since independence in 1980. Almost 70 people
have died in political violence since March, according to the MDC.
The government's banning
at the beginning of the month of NGOs working in the countryside
- on the grounds they are fronts for western powers - has affected
aid assistance to over two million Zimbabweans, according to the
United Nations. The development agency World Vision International,
which like most humanitarian organisations working in Zimbabwe channels
its aid through local NGOs, said it had been forced to suspend relief
to 1.6 million vulnerable children
Victims
of possible attacks
"Whichever
way the election run-off goes, there will still be thousands of
political refugees coming here because the losing group will be
victims of targeted attacks, whether it will be the MDC or the ruling
ZANU-PF; a trend has already been set in motion" said Chilengi
of Africa IDP Voice
"Furthermore, the
granting of refugee status to Zimbabwean immigrants by the Zambian
government at a time such as this, will in itself generate more
refugees because the message being sent out there is that Zambia
as a country, has a conducive environment to provide asylum to those
that are in need."
The Zambian government
does not demand visa requirements from people from neighbouring
countries, which makes it easier for Zimbabwean immigrants to cross
into Zambia.
But Sikaneta said the
government had started screening all people entering the country
through the Southern province border posts of Kazungula, Chirundu
and Kariba to avoid abuse of the asylum status facility.
"We know some people
may take advantage of the situation to come to Zambia even when
they don't qualify for asylum, but we have an eligibility
committee in place, and our immigration officials and police have
been put on alert at all order posts. On issues of whether we have
the capacity to take care of the perceived influx of Zimbabwean
immigrants, I think let's cross that bridge when we get there,
but at the moment it's just important to note that the Zambian
government is adequately prepared for anything," she said.
Levy Mwanawasa, Zambia's
president and chairman of the regional body, the Southern Africa
Development Community (SADC), recently said his country did not
have the capacity to host any more refugees, as it was developing
its former camps into skills training centres.
Zambia was host to about
300,000 refugees fleeing the Great Lakes conflicts and the Angolan
civil war during the 1990s. The numbers have since dropped to about
113,000 following the on-going repatriation of Rwandese, Congolese
and Angolan nationals.
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