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Fear
drives migrants home to Zimbabwe
IRIN
News
July
15, 2010
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=89841
John Muswere,
34, arrived four hours ago at the main bus terminus in Harare, capital
of Zimbabwe, after making an unplanned journey with his wife, their
three-year-old child and few household possessions from Johannesburg,
South Africa, where he spent 18 months working as a mechanic.
"I am left
with little money on me because I left South Africa in a hurry and
before my employer could pay me. All the transport operators are
saying my money is too little and I don't know how I am going to
leave this place [the bus terminus]," Muswere told IRIN while
his wife tried to pacify their wailing child.
The hasty trip
was prompted by rumours that foreigners would be targeted once the
FIFA World Cup finished, just as they were in May 2008, when 62
people were killed and more than 100,000 displaced.
Since the final
game on 11 July there have been numerous attacks on foreign nationals
and their businesses, mainly in Western Cape Province. The Forced
Migration Studies Programme (FMSP) of the University of the Witwatersrand,
in Johannesburg, estimates that 1.2 million Zimbabweans live in
South Africa, mostly arriving in the past decade after their country's
economy collapsed.
"I will
be starting from scratch, and at no time has life been so uncertain
for me. I don't know how I am going to feed the family because it
might be a long time before I get a job here," Muswere said.
His uncle has offered them temporary accommodation.
The threats
began a few months before the soccer world cup, and came in the
form of notes pasted on the door of their one-room rented flat in
the inner-city suburb of Berea, Johannesburg, "telling me that
they would kill me and my family if I remained in their country
after the World Cup".
The notes accused
Muswere and other Zimbabweans in the suburb of "stealing their
sisters, jobs and houses".
"I thought
they were mere threats until they accosted my neighbour, who was
coming from night duty at a local supermarket where he worked as
a security guard, poured petrol on him and set him alight. Fortunately,
he survived but he is still in hospital," said Muswere.
Grace Takawira,
46, arrived on the same bus as Muswere after travelling from Western
Cape, where she had been employed as a domestic worker for the past
four years. "I just packed my few belongings and hitch-hiked
to Johannesburg, where I boarded a bus to Harare," Takawira
told IRIN.
"I had
seen several Zimbabweans and other foreigners being attacked shortly
after the World Cup ended. Many foreigners who feared for their
lives sought shelter at police stations, but I could not stand the
idea of living as a refugee." She has decided to try cross-border
trading to feed her three children.
"Hundreds
of Zimbabweans are crossing back to Zimbabwe on a daily basis as
they flee xenophobic attacks," said the bus driver, who plies
the Harare-Johannesburg route but declined to be identified.
Burdening
a weak economy
"Most of
them are in a desperate situation, as they don't have enough money
for bus fares. Some of them only managed enough money to come as
far as Beitbridge [on the Zimbabwe side of the border] and are squatting
in that town," he told IRIN.
"The South
African government should improve on its policies, so that more
jobs are created and there is greater literacy among citizens of
that country," John Makumbe, a Harare based political analyst,
told IRIN.
"It is
clear that high levels of unemployment, widespread poverty, and
low levels of skills are contributing to xenophobia among South
Africans, who see foreigners as the main cause of their problems."
Innocent Makwiramiti,
an economist and former chief executive officer of the Zimbabwe
National Chamber of Commerce, expected problems. "The economy
is still weak and the return of Zimbabweans from South Africa will
push up unemployment. While those that are returning might have
skills in their respective professions, it will be difficult for
them to start their own ventures because they don't have the capital."
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