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Asylum-seekers
resort to border jumping
IRIN
News
February
09, 2012
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=94820
At the Beitbridge
border post between Zimbabwe and South Africa, asylum-seekers from
all over the continent used to jostle with Zimbabwean migrants to
gain entry into a country widely perceived as a place of freedom
and safety.
But since border
officials began turning away or arresting so-called "third-country
nationals" seeking asylum in April 2011, they have joined
the steady stream of undocumented Zimbabweans who brave dense bush,
ruthless gangs, razor wire and the Limpopo River, to enter the country
illegally.
"I paid
R290 (US$38) for someone to drive me from Beitbridge to the bush,"
said Simeon Mulekezi, a 24-year-old refugee from Burundi. "There
were people from Zimbabwe who said they'd help us cross the
river but they wanted money so I decided to cross by myself even
though the water was up to my neck. I was with four Zimbabweans
but none of us knew the way. We got lost for 24 hours and saw a
lot of animals. I was scared, but luckily I didn't meet a
lion."
While Mulekezi
survived his ordeal unscathed, "some were robbed in that bush,
some were raped," he told IRIN.
Prior to April
2011, third-country nationals like Mulekezi were able to enter the
country via Beitbridge where they were issued with a temporary permit,
known as a section 23, which gave them 14 days to report to a refugee
reception office and formally apply for asylum.
Following this
apparent change in attitude towards asylum-seekers, Mohamed Hassan,
who heads the International Organization for Migration (IOM) office
in Musina, noted that, "we've received reports that
many people from Somalia and Ethiopia were coming through the bush . . .
They cross the river with the help of guides, but sometimes these
very people rob them and many times they find a group of thugs waiting
for them."
Médecins
Sans Frontières (MSF), which runs mobile clinics in and around
Musina, has been treating migrants who have suffered violent attacks
by border gangs known as `guma-guma' for years, but according
to Christine Mwongera, MSF's project coordinator in Musina, staff
have seen an increase in trauma cases since the end of 2011.
"The Zimbabweans
have been going through this for more than a year, but now it's
other nationalities as well," she told IRIN.
Her observation
was confirmed by Christopher Sibanda, head of security for Maroi
Farm, 25km west of Beitbridge, who regularly picks up migrants who
have wandered onto the property after climbing through one of the
many holes in the nearby border fence.
"Every
day we find border jumpers. It's worse this year, we see people
from other nations [besides Zimbabwe] - Somalis, Congolese, Rwandese,"
he said. "Most are in a bad state. A week ago we found four
people dead; maybe they got lost in the bush and died from hunger
and exhaustion."
Robbed
and abandoned
He added that
some drowned trying to cross the river, particularly during the
rainy season, and that he found others stripped of their clothing
and possessions after having been robbed and abandoned by their
guides or the `guma-guma'.
"We feel
pity for them. Sometimes we make them food or give them directions
to the road." Other times, Sibanda hands the migrants over
to the army which took over border security from the police in 2010.
Owner of Maroi
Farm, Hannes Nel, said the migrants cut his fences, poached animals
and posed a fire risk, but that the army troops deployed along the
border lacked the resources to stem the flow. "The fence is
in such a poor state, they might as well leave the gates open,"
he commented.
Indeed, while
accompanying Sibanda on one of his patrols, IRIN observed a group
of some 10 migrants walking through an open gate in the fence and
getting into a waiting vehicle.
Captain George
Mills of the Musina police admitted that only a fraction of the
vehicles smuggling people from the border were intercepted. "Since
the new year... there's been an increase. We don't have the manpower,
so most are passing us."
If the purpose
of discouraging third-country nationals from approaching the official
border post was to improve security, the result may have been the
opposite. "When they are coming through the border, you have
the opportunity to obtain biometric information," Hassan of
IOM commented. "However, if they come through irregularly,
that is when you don't know who is in the country."
More border
jumpers also means more potential victims for the `guma-guma'.
Mills said that police operations targeting their activities rarely
resulted in convictions as few illegal migrants were willing to
open cases, let alone testify in court. "When we make an arrest
and the case comes to court, you can't find the complainant or witnesses
so we can't proceed and have to release them," he told IRIN.
Fear of authorities
also prevents many of the migrants attacked or injured while crossing
the border from seeking health care. "Their aim is to get an
asylum permit. Health is not their priority, even if they've been
sexually abused or had trauma," said Mwongera of MSF. "If
you're undocumented, you want to stay invisible."
MSF partners
with the local health department to provide medical and counselling
services to survivors of sexual assaults at the Thuthuzela Care
Centre in Musina Hospital, but knowing that the first port of call
for most of the asylum-seekers is the Refugee Reception Office in
Musina, the organization has set up a mobile clinic across the street.
Staff also make nightly visits to the town's four shelters where
migrants waiting for documents or lacking the funds to continue
on to urban centres like Johannesburg and Cape Town are given a
place to sleep and one hot meal a day.
Shelter
The shelter
for male migrants run by a local church on the outskirts of town
consists of little more than a row of tents, and conditions at the
women's shelter are only slightly better with one large room accommodating
dozens of women and their children in bunk beds. Two more shelters
take in unaccompanied children. All are church run, although UNHCR
provides meals at the men's shelter and other organizations such
as MSF and IOM donate blankets and other non-food items.
"There
is no government capacity to provide these services," said
Maureen McBrien, who heads the UNHCR office in Musina. "However
basic, these churches are doing all they can to provide."
During January,
many asylum-seekers were forced to prolong their stay in Musina
as officials at the Refugee Reception Office began refusing to assist
those without section 23 permits despite the fact that such permits
were no longer being issued at the border. In a 1 February press
release, MSF described the situation as a "cruel Catch-22",
and on the same day, Lawyers for Human Rights won a court case which
forced the Department of Home Affairs to accept an asylum application
from a Zimbabwean woman who had been arrested after being turned
away from Musina's refugee office for not having a section
23 permit.
Following the
case, large numbers of newly arrived asylum-seekers who had been
hanging around Musina for fear of proceeding any further without
documents were finally admitted to the Refugee Reception Office
and allowed to apply for asylum.
"Yesterday
they gave us the forms, so today we're hoping to make our
applications," said Mulekezi, who was waiting for the office
to open its gates early on Friday morning. "I'm wishing
to go to Cape Town because there's freedom there."
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