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Migrants
face unlawful arrests and hasty deportations
IRIN
News
February
14, 2012
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=94865
Four months
ago, Clemence Uzizo, 21, a welder living in Soweto, Johannesburg's
most populous suburb, made the mistake of venturing out to a local
shop without his asylum-seeker permit. Neither the police who arrested
him, nor the immigration officials who detained him, verified Uzizo's
legal status before deporting him to Zimbabwe, the country of his
birth.
"My permit
was at home but I didn't have a cell phone to call to ask someone
to bring it," he told IRIN not long after making a risky and
expensive return to South Africa via the Limpopo River. "Since
my father brought me [to South Africa] in 1992 I've lived here,
so I don't know anyone in Zimbabwe."
Uzizo's story
is not unusual. In October 2011 South Africa lifted a moratorium
that had protected undocumented Zimbabweans from arrest and deportation
for more than two years. Since then nearly 10,000 have been forcibly
returned, according to the International Organization for Migration
(IOM), which runs a reception and support centre for returnees at
the Beitbridge border between the two countries.
An internal
directive issued by the Director-General of South Africa's Department
of Home Affairs said deportation should only be carried out after
verifying that a suspect had not applied for asylum or any other
permits. However, Kaajal Ramjathan-Keogh, who heads the Refugee
and Migrant Rights Programme at Lawyers for Human Rights (LHR),
said officials at Lindela Repatriation Centre outside Johannesburg,
where the vast majority of migrants are held before being deported,
often fail to screen new arrivals to establish that they really
are undocumented.
"We find
people with documents who shouldn't have been admitted [to Lindela],"
she told IRIN. "It is a huge struggle to have [them] released;
we usually have to resort to high court litigation which is time
consuming and we can only assist a few people."
In a recent
submission to the UN Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Migrants,
LHR noted that "Despite the legal protections afforded to asylum
seekers, refugees and other migrants in South Africa, the detention
and deportation of foreign nationals is often carried out in an
unlawful manner."
Arrest
first, ask questions later
In the busy
border town of Musina, about 10km south of Beitbridge, newly arrived
migrants, many of them border jumpers like Uzizo, sleep rough in
the vicinity of the Refugee Reception Office where they start queuing
in the early hours of the morning in the hope of securing asylum-seeker
permits. Despite waiting all day, not all of them reach the front
of the queue and those who leave without documents risk arrest by
police waiting outside, according to Jacob Matakanye, director of
the Musina Legal Advice Office (MLAO).
On a recent
Friday, three cells at Musina Police Station contained 106 migrants,
of which 102 were men held in just two cells. Among them were Zimbabweans,
Ethiopians, Somalis, Bangladeshis, Congolese and one Tanzanian,
Cassim Mustapha, who had attempted to enter the country via the
Beitbridge border post. "I'm claiming asylum because of my
sexuality," he told IRIN. "I had a paper from the UN but
they just said, 'Where is your passport?' and when I didn't have
it, they arrested me."
Arresting someone
who is claiming asylum because they cannot produce a passport is
"completely unlawful", said Ramjathan-Keogh of LHR, but
"quite common" at Beitbridge.
While the practice
of arresting undocumented migrants first and asking questions later
appears common in Musina, several organizations, including LHR,
IOM and the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) have regular access to detainees
at the police station and often help secure the release of those
with pending asylum applications or lost permits.
Access to detainees
at Lindela is much more limited. The South African Human Rights
Commission is the only organization with an official mandate to
monitor immigration detention facilities, but according to LHR,
such monitoring has been "haphazard and infrequent".
"We rely
on clients to tell us who is there and what is going on. It's extremely
laborious and frustrating," said Ramjathan-Keogh, adding that
the organization was being forced to scale back its assistance to
detainees at Lindela due to resource constraints.
Poor
conditions
LHR's submission
to the Special Rapporteur notes that detainees at Lindela regularly
complain about conditions at the facility, in particular the lack
of medical care, but also dirty bedding, inadequate meals, and beatings
by security guards and immigration officials.
South Africa's
immigration law stipulates that detention for the purpose of deportation
should not exceed 120 days, but a number of detainees told LHR that
they had been at Lindela much longer.
The cells at
the Musina Police Station are often overcrowded, so deportations
to Zimbabwe occur almost every day and detainees from further afield
usually spend no more than two weeks there, according to Matakanye
of MLAO. The downside of migrants being detained so briefly is that
some are deported before agencies like LHR can determine the lawfulness
of their case, said Ramjathan-Keogh, noting that there had been
several instances of unaccompanied minors being deported from Musina.
Médecins
Sans Frontières (MSF) has expressed concern about conditions
in the police cells, in particular the lack of access to health
care and the absence of screening to determine which detainees are
on medication for infectious diseases like tuberculosis (TB) or
HIV. "There's still no screening happening," said Christine
Mwongera, MSF's project coordinator in Musina, "so there are
TB patients being kept in cells with others."
Migrants with
TB whose treatment is interrupted can develop multidrug-resistant
(MDR) strains of the disease. Mwongera noted that "At some
point, these people who are being deported might return and they
will bring MDR-TB back to South Africa, so it really needs to be
deal with."
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