Cape Argus

Perilous ocean crossing to nowhere

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THE village of Kangani is the last stopping off point on the Comoros before a perilous ocean crossing for would-be migrants trying to reach the French island of Mayotte.

But in recent weeks, the kwassa kwassa – small wooden fishing launches inadequate for the 70km Indian Ocean journey – have remained tied up on the shore.

Mayotte is France’s 101st and poorest administra­tive region and anti-immigrant groups have launched protests against new arrivals despite a vow from Paris to tighten citizenshi­p rules.

Part of the Comoros archipelag­o, Mayotte voted to remain part of France in 1974, when the other three islands sought and won independen­ce.

The current state, the Union of the Comoros, maintains a claim on the French island and many here resent the ever-stricter immigratio­n rules.

Mayotte may be poor in EU terms, but the Comoros are one of Africa’s poorest countries.

Thousands of would-be migrants from the Comoros or mainland Africa try to make the journey every year and are now estimated to make up just under half of Mayotte’s 310 000 population.

This has proved too much for some of the locals, who have set up barricades on the streets to demand action from the state to rein in undocument­ed migration.

In Kangani, a small town of a few thousand souls on the easternmos­t Comoros island of Anjouan, this has disrupted the migrant smuggling business and other covert trade.

Even with its unemployme­nt and social unrest, Mayotte has better infrastruc­ture, schools and hospitals, than its neighbour.

According to a local official, “when everything is going well”, between five and six kwassa kwassa skiffs set off every day for north-west Mayotte. Now, migrants are piling up, alongside cigarettes and even livestock – in Kangani, the entire economy of the village turns around the Mayotte route and business is conducted in wads of euros.

“The roadblocks affect us all, there are no more kwassa kwassa departures until things get back to normal,” said Chadhuli Tafsir, a man in his thirties from the village itself.

Among the migrants held up waiting for their first crossing there are also tattooed youths, who have already been expelled from French soil.

They are recognisab­le by the dyed blonde streaks of hair, a fashionabl­e hairdo on Mayotte.

They’re keen to go back, but the situation is tense, and many locals refused to speak to AFP or turned their backs when reporters approached.

France’s latest initiative to dissuade migrants from making the trip was a proposal to strip children born on Mayotte to non-French parents from having the right to claim citizenshi­p.

Interior Minister Gerard Darmanin’s shock proposal of a constituti­onal amendment has yet to appease the protesters on Mayotte, but it has added to frustratio­n in Kangani.

“Abolishing the law of the soil is a bad idea for everyone concerned,” muttered Tafsir, as a group of men gathered to discuss the decline in trade.

Ousseni, a small man in his fifties, would only give his first name, but describes himself as a fisherman-smuggler.

He charges travellers between €400 (about R8 000) and €500 a head to cross the strait to Mayotte, four or five times the average monthly salary on this archipelag­o of 870 000 people.

The protest groups, he complains, are costing him “time and money”, just like the Comoros coastguard­s who, he alleges, shake him down for €200 per trip. “The last time I was carrying a sick person. We were prevented from crossing and I had to come back to dry land. The guy died shortly afterwards,” he said.

Sometimes he supplement­s the people trade with cigarette shipments – and that’s not all.

“Some people on Mayotte are waiting for a cow to celebrate their marriage. It cost them €10000. It’s a lot but still cheaper than over there,” Ousseni said.

 ?? | AFP ?? A POLICEMAN inspects a villager’s boat documentat­ion during a patrol to intercept boats sailing illegally from the Comoros to the French Indian Ocean island of Mayotte.
| AFP A POLICEMAN inspects a villager’s boat documentat­ion during a patrol to intercept boats sailing illegally from the Comoros to the French Indian Ocean island of Mayotte.

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