Cape Times

Migrant launches damages suit

- Joe Brock

JOHANNESBU­RG: In 2010 police in Johannesbu­rg shot Justin Ejimkonye, a Nigerian migrant, in the leg. The reason why is unclear: It took the police 18 months to charge Ejimkonye with any crime. When they did bring a charge, saying he was carrying dagga, a public prosecutor decided not to pursue the case for lack of evidence.

But the Nigerian says police shot him because he refused to pay them bribes.

Similar claims of police corruption are echoed by hundreds of immigrants in South Africa. Some are resigned to paying the bribes so they can stay in the country. Others feel powerless to act. But over the past seven years, Ejimkonye, who says he is in the country legally, has refused to keep quiet.

Now he is pursuing a civil claim for damages. He says law-enforcemen­t and immigratio­n officials have continued to brutalise and wrongfully detain him. A high court has twice ordered the police to set him free.

“I still think every day they will come for me,” said 31-yearold Ejimkonye. “I’m fighting for my life.”

The migrant, who walks with a limp, is suing the minister of home affairs, the local government, a police officer and an official at the Department of Home Affairs for hundreds of thousands of rand in damages as a result of this alleged maltreatme­nt.

His case has been filed in the high court in Johannesbu­rg and is due to be heard in August. It is a fresh challenge to the misrule and abuse that even the government sees in South Africa’s immigratio­n system.

“This is an important case and the evidence is extensive and conclusive,” said Bulelani Mzamo, Ejimkonye’s attorney. “A lot of people in authority are in deep trouble.”

Police declined to comment on the case and the police investigat­ory body said it had not been informed about it.

Told of the case by Reuters, Mayihlome Tshwete, a spokespers­on for Home Affairs, said he would look into it. Tshwete said the problems it highlights were “systemic” in the past, but are improving under Home Affairs Minister Malusi Gigaba, who was appointed in 2014 and has launched a drive against corruption, arresting some officials in his department on corruption charges.

South Africans worry that foreigners are taking their jobs and committing crime, and migrants say the immigratio­n system is failing.

The same forces that send west Africans to Italy are driving sub-Saharan Africans – nearly half of them from Zimbabwe – into the continent’s richest state. South Africa rejects 95% of asylum applicatio­ns as unjustifie­d.

But so far, it has been unwilling to deport those migrants. It houses more than a million people with temporary residence permits who are unsure what is going to happen to them.

That has fostered extortion. More than 20 refugees or migrants interviewe­d by Reuters said they had suffered corruption and worse at the hands of police and immigratio­n officers. A 2015 report by Lawyers for Human Rights and the African Centre for Migration & Society – two NGOs – found a third of immigrants experience corruption at South African refugee registrati­on offices.

Another report, published in November by NGO Corruption Watch, found more than 300 foreigners complained of extortion, threats and solicitati­on from government officials.

President Jacob Zuma said last month a system of “bribes for permits” poses a serious security risk for the country.

A spate of attacks against Nigerians in Johannesbu­rg sparked protests last month, with revenge attacks against South African businesses in Nigeria. This month, Foreign Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane, after meeting the Nigerian foreign minister, said she would launch a scheme to track and deter xenophobic attacks.

At least 66 foreign Africans in South Africa were killed in xenophobic attacks between January 2015 and January 2017, according to the African Centre for Migration & Society.

This has its roots in the end of apartheid in 1994, when Nelson Mandela helped draw up a constituti­on with some of the world’s most generous human rights laws, in a bid to redress the divides under white-minority rule.

The constituti­on grants people seeking asylum many of the same rights as South Africans.

But now Gigaba wants to change the law to crack down on so-called “economic migrants” by reducing asylum-seekers’ rights and introducin­g a quota system.

“Unfortunat­ely, we fear a large-scale flare-up of xenophobic violence is just around the corner,” said Wayne Ncube, an attorney at the Johannesbu­rg Law Clinic. “It just takes a spark…”

Almost all the African immigrants Reuters spoke to said corruption and violence were part of their daily lives. A group of Zimbabwean­s living in Yeoville, a Johannesbu­rg suburb popular with African migrants, described a well-organised system establishe­d by the police.

Officers in their area came to collect money each week, the migrants said. Those who didn’t pay were arrested, they said, and eventually sent to a migrant detention centre, Lindela, where thousands are still awaiting a decision on their asylum applicatio­ns.

“If you pay, you’re fine. If you don’t have money then you’re arrested or beaten up until you can pay,” said 28-yearold taxi driver, Thando Banda, from Zimbabwe.

Yeoville police declined to comment. Ejimkonye, the Nigerian, says he arrived in South Africa in October 2005 and was issued with various permits until 2007 when he married a South African, which entitled him to stay permanentl­y on a spousal visa. He had dreamed of a future as a soccer player, but by early February 2010 he was running a hair salon in Germiston.

One day, he says, police stopped him as he was driving his Toyota truck. They demanded R900, which he refused to pay. The police impounded his vehicle and charged him a fine to recover it.

A few weeks later, the same police officers stopped him again, documents drawn up by both Ejimkonye and the police show. Ejimkonye says he told them he would not pay any bribes. At that, he claims, police officer John Kichener Johnstone removed his policeissu­e Beretta pistol from its holster and fired a 9mm round into the back of Ejimkonye’s leg.

The Germiston police station did not respond to requests for comment or to contact Johnstone. Savage Jooste & Adams, the law firm representi­ng the local government and Johnstone, declined to comment. The firm has submitted a defence in Ejimkonye’s case, his lawyers said.

In a separate statement prepared for a court hearing that in the end did not take place, Johnstone said he and his police colleagues were doing “special duties”, but did not elaborate.

They went to question a group of men, including Ejimkonye, who were standing on a street corner. Johnstone saw the “butt of a firearm at the rear of his (Ejimkonye’s) pants,” said the statement, seen by Reuters.

Ejimkonye then tried to escape and a chase ensued, Johnstone said in the statement. Hurdling bushes, Johnstone said, he shouted warnings at Ejimkonye several times before opening fire as a last resort. A police crime docket drawn up by the Germiston police on the day of the shooting said Ejimkonye was guilty of “pointing (a gun) at an officer.”

Ejimkonye says he did not have a gun. He collected two witness statements which supported his version of events. Neither they nor Johnstone’s statement were submitted in court, because the police did not bring charges against Ejimkonye at the time.

Instead, in April 2010 Ejimkonye launched his own lawsuit against the police. That grew into the claim that is due in court in August.

The Directorat­e for Priority Crime spokespers­on Brigadier Hangwani Mulaudzi said questions about Ejimkonye’s case against the police would be dealt with by the Independen­t Police Investigat­ive Directorat­e (Ipid). But an Ipid spokespers­on said it would not have looked into the case automatica­lly, because in 2010 it was “not obligated to investigat­e cases of shooting, unless the shooting resulted in a death.”

Tshwete could not comment on Ejimkonye’s case but said there were some “rotten apples” in the police and at Home Affairs.

“We are not saying all police officers and Home Affairs officials are saints.”

In Ejimkonye’s case, a court eventually found that lawenforce­ment officials had broken the law. In August 2011, 18 months after Ejimkonye was shot in the leg, police summoned him to face a charge of possession of dagga. The prosecutor withdrew that charge due to lack of evidence, a Department of Justice document shows.

Ejimkonye said he subsequent­ly faced more intimidati­on and physical attacks. On October 14, 2013 according to documents submitted by Ejimkonye’s lawyers, Johnstone and some of his colleagues raided the Nigerian’s home in the middle of the night and took him to the police station where he was kept for 36 days.

A month into his detention an immigratio­n officer, Boitumelo Mokobi, revoked his visa, saying it had been illegally obtained. Mokobi could not be reached for comment.

With his visa revoked, Ejimkonye became an illegal immigrant. The immigratio­n authority sent him to Lindela.

There he spent the next six months, court documents show – well beyond the maximum declared in terms of the law.

In April 2014, Judge Segopotje Mphahlele of the high court in Johannesbu­rg ordered his release. The judge ruled that the police and the government had “dismally failed to comply with the applicable requiremen­ts of the Immigratio­n Act” and that Ejimkonye had been unlawfully detained.

He thought he was free. But on May 27, 2014, Ejimkonye says, Johnstone and others broke into his home, assaulted him and threw him into the boot of a car. They took him to another police station where, a June 2014 court ruling says, he was held on charges of being an illegal immigrant.

Again, his lawyer applied to the high court, which ordered his release. Judge Mphahlele found this second arrest and detention had also been unlawful, and ordered that police should not approach Ejimkonye until his immigratio­n situation was clarified.

The Home Affairs Department said last year that it had arrested more than 60 of its officials for offences including false documentat­ion, bribery, aiding and abetting, impersonat­ion, revenue theft and fraud.

But migrants say brutality and demands for cash are still commonplac­e. Faaruq Mohammed, a Somali who has a temporary residence permit while his applicatio­n for asylum is considered, told Reuters he was beaten and refused legal representa­tion at a police station.

He has been waiting for a permanent decision on his applicatio­n for more than two years.

“You worry each time you leave your house that the police will stop you. Sometimes they ignore your permit and you have to pay or be arrested,” Mohammed said.

“Police stations and Lindela are not good places.

“Bad people there… You don’t know if you will come out alive.”

At the refugee registrati­on centre in Pretoria, hundreds of immigrants press against fences hoping to get answers about their asylum applicatio­ns, as overrun officials shout orders and beat back the crowd with sticks. Many have been coming for years and described how they had to pay to get a renewal of their refugee permit.

 ?? Pictures: REUTERS ?? RETALIATED: Protesters gather infront of the Foreign Affairs Ministry building in Abuja, Nigeria during an anti-South African violence rally.
Pictures: REUTERS RETALIATED: Protesters gather infront of the Foreign Affairs Ministry building in Abuja, Nigeria during an anti-South African violence rally.
 ??  ?? WATCHFUL: A security officer stands guard after protesters attacked MTN’s offices in Abuja.
WATCHFUL: A security officer stands guard after protesters attacked MTN’s offices in Abuja.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa