The Citizen (Gauteng)

Cape church refugees asked to leave

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A banner hanging outside Cape Town’s Central Methodist Church yesterday said the hundreds of foreign nationals taking refuge there were planning a “mass exodus” from South Africa.

“Refugees have decided to go on a mass exodus out of South Africa,” read the hand-painted banner waving in the wind.

This was after some of the people in the church rounded on a delegation of interfaith leaders and non-government­al organisati­ons last Friday, who were pushed and shoved in a scuffle in the church.

Others held the attackers back to protect the group.

The SA Human Rights Commission’s (SAHRC) Reverend Chris Nissen and Anglican Archbishop Thabo Makgoba were injured when bottles and objects were thrown.

The leaders of the group were engaged in a meeting yesterday.

About 600 people, including more than 100 children, have been living in the church on Greenmarke­t Square since October 30 after they were forcibly removed from a sit-in protest at the nearby Waldorf Arcade.

They had been holding a sit-in to get the attention of the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR).

They want the UNHCR to evacuate them from SA because they say they have been targeted for being foreign nationals and have experience­d constant problems over their paperwork with the department of home affairs.

They do not want to return to their countries of origin, but to another host country.

The UNHCR has said this is not possible and home affairs said it could not force people on another country.

Last Friday, police detained a group with the same demands when they moved on to the UNHCR’s premises in Pretoria.

They were taken to the Lindela Repatriati­on Centre in Gauteng for their status as refugees or asylum seekers to be verified.

In the meantime, a seemingly never-ending game of draughts continued under a tree outside the church in Cape Town.

The clattering of the dice mingled with the sound of children playing and the murmured conversati­on of the adults, all in limbo.

In his Sunday sermon, the church’s Reverend Alan Storey said he found last Friday’s incident disgracefu­l.

He understood that their circumstan­ces could make refugees lose control, but he said it could also harden attitudes to their plight.

He has asked them to start making arrangemen­ts to leave, due to the fire and health risks of living in such close quarters, in between the pews and on the floors. He has not given them a deadline.

– News24 Wire

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