The Citizen (KZN)

Court blocks deportatio­n of Ghanaian facing danger

- Ilse de Lange

A young Ghanaian woman who fled to South Africa because she feared the much older priest she was forced to marry was about to kill her, has obtained a court order blocking her deportatio­n from South Africa.

Judge Billy Mothle granted an order in the North Gauteng High Court in Pretoria, interdicti­ng the department of home affairs from deporting Dora Oduuta, 33, from South Africa pending the outcome of her review applicatio­n to set aside the department’s refusal to grant her refugee status.

The department was ordered to issue Oduuta with an asylum seeker permit and was interdicte­d from further arresting, detaining or deporting her while the review proceeding­s were pending.

Oduuta, who works as a hairdresse­r in Mpumalanga, said in court papers she fled from Ghana in 2008 because she was forced to marry a much older priest and religious leader of the Jwira-Pepesa tribe. Her community believes that if a virgin marries a traditiona­l priest, it pacifies the ancestors and cleanses the tribe.

Oduuta said she had seen peers being brutally assaulted and harassed until they succumbed to the practice. She had personally endured assaults, psychologi­cal abuse and threats of death because she wanted to go against a long-standing practice of her tribe.

When she arrived in South Africa in 2008 she was issued with an asylum seeker permit.

Earlier this month, she was summoned to the Marabastad refugee office to renew her permit, but was arrested. She was told that her applicatio­n for asylum had been refused and she was sent to the Lindela repatriati­on centre in Krugersdor­p for deportatio­n.

Oduuta was separated from her three-year-old daughter, who was born in South Africa, and officials refused to release her, saying she was not the mother of the child. She maintained the decision to arrest her had been made in bad faith, was not in the best interests of her child and that the rejection of her asylum applicatio­n was not justifiabl­e as she faced grave danger if she returned to Ghana.

I personally endured assaults, psychologi­cal abuse and threats of death because I wanted to go against a longstandi­ng practice of my tribe. Dora Oduuta Ghanaian asylum seeker

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