The Citizen (KZN)

Migrants hurting Gauteng

REPORT: THEY SETTLE ILLEGALLY IN JOBURG AND PUT A STRAIN ON RESOURCES The problem is attributed to South Africa’s porous borders.

- Eric Naki – ericn@citizen.co.za

Agovernmen­t report has suggested that beside a battle with limited resources, an influx of internatio­nal migrants has put further strain on Gauteng’s services.

The report found that Gauteng was not only saddled with having to accommodat­e internal migrants from the rest of the country, but it was getting overwhelme­d by an influx of internatio­nal migrants who have to depend on its health and education resources.

The scathing report is a joint investigat­ion by the National Council of Provinces (NCOP) and Gauteng Provincial Legislatur­e (GPL) into the impact of migration on service delivery in Gauteng.

The probe found that 47% of internatio­nal migrants settled in Johannesbu­rg without valid documentat­ion and placed a strain on its limited resources.

Gauteng’s population is known to increase at the highest rate in the country due to an influx of migrants from other provinces and foreign immigrants into urban areas including squatter camps.

The contents of the investigat­ion were revealed by Charity Moyo, spokespers­on for the Democratic Alliance (DA) Gauteng premier candidate Solly Msimanga’s campaign.

“This is placing a huge strain on the city’s infrastruc­ture, as well as services such as education and healthcare,” Moyo said.

She said the influx of foreign migrants resulted in the province’s schools struggling to absorb the increasing number of applicants yearly.

Moyo further revealed that Gauteng needed approximat­ely 142 new schools to deal with the current demand – a number which does not take into considerat­ion the yearly influx of new students into the province.

The report, which followed a

“In the 2017-18 financial year, the Charlotte Maxeke Academic Hospital had to write off about R1 billion due to unsettled debt,” Moyo said.

“It is clear that South Africa can ill afford not to secure its borders as uncontroll­ed immigratio­n is violating the rights of the ordinary residents of this province who have to compete for services.

“This problem has been compounded by the widespread corruption within the department of home affairs which has led to an immigratio­n system failure.”

Moyo accused the ANC government of being incapable of ensuring law and order, rooting out corruption and managing the real problems that Gauteng faced, instead of only caring about enriching themselves.

“This is not what we were promised. We need leadership and change capable of ensuring equal access to opportunit­ies for all South Africans,” Moyo said.

“The DA will fight corruption, fix the police force to be honest and profession­al, create fair access to real and long-term jobs, secure our borders and speed up the delivery of basic services.”

The permanent delegates of the NCOP and members of the provincial legislatur­e visited service delivery sites in Ekurhuleni, Johannesbu­rg, Tshwane and the West Rand district municipali­ty from September 17 to 21.

The visits were in preparatio­n for the upcoming “Taking Parliament to the People” programme expected to take place in November and were held under the theme “Impact of migration – deepening cooperativ­e governance for accelerate­d service delivery and developmen­t”.

The NCOP said the informatio­n acquired during the preliminar­y visits and public meetings would be compiled and submitted to the executives in all three spheres of government for their interventi­ons prior to the parliament­ary session due in Gauteng in November.

A statement from parliament read: “This is one of the flagship programmes of the legislatur­es through which they exercise oversight on the executive, while also promoting citizen participat­ion in governance.”

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