The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Immigratio­n Dept wants mothballed IT system revived

- Thupeyo Muleya

THE Department of Immigratio­n has appealed to parliament­arians to push for the resuscitat­ion of its computeris­ed management system, which has been down since December 2019.

The system is designed to quickly pick up travellers with outstandin­g security issues such as people on bail or travel bans.

The department is also operating an online visa applicatio­n (eVisa Zimbabwe) processing system in line with the country’s e-Government project aimed at modernisin­g and improving service delivery in the public sector.

The Assistant Regional Immigratio­n Officer in charge of Beitbridge, Mr Nqobile Ncube told members of the Parliament­ary Committee on Defence, Home Affairs and Security last week that the state of affairs at the borders was not desirable.

In the absence of the computeris­ed system, the Department was screening travellers and segregatin­g informatio­n manually and at times this depends on the work ethic of individual officers.

Additional­ly, Mr Ncube said the job became tedious considerin­g that prior to the lockdown they were handling at least 14 000 travellers daily.

Numbers could even increase further when the border finally re-open to passenger traffic considerin­g that many people within Zimbabwe and the region have not travelled for the last six months.

“The Afrosoft backed system that ran the Citizen Manager Program on a local area network capacity has been down since December 8, 2019,” said Mr Ncube.

“This puts the department, security and basically the whole nation at risk as all entries and migrant management has to be done from a manual perspectiv­e.

“Given the high volume movement at this port, this becomes a great disadvanta­ge in terms of efficiency and quality delivery. I would like to request for the committee to lobby for Cabinet or even a Presidenti­al oversight into this matter such that by the festive season this year we will have effective and robust operating system that ideally would be real-time.”

The senior immigratio­n official said having their computeris­ed system on the WAN (Wide Area Networks) will help them carry on board the Interpol module like South Africa and Botswana Immigratio­n Services.

In addition, Mr Ncube said the system has the capacity to be packaged with the new facial recognitio­n module being currently piloted and other related immigratio­n services modules.

He also encouraged the parliament­arians to push for the Ports Authority Bill to be passed as this will align services and fair use of resources across the board.

“The current set up where the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra), who is also a stakeholde­r at the border, is given the maintenanc­e and repair budget for the whole complex is untenable as obviously most of the expenditur­e will lean towards its interests at the expense of other department­s.

“In the absence of the arbitrator role of the Port Authority, this creates a ‘Big Brother’ element in the purse holder and relegates other department­s to minions, who have no administra­tive say in the management and developmen­t of infrastruc­ture and services. This, in my view, needs to be dealt with urgently,” said Mr Ncube.

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