The Herald (Zimbabwe)

SADC tackles xenophobia in SA

- Fungi Kwaramba Political Editor

SADC has engaged the South African government to ensure the protection of African citizens domiciled in that country against xenophobic attacks.

After paying a courtesy call on President Mnangagwa yesterday, the newly elected

SADC Executive Secretary Mr Elias Magosi said, as the head of the secretaria­t driving programmes and policies of the 16-member bloc, he intends to ensure there is regional integratio­n.

His call comes amid rising tensions in South Africa where foreigners have once again been under attack from South Africans in an Afrophobic wave that is code-named Operation Dudula.

Last month, a Zimbabwean Elvis Nyathi was brutally murdered by South Africans in Diepsloot in a foreboding repeat of other equally brutal and callous attacks on foreigners.

However, Mr Magosi said such actions are an anathema to the founding values of the regional bloc that was founded in August 1992.

“The idea of the founding fathers of the community was to ensure that we integrate and that we have our citizens moving freely across the region, that means they could find economic activity anywhere in the region.

“Zimbabwean­s could move into Botswana, and citizens of Botswana could move to Zimbabwe or anywhere in the region without fear that when working they should be looking behind their back feeling that they are insecure, so those aspects that have been in the Republic of South Africa, obviously as the secretaria­t and SADC, we will be concerned about.

“We are concerned about it and we are engaged with the leadership of the Republic of South Africa for them to find solutions,” he said.

He said the region also encourages bilateral engagement­s between member states in the event of xenophobia, which has lately been simmering in South Africa at the instigatio­n of Operation Dudula, which is targeting Africans in what some have described as Afrophobia.

“We encourage government­s to engage at the highest level to make sure that citizens in either country are secure and that the security is not compromise­d. The message that I would send to those practising it, say in South Africa, is that they have citizens elsewhere and would not want their citizens in other parts of the region to be treated like that.

“There are citizens of South Africa who are enjoying peace in the other 15 member states and that is what we would want for citizens of Zimbabwe, if they go to South Africa looking for opportunit­ies, and the South Africans must realise that these citizens that are coming are for the economic developmen­t of their country,’’ he said.

The SADC Executive Secretary said his mandate is to ensure that the aspiration­s of the regional bloc founding fathers to make sure Southern Africa prospers and is integrated,

are fulfilled.

“The region has done very well in terms of tools, processes, and protocols and it is time now to put that to good use, to implement.

“My role as secretary is that I expedite that, if there are protocols to sign we have to expedite the signing of those agreements. I am focusing primarily on policies driving integratio­n,” he said.

Mr Magosi added that the focus is on the signing of protocols in trade and infrastruc­tural developmen­t which will ultimately improve the welfare of the citizens of the SADC region.

With one of Sadc member states, Mozambique, under attack from insurgents in its Northern Cabo Delgado region Mr Magosi said he was determined to also ensure that Southern Africans appreciate the importance of collaborat­ion and interventi­on when a member state’s sovereignt­y, peace, and stability is under threat.

“I am also looking at improving the visibility of SADC, not many people know SADC as a community.

“We are looking at what can we do to improve the visibility of SADC to make sure the citizens of SADC may know the programmes that are being implemente­d within say the Republic of Zimbabwe.

“Now we are in Mozambique. When the Parliament of Zimbabwe has to provide resources or funds for President Mnangagwa to use in the Republic of Mozambique, they should understand, including those in opposition they should understand, why we should spend those resources in the Republic of Mozambique; we are nipping terrorism in the bud. It’s not only the threat to the Republic of Mozambique, but a threat to the entire region, that can grow quickly like a wildfire, so there is a reason why we should intervene,” said Mr Magosi.

Zimbabwe, like many SADC member states, has stood by Mozambique, sending trainers and also helping with food aid.

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