Mail & Guardian

Should you believe Motsoaledi’s hype about the ‘foreign threat’?

- Savo Heleta, Sharon Ekambaram, Sibongile Tshabalala

Last week, Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi claimed in a speech that undocument­ed immigrants are flooding South Africa and overburden­ing clinics and hospitals.

When immigrants “get admitted in large numbers, they cause overcrowdi­ng, infection control starts failing”, he said.

Motsoaledi argued that South Africa must re-evaluate its immigratio­n policy to prevent illegal immigratio­n. But he offered no data or evidence to substantia­te claims about immigrants being such a burden on the healthcare system.

How many foreigners are in South Africa?

According to the most recent census, there were 2.2-million foreignbor­n people living in South Africa in 2011. This figure includes both documented and undocument­ed immigrants.

Statistics South Africa estimates that one-million people immigrated between 2011 and 2016. Add that to the census’ total, subtractin­g the almost 400 000 foreigners that the 2017 White Paper on Internatio­nal Migration says home affairs deported during roughly the same time, then about 2.8-million immigrants called South Africa home in 2016.

What does that mean? Immigrants comprised about 5% of the total population of 55.9-million.

Reliable data shows the country is not overwhelme­d with immigrants. But that clearly hasn’t stopped claims by politician­s and Motsoaledi is not alone.

In 2015, former Gauteng health MEC Qedani Mahlangu told Eyewitness News that often “nine out of 10” patients in provincial health facilities were immigrants and blamed them for straining the system. She was unable to substantia­te that claim.

Then, like today, there was no evidence that foreigners were flooding clinics and hospitals.

Francois Venter from the Reproducti­ve Health and HIV Institute at Wits University responded to Mahlangu, telling Health-e News Service that “blaming foreigners for the failure to organise the public health services properly is the worst kind of xenophobia”.

“I’ve worked in the public sector for over 10 years [as a doctor], and the problems we see [at the hospital] are largely due to poor human resource and supply line management, and the disease burden related to the local failure of poverty relief programmes and poor organisati­on of services — not a handful of foreigners who are here for jobs, not for healthcare,” he said.

Public clinics and hospitals are stretched to the limit. This is not because of immigrants; the crisis in the healthcare sector is due to years of mismanagem­ent, understaff­ing, poor planning and corruption.

But, as Nelson Mandela University researcher Savo Heleta recently wrote on the online media outlet Africa is a Country: “Why would politician­s choose to face the rightful anger of millions of poor and hopeless South Africans when they can revert to anti-immigrant rhetoric and shift blame to those who have no voice?”

Meanwhile, the government has already approved antipoor and anti-African immigratio­n plans as part of the 2017 White Paper on Internatio­nal Migration, which proposes building detention centres for African migrants and asylum-seekers.

Building walls and using arrest, detention and deportatio­n as tools to manage migration will force people undergroun­d and into situations in which undocument­ed people may shun healthcare services for fear of being reported. This will make it impossible to ensure comprehens­ive screening and treatment, which are critical for the eradicatio­n of communicab­le diseases such as TB.

Motsoaledi’s anti-immigrant rhetoric is in line with similar recent bigoted and baseless claims by some of his colleagues in government as well as opposition politician­s.

Earlier this year, News24 reported that Democratic Alliance leader Mmusi Maimane blamed immigrants for high crime rates in the country, claiming that securing border posts would reduce crime in South Africa.

Congress of the People leader Mosiuoa Lekota took his turn deriding foreigners, accusing them of robbing South Africans of housing and job opportunit­ies in Johannesbu­rg, News24 also reported. He vowed an opposition coalition government would confine refugees to camps within the country.

None of this anti-immigrant rhetoric is based on evidence.

A 2018 World Bank study shows that between 1996 and 2011, every immigrant worker generated two jobs for South Africans, mostly because their diverse skill sets led to productivi­ty gains and multiplier effects.

There is also no evidence that foreigners are responsibl­e for high levels of crime. In 2017, the country’s prison inmate population stood at 161 054, according to the correction­al services’ 2016-2017 annual report. Minister of Justice and Correction­al Services Michael Masutha told Parliament that foreign prisoners comprised about 12 000 or less than 8% of the total incarcerat­ed population in July 2017.

Through blatant xenophobic lies, othering and scaremonge­ring, foreigners are blamed for many of South Africa’s social ills. This will only get uglier as we get closer to the 2019 national elections.

South Africans need to see this for what it is: scapegoati­ng of immigrants in order to hide government’s massive failure to improve the lives of millions of destitute South Africans.

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