The Citizen (Gauteng)

Immigrants ‘desperate for food during pandemic’

- Tariro Washinyira

Zimbabwean relief organisati­ons are struggling to keep up with the demand for food help from immigrants in SA who have been floored by Covid-19.

Though the special R350-amonth Covid-19 relief grant was extended to immigrants by government last year, many are battling to access it.

Zimbabwe Community SA spokespers­on Bongani Mazwi Mkwananzi says his organisati­on has helped about 2 000 families with food since November last year, mostly in Gauteng but also in Cape Town.

There are 4 700 people on the list. “We are appealing to business people and donors to assist with the food distributi­on programme since people are still struggling and have not returned to work.”

Mkwananzi says many immigrants earned a living through informal trading, domestic work and casual jobs in restaurant­s. They have been hard hit by the pandemic.

Initially, there was no assistance for immigrants from the SA government, but Judge Selby Baqwa of the High Court in Pretoria ruled on 19 June that the R350 Special Covid-19 Social Relief of Distress must be extended to asylum seekers and special permit holders from Lesotho, Angola and Zimbabwe.

The SA Social Security Agency

(Sassa), with the help of the home affairs department and the Scalabrini Centre, has created a separate web applicatio­n channel for asylum seekers and permit holders which caters for their special identifica­tion numbers.

The grant, due to expire at the end of January, has been extended for three more months. But Mkwananzi says an informal survey of members of Zimbabwe Community SA revealed that many battle to access it.

“They wish they would receive the grant and buy their families some food. Most of the people who applied for the grant were declined and some said they were never responded to.”

Sassa spokesman Paseka Letsatsi

told GroundUp at the end of February that 4 110 applicatio­ns had been received from asylum seekers and special permit holders. These included 1 171 applicatio­ns from asylum seekers, 235 applicatio­ns from Angolan special permit holders, 1 742 applicatio­ns from Lesotho special permit holders and 962 from Zimbabwean special permit holders.

On average, 800 asylum seekers and special permit holders a month were paid out. In total, more than nine million applicatio­ns for the grant were received in February, Letsatsi said.

About three million applicatio­ns a month on average were declined, he said.

On Tuesday in an e-mail, deputy ambassador of Zimbabwe to South Africa Martin Makururu told GroundUp about 8 000 Zimbabwean­s had asked for food help since the beginning of lockdown. The Johannesbu­rg consulate had submitted 5 000 names for food parcels assistance to the Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Migration (IOM), he said.

“Zimbabwean nationals in South Africa in the informal sector and hospitalit­y industry were hardest-hit,” said Makururu. “The situation was tough during the initial lockdown. Those nationals who found the going tough, returned home.”

When lockdown levels were lowered, almost half of those who “weathered the storm had not been rehired”. – GroundUp

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